Coming Home For Christmas
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“Any word?” Ben asked anxiously, as Adam arrived home from town with the mail.
Dismounting slowly, Adam tried not to wince as he shook his head. “No, nothing,
Pa,” he reported, sadly. “Roy says he’s tried everything he knows.”
Sighing, Ben looked discouraged. Adam thought how much his father had aged these
last 2 months. The lines on his face were more pronounced and there were
perpetual dark circles under his eyes, as though he hadn’t slept properly for a
long time. And Adam knew that Ben hadn’t slept properly; neither had he and
Hoss.
None of them had slept properly since Joe disappeared two months before.
“That weather’s closin’ in fast,” Hoss commented as he came in later that
afternoon. “I reckon there’ll be more snow afore mornin’.” He stripped off his
big coat and hung it behind the door. He went over to stand in front of the
fire, putting his hands out to the blaze to warm them. He diagnosed the silence
surrounding his family all too easily. “Still no word, huh?”
“None,” Ben sighed. He rose from his chair to pace the floor restlessly. “Do you
think we did everything we could? Is there something we haven’t thought of?”
“Pa, we done everythin’,” Hoss assured him. “There ain’t a single thing we didn’
do. I hate ta say it, but Joe’s gone.” He blinked back the tears in his eyes.
“You know we’ve done everything, Pa,” Adam added. “All we can do now is hope
that Joe is all right and will come home one day.”
“I suppose so,” Ben agreed. “But if only we hadn’t parted on such bad terms…”
“I know I’m taking Jonathan to the stage,” Joe snapped. “Why am I suddenly being
reminded of it all the time? Was I complaining? No!”
“I’m reminding you that you have to be up on time tomorrow morning,” Adam
snapped back. “You’ve missed breakfast every day this week so far.”
“Boys!” Ben interrupted. He didn’t want this argument getting out of hand.
“Could we please stop shouting at each other? I guarantee Joe will be up on time
tomorrow morning, Adam, because I will be wakening both he and Jonathan. Now
let’s close the matter there.”
“Yes, Pa,” Joe muttered and walked off, but the black look he threw Adam told
Ben all too clearly that, for Joe, the matter was not yet closed. Adam walked
off the other way.
Sighing, Ben went back indoors. Adam’s friend Jonathan Millar had been staying
with them for a month. He was a bit younger than Adam and had been the year
below him in college. Nevertheless, he and Adam had struck up a close friendship
and this was the first time that they had seen each other in several years.
Sitting down at his desk, Ben gazed blankly at the books in front of him. Joe
and Jon had become friends, too, much to Adam’s chagrin. Ben wondered if Adam
was jealous that his friend had also become close to his youngest brother. Adam
was chary about sharing his feelings and surprisingly possessive about his
friends. And when Jon had announced that he had been summoned home by his
father, and showed the stage ticket that had been sent to him, the breach
between Joe and Adam had widened a bit further. That was the very day that Adam
had arranged an important meeting to negotiate a lumber contract. He couldn’t
back out without making the Ponderosa look bad and so Joe had been elected to
take Jon to the stage. Adam would have preferred that Hoss do it, but Hoss was
laid up in bed with a bad cold. When Jon seemed to find this quite acceptable
and showed only minimal disappointment, Adam had become ominously quiet towards
his younger brother.
To further sour the mixture, Joe had been up before either Ben or Adam the next
morning and couldn’t keep the triumphant grin off his face. Adam had ignored Joe
all through the meal, talking almost exclusively to Jon. Joe had been quite
tactful while his brother took his leave of his friend, and then had ridden away
with Jon, chatting 20 to the dozen and laughing aloud. Adam had left for his
appointment wearing the most ferocious scowl Ben had ever seen.
That had been the last time they had seen Joe. He and Jon had never arrived in
Virginia City and Jon had never arrived back home. The alarm hadn’t been raised
until the next morning, and by then, any tracks there might have been had been
washed away by the torrential overnight rain. Roy Coffee had led out a posse
searching for the missing men, but had found nothing. Ben and his sons had spent
further days searching for Joe, but had found nothing. Wires to other towns had
produced no results and despite trying every avenue they could think of, no
trace of Joe or Jon was found.
Sighing deeply once more, Ben muttered, “It’s the not knowing that’s so hard.
How I wish Joe was coming home for Christmas.”
Adam and Hoss exchanged glances. Very few preparations had been made for
Christmas, and neither of them had liked to suggest that they buy presents or
decorate a tree. They had nothing to celebrate this year. It was a dreadful
thought, but they were both sure that Joe was not only not coming home for
Christmas, but that he was not coming home ever again.
Two months previously…
“It’s a real pity your pa wants you back home so suddenly, Jon,” Joe told him as
they rode off towards town.
“Well, I’ve been here a month, Joe, so I guess he’s entitled to ask me to come
home. I do work for him after all.” Jon was taller than Joe, with short blond
hair and blue eyes. The ladies of Virginia City thought he was very handsome.
Joe had been quite surprised to discover how much he enjoyed Jon’s company,
since most of Adam’s friends had not wanted to befriend someone so much younger
than them. But Jon’s light-hearted laugh had often rung out in conjunction with
Joe’s and Joe was sorry to see the other man leave. “I like it round here, Joe.”
“Good,” Joe replied, pleased. He glanced around at his home, feeling the intense
pleasure it always brought him to know that this land belonged to his family.
“It looks like there’s rain coming,” he commented. “I hope it’s not too bad, or
it’ll make the stage trip real uncomfortable.”
“I’ve been wet before,” Jon replied, philosophically. “I don’t suppose I’ll
shrink.”
“No, probably not,” Joe joked back and grinned.
They had just left the Ponderosa when a group of horsemen rode onto the road
ahead. Joe tensed at once, sensing trouble, and his left handed drifted to hover
near his gun. He shot a quick glance at Jon. “Be ready to ride when I tell you
to,” he warned. “These guys look like trouble.”
“Oh, they’re not trouble, Joe,” Jon replied. A small derringer appeared in his
hand, aimed at Joe. “These are my friends, and I’m sure they’ll become friends
of yours, too, before long.” He grinned at Joe. “And just move your hand away
from your gun carefully, Joe. I don’t want to have to shoot you.”
“What is this?” Joe asked, as the other men reached them.
“These are my men,” Jon replied, smiling lazily. It was clear he was finding
Joe’s disbelief amusing. “That wire didn’t really come from my father, Joe. I
murdered the old man a few months ago. No, I got the boys here to send the wire.
I had hoped to get Adam to join me, but I saw that he was too stuffy. But you;
you’ve got much more life in you, Joe and I’m sure you’ll enjoy being one of
us.”
“I wouldn’t count on it,” Joe retorted. He glared at one man who had lifted his
gun from its holster.
“I thought you might say that, but since I’ve just told you something
incriminating, I can’t just let you go.” Jon sighed dramatically. “I guess I’ll
just have to take you along, Joe.”
At those words, panic flared through Joe’s gut. He thought he knew what this
would involve; a ransom note to his father. Jon had been living with them for a
month; he knew that Ben would pay to get one of his sons back. Kicking Cochise,
Joe attempted to break through the men in front of him, but Jon had been doing
his homework and guessed that Joe would make a break for freedom. His men had
been well briefed, and Joe got nowhere.
As they bound Joe’s hands behind his back, Jon looked around. He wouldn’t be
back to this area; too many people knew his face. He would head down into
Arizona and continue his career in crime. He was sure Joe would come round
before long and be willing to help them. If not…well, there was always a ransom.
Or death.
Through the long days of riding down to Arizona, Joe discovered more about Jon.
The journey was hard, with torrential rains adding to Joe’s misery. But Jon
seemed to enjoy telling Joe exactly why he thought the youngest Cartwright would
be willing to turn to a life of crime.
“When Adam told me about that meeting, I knew this was the chance I’d been
looking for. I wasn’t quite sure how to get Hoss out of the picture, but that
cold was very fortunate. I made sure my men knew what I wanted, they sent the
wire and the stage ticket and then laid in wait for us to pass by.” Jon looked
appraisingly at Joe. “I must say, I thought you’d be more up for this, after
some of the stories I was told about you.”
“In which one of those stories did I break the law?” Joe asked, acidly.
Shrugging casually, Jon answered, “None of them, I guess, but you did come
pretty close a few times. Have you really not done anything to tweak the devil’s
tail, Joe?”
“No, nothing,” Joe replied, truthfully. “I suppose I’ve got into a few bar
fights, but that’s been it! I certainly haven’t murdered anyone and especially
not my own father!”
“Perhaps telling you that was a mistake,” Jon admitted. “But, too late now. My
father was a rich man when I was a child, Joe. But somehow, the money
disappeared. When I discovered that I would have to work for a living, I wasn’t
too pleased. I didn’t really want to be an engineer, and they don’t get paid
enough to support the kind of life-style I fancy. So I told my father that I
wasn’t going to work for him for just my keep and we argued. I killed him. End
of story.”
“Not quite, surely,” Joe said, quietly. “The end of the story won’t come until
you are hanged for his murder.”
“Good try,” Jon allowed. “But you can’t goad me into anger, Joe. Not any more. I
vowed to always keep my temper under control from now on.”
“It’s an easy vow to make,” Joe replied, with the assurance of one who knows.
“But it’s not so easy to keep.”
“That’s why I like you, Joe,” Jon laughed, slapping his captive on the shoulder.
“You’ve got a temper, just like I have.” He rose. “You’ll change your mind, Joe,
you’ll see.”
“Don’t hold your breath,” Joe advised him.
After 10 days of riding, they arrived at a ramshackle old house miles from
anywhere. The house was barely weatherproof, and the barn leaked like a sieve,
but this appeared to be where the outlaws were going to hole up. Joe had been
bound the whole time, and barely spoken to. He had kept a sharp eye on the route
they took, so that he would be able to retrace his steps when he got free. For
Joe never doubted that he would escape at some point. In his mind, he promised
Ben every night that he would do what was necessary to survive and get home. The
image of the Ponderosa and his family kept him going.
There were eight men altogether, but Joe never discovered any other names. From
the time they arrived at the house, Joe barely saw the other men at all. He was
secured in the cellar, fighting the whole way down, to no avail. By the time he
was tied to a stout pole, he was bruised and dishevelled. For two days, he saw
no one; his only way of charting the passing of time was to look at the daylight
coming through the dusty, broken glass high above him.
Weak from hunger and thirst, Joe did not resist when Jon came to get him. In an
upstairs room, he was given a little food and a little water and was nursed back
to something approaching normality. While he was too weak to try and escape, Joe
was left untied, but as his strength crept back, Jon appeared with handcuffs and
leg irons. Joe had balked at having them fitted and Jon lost the battle to keep
his temper. It only took a few blows to get Joe down, and when the youngest
Cartwright was again aware of his surroundings, he was locked into the irons.
The very next day, Joe discovered that he was to be the servant to the gang by
making their meals and looking after the horses. While Jon and his gang were out
robbing banks, or making plans for the next robbery, Joe was left, chained like
an animal, in the cellar. He never had enough food, although his water was never
restricted again.
Looking after horses was a chore Joe had done all his life, but he had never
found it onerous before. Now, with his strength sapped by too little food, and
his movements hampered by the chains he wore, Joe found it very hard to keep
going. His wrists were raw from the chafing of the irons and he hadn’t seen his
boots since his first days in the house. His bare feet were covered in cuts and
bruises from working in the barn.
Joe thought he had been in the house about three weeks when Jon came down one
morning to set him ‘free’ to do his chores for the day. Joe thought of refusing,
but he couldn’t face the beating that he knew refusal would bring him. Jon was
all too free with his fists.
“Have you changed your mind yet, Joe?” Jon asked, as he unlocked the chain that
kept Joe a prisoner.
“Changed my mind about what?” Joe responded, dully. He wondered if he would get
anything to eat that day. He couldn’t remember the last time he had been fed.
“About joining us, of course.” Jon sighed. “Surely you don’t like living like
this? You stink, you know, Joe.”
“That’s not my doing,” Joe answered. He had done his best to keep himself clean,
but since he could only wash in the horse trough, and had no way to clean his
tattered clothes, he had failed. He raised his head to meet Jon’s eyes. “I would
sooner live like this than join you.”
For a moment, Joe thought Jon was going to hit him after all, but the other man
controlled his temper. “Adam said you were stubborn, but I didn’t think he meant
this stubborn!”
“Now you know,” Joe muttered. He felt as though he had never slept, although he
had fallen asleep almost before his chain had been locked the night before.
Looking at Jon with revulsion, Joe wondered how on earth he had ever been
friends with this man. “I’m not going to join you, Jon.”
“Some people are obviously too stupid to see the benefits,” Jon snapped, clearly
annoyed.
“The benefits being getting caught, going to jail or hanging?” Joe retorted,
with some of his old fire. “No thanks! I’d sooner starve!”
“That can be arranged!” Jon hissed and drove his fist into Joe’s stomach.
Caught completely by surprise, Joe folded and the next blow caught the back of
his neck. Joe tumbled to the floor, where a couple of kicks sent him into
oblivion.
All that day, Joe lay shivering in the cellar, his chains pulled into a cruel
hogtie. By evening, when Jon finally relented and allowed him his minimal
freedom again, Joe’s muscles had been cramping for hours and he was in agony.
Moving slowly, Joe reached for the canteen of water that had been tantalisingly
close, but so far out of his reach, all day. After slaking his thirst, Joe
curled into a ball to try and keep warm. There had been lashing rain and gales
all day, and the rain had been driven into the cellar, with the result that
Joe’s clothes were quite damp. Now, a sharp frost was setting in and the
temperature plummeted.
Come morning, Joe was chilled to the bone and running a slight fever.
Getting back to work was nearly a relief. Hunched over the stove, Joe was at
least able to warm himself for a while. He was even allowed a single slice of
bacon to eat – the first thing he’d eaten in almost a week. Mucking out the
stalls and saddling the horses warmed him up, too. He made sure Cochise, also a
prisoner, got some hay, for he was sure his horse would starve if it was left to
the outlaws.
As he slowly fastened the last cinch, he heard hoofs on the clear, cold air.
Next moment, the man who was guarding him raced into the barn, knocked Joe off
his feet into one of the stalls, and jammed a bandanna in his mouth. Joe fought
furiously, but he was too weak to throw the man off, and he lay, pinned to the
floor, as the hoofs stopped in the yard outside.
“Well, morning, sheriff,” he heard Jon call cheerfully. “What can I do for you?
Would you like a cup of coffee to help you thaw out?”
“No, but thanks for the offer. Have you fellas seen any strangers around here?
Someone robbed the bank last night not far from here.”
“Can’t say that I have,” Jon replied, in a thoughtful tone. Joe struggled harder
to try and break free, but only earned himself a backhander across the face. “Do
you think they came this way?”
“No, not really,” the sheriff replied. “But I thought I’d mention to you folks,
seeing as how you’re out here a long way from town.”
“We’ll keep our eyes open,” Jon promised. “Thanks for coming out. Are you sure I
can’t tempt you into some coffee?”
“Much as I’d love to, I got work to do. See ya.” Joe heard the hoofs leaving
again.
“All clear,” Jon said, from the barn door.
“That was close!” the other remarked, getting off Joe. Joe reached up and tugged
the bandanna away from his mouth, drawing a deep breath. His lip and cheek stung
where he had been struck, but he barely noticed. Disappointment raged through
him that he had not been able to attract the sheriff’s attention to his plight.
“Did you get your hopes up there, Joe?” Jon taunted him.
Half-way to his feet, Joe threw himself at Jon, and was chagrined when the man
simply stepped aside and let Joe tumble to the floor, caught up in the leg
irons. But Jon didn’t allow the challenge to pass by. He pounced on Joe, yanking
him to his feet and punching him several times in the stomach. This was his
favourite form of punishment, although Joe had had several black eyes by then.
Lying on the floor, dazed, Joe tried to catch his breath. Jon pulled him to his
feet and began to drag him back to the house. Joe could feel new stinging on his
feet that meant new cuts for him to worry about. “What good would one man have
been against all of us, Joe?” Jon asked, as he secured Joe in the cellar again.
“We’d have killed him like that!” He snapped his fingers.
As the pain subsided, and Joe lay there, alone, he realised that Jon was right.
Perhaps it was just as well he hadn’t been able to attract the sheriff’s
attention.
The cold and the abuse grew worse and Joe grew weaker. Jon no longer bothered to
chain him up at night, secure in the knowledge that Joe would be there the next
day. Realising this, Joe played along, pretending to be too weak to work and so
husbanding his strength the best he could. He had planned out his escape route
and all he needed was the chance.
It just a few days later, at the start of the following week. Joe had lost track
of how long he had been a captive; he knew it was weeks, rather than days, but
was unable to put a number to them. He was lying in the cellar when he heard
shouting and gunfire outside.
Struggling to his feet, Joe peered through the grimly glass as best he could,
but he could see very little. However, one thing seemed clear; a posse had found
the gang and was closing in on them. Joe’s heart leapt. He tried to climb onto a
rickety old chair that was standing there, but in his haste, he neglected to
allow for his chains and tumbled headlong to the floor.
Winded but unhurt, Joe scrambled to his feet again, but the battle had moved on
and he couldn’t see anything. Making up his mind to take the chance, Joe made
his way to the cellar stairs and climbed laboriously up them. He tried the door,
but he didn’t really believe it was unlocked and so wasn’t disappointed. He
tugged, pulled and pushed at the door, but it didn’t budge.
Despairing, Joe threw his entire weight against the door and when it gave
unexpectedly, he lost his balance and tumbled headlong down the stairs.
When Joe regained consciousness, there was silence outside. Rising shakily to
his feet, he fumbled his way through the half-light to the stairs and climbed
them once more.
The door lay a little open, just as it had when Joe fell. Cautiously, he crept
out into the hall, trying to minimise the noise his chains made. There was a
hushed air of expectancy about the house. As Joe shuffled towards the door, he
gradually realised that the house was empty.
There were odd stains on the frozen dirt of the yard, and Joe guessed they were
blood stains. He headed over to the barn, steeling himself to find it empty, for
he thought it unlikely that Cochise would still be there. So it was with
overwhelming relief and joy that Joe saw his pinto was still in its stall.
Standing by his horse, Joe could not stop himself shedding some tears. All
through his ordeal, he had refused to allow the tears to come; now he could not
stop them. The horse was warm and alive and Joe now had the chance to go home.
Since it was already dusk, Joe knew it would be foolish to set off that night.
He searched the barn and finally found the tools he was looking for – a hammer
and chisel. Working carefully, he finally managed to prise the leg irons open,
although not without some cost in himself as his hand slipped and struck the
exposed skin of his ankles more than once. The handcuffs defeated his efforts to
remove, although he was able to split the chain, so that his hands were
independent of one another again. It felt distinctly odd, but very nice.
Going back into the house, Joe found a couple of canteens and a little food. In
another room, he found a threadbare blanket, but given the tattered state of his
clothes, it seemed like the height of luxury to the frozen young man.
Taking all the things back to the barn, Joe settled in to spend the night there
beside Cochise. He could not face spending a night in that house, free or not.
Cochise gave off some heat, and the straw was warm after the bare earth floor.
Joe soon fell fast asleep.
Next morning, Joe forced himself to eat a little food before he saddled Cochise.
Then, he had to rest for a while before he could pull himself into the saddle.
Ruefully, he found himself remembering the times when he had vaulted so
effortlessly on board his mount.
It had been weeks since Joe had arrived here, but he had never forgotten in
which direction his home lay. Turning Cochise’s head to the north, he began the
long trek home.
“Pa,” Adam said, in a low voice as he approached his father’s desk. “It’s going
to be Christmas in a couple of days. Do you want Hoss and I to get a tree?”
Looking up lethargically, Ben shrugged. “Do whatever you think is best, son,” he
replied.
There was so much pain in Ben’s voice that Adam’s heart ached for him. The house
had been unusually silent for these last months. None of them had laughed since
Joe vanished and Adam was beginning to think that they would never laugh again.
Why had they quarrelled that last day? Why had he grudged sharing his friend
with Joe? Adam stifled a wince as he remembered the wire they had received,
telling them that Jon’s father had been murdered. There was no one there to
mourn the loss of a son. “We’ll get a tree,” he murmured.
As Adam buckled on his gun belt, he heard slow hoofs entering the yard.
Wondering who it could be, for most sensible people weren’t going anywhere in
the three feet of snow that was lying, Adam opened the door. What he saw caused
him to freeze in place, unable to do anything except stare disbelievingly at the
apparition outside.
It was only as the figure slipped from the back of the pinto to the ground that
Adam was able to break the spell that held him captive. “Pa!” he cried. “Hoss!
Come quick!” He raced outside, only slowing as the horse shied nervously.
Kneeling by the body in the snow, Adam gazed and gazed, unable to believe that
Joe was home.
“What is it?” Ben asked, then was pushing his oldest son aside as he scrambled
to gather his youngest son in his arms, crying his name over and over again,
while tears poured down his face. “Joseph! Oh, Joseph!”
“Send someone for the doctor!” Ben ordered, his voice anguished. After the
initial joy of seeing his lost son home again, Ben had realised that the
scarecrow figure in his arms was burning with fever. As he hoisted the
unconscious youth in his arms, oblivious of the rank smell from his tattered
clothes and body, Ben became aware of just how much weight Joe had lost. His
youngest son had always been slender, but he was positively skeletal now.
The immobility that had gripped Adam disappeared and he hurried off to the
bunkhouse to send one of the men on the tricky journey to town for the doctor.
That accomplished, he led Joe’s horse into the barn and stripped off the saddle.
Cochise was almost as thin as its master, its coat rank and staring and the
bones of its hips sticking out. Adam put a rug over the horse and gave it a
measure of grain before hurrying into the house.
Upstairs, Ben was removing the tattered remains of Joe’s clothes. “Hoss, get
something to remove these,” Ben ordered as he allowed himself to acknowledge the
chains still hanging from Joe’s thin wrists. “Oh, Joe, who did this to you?” he
asked. There was no answer, for Joe was still unconscious.
Becoming aware of someone at his side, Ben looked around to see Hop Sing. The
Oriental looked appalled. “Hop Sing get water for bath,” he announced, for the
rank smell from Joe’s body was overpowering. Joe was caked in grime and had
quite a substantial growth of beard, despite his brothers’ claims he would never
be able to grow one.
It didn’t take long for the bath to arrive, and by then, Adam had arrived to
help Ben carefully lower Joe into the water. Joe mumbled a bit, but didn’t
regain consciousness as they carefully scrubbed the dirt from his body and
washed his hair. Then, with Joe clean at last, they laid him carefully on the
bed to towel him dry.
“He’s been beaten,” Ben muttered. Joe’s stomach was a pattern of differently
coloured bruises, although most of them were fading now. There were smudges
around Joe’s eye that suggested he had had a black eye recently.
“Look at his ankles,” Adam said, in a low voice. The scabs there had barely
healed over and the flesh looked red.
“It looks like he had chains on his legs, too,” Ben replied, in a despairing
tone. “And, Adam, look! His feet!” For Ben had noticed the bruises and cuts.
“What can have happened to him?”
“I don’t know,” Adam answered. “I just don’t know, Pa.” He glanced up as Hoss
came in with a hammer, chisel and block of wood. Adam held Joe’s arms while Hoss
carefully worked to remove the ugly irons. It seemed to Ben to take forever, but
actually took a surprisingly short time.
After that, there was nothing to do but wait for the doctor. Joe seemed slightly
cooler after his bath and Ben managed to get him to swallow some water, although
his eyes never opened and he seemed no nearer the surface. Ben held Joe’s hand,
and constantly urged him to wake up, but there was no movement from the skeletal
figure on the bed.
The light was waning before they heard Doc Martin’s buggy in the yard. Adam rose
to let him in, but Paul was an old friend and knew the way. He and Adam met on
the stairs. “Is it true?” he demanded. “Is it Joe?”
“Yes,” Adam nodded, but he couldn’t return the smile that lit Paul’s face.
“He’s… changed, Paul.”
Sobering, Paul looked intently into Adam’s eyes. “All right,” he replied,
understanding that Adam was warning him to prepare for a shock. He followed the
oldest Cartwright son into Joe’s room, speculating on the ‘changes’ he would
see.
They were indeed shocking. Joe was usually deceptively slender, although
impressively muscled. Now, the flesh had melted off his bones, leaving him
looking like an illustration for a medical examination. His normally
golden-toned skin was grey and ashen and even his hair seemed to have lost its
curl and bounce. Everything about Joe told Paul that this was a boy desperately
sick and although he seldom thought of Joe as a boy anymore, the adjective
seemed somehow appropriate, as Joe looked no more than 16 lying there.
“Good God, Ben, what’s happened to him?” The words were out before Paul could
catch them.
“Paul,” Ben replied, as way of greeting. “We don’t know. Adam saw him falling
from his horse in the yard. He’s been unconscious ever since. But he’s been
beaten, and he was in chains.” Ben’s voice threatened to break and he swallowed
hard. “He was filthy, and so we bathed him. His clothes were in rags.”
“Let me see,” Paul requested and Ben moved slightly to let the physician in, but
he didn’t relinquish his hold of Joe’s hand. Paul’s examination was thorough and
when he finished, he sat back on the bed. He could feel three pairs of eyes on
him. “All right,” he began. “As you can plainly see, Joe is severely
mal-nourished. His feet and ankles are infected and his wrists are chafed raw.
There’s some sign of infection there, too. As you said, he’s been beaten and I
suspect he has some broken ribs that are partially healed. He’s clearly
exhausted. I can’t detect any internal injuries, and no broken bones apart from
those ribs. You’ll have to build him up very slowly. Fluids for the first while,
then start him on soft foods. I’ll give him something for the fever and let’s
hope it breaks soon. I think it’s just been caused by the infection, his poor
condition and mild exposure. His lungs are clear, although his breathing sounds
a little stuffy. I can’t even guess what has happened to him, and frankly, I
don’t want to guess!”
“Will he be all right?” Ben asked, his voice a low throb in its intensity.
“I hope so,” Paul replied, hesitantly, “but I can’t give any guarantees, Ben. It
could be that he’s reached a stage in his starvation where his body will reject
food. We won’t know until we start to feed him. But at any rate, he’s going to
be sick for a long time.” He sighed. “Joe was strong, but all his strength has
gone on staying alive, and now that he’s home again, it might be that he relaxes
too much and can’t regain his strength. I just don’t know at this stage.”
“Just tell us what to do,” Ben ordered. “We’ll get Joe through this.” He stroked
Joe’s arm. “I promise, son, I’ll make you well again.”
Looking at Ben, Paul found there was nothing more he could say. He had seen Ben
dwindling into a shadow of his former self over the last couple of months and
couldn’t bring himself to say anything that would knock away the fragile hope
that Ben had found in his son’s return.
Snow was falling softly as Paul Martin left the Ponderosa that night. He glanced
back over his shoulder as he drove away, looking at the light in the room above
the door. He knew Ben would be keeping vigil over Joe until such times as the
young man regained consciousness or died. He had done everything he could for
Joe, dosing him with quinine until the fever abated somewhat, and bandaging up
the various hurts after cleaning them thoroughly with alcohol.
It was a long, cold journey home that night, but the first thing he did after
stabling his horse was call on Roy Coffee, the sheriff. “Hello, Paul,” Roy
cried, as the doctor shivered his way into the warmth of the jail house. “What
c’n I do fer ya?”
“Well, nothing, really,” Paul replied, smiling slightly. “I came to tell you
that Joe Cartwright is home.”
“Joe?” Roy echoed, joyfully. “When? Where’s he been?”
“He arrived home early this afternoon, but that’s all we know, Roy,” Paul
explained. “He’s sick, Roy; very sick. He’s like a skeleton and he’s running a
pretty good fever. I’m not sure he’ll make it.”
Roy’s genial face was a mask of sorrow as he absorbed the news. Like Paul, he
had known Joe since ‘before he was born’. “I’ll look out there come mornin’,” he
muttered. “That’s real sad, Paul, real sad.”
“I know,” Paul agreed, before he headed off for his own home and bed. But it was
a long time before he slept that night and both he and Roy prayed fervently for
Joe to be spared.
Joe slept throughout the night, barely moving at all. Ben’s eyes were burning
when dawn finally broke, for he had resisted all Adam’s efforts to make him go
to bed. It was as if he feared Joe would die if he was not there to keep urging
his son to live. Joe’s fever had broken during the night in a drenching sweat
and Ben had accepted Adam’s help to change the bedding. Cradling Joe in his
arms, Ben thought how frail his son felt, his every bone threatening to poke
through his paper-thin skin. When Joe was settled into fresh bedding again, he
had slipped into a deeper slumber.
A huge sigh from the bed dragged Ben’s eyelids open again. Looking at Joe, he
saw his son was mumbling slightly and rolling his head around. “Joe?” he asked
tentatively. His voice was hoarse from the hours of talking, keeping Joe
anchored to this world. “Joe, can you hear me, son?”
Another sigh shook the frail man on the bed and then Joe’s eyes opened. For a
moment, he gazed at the ceiling in disbelief, then as Ben spoke his name once
more, he swivelled his gaze round to his father’s face. Green eyes met brown and
locked for an endless moment, when neither of them could speak. Then tears
mounted in Joe’s green eyes and silently overflowed.
“Joe?” Ben questioned, feeling corresponding moisture forming in his own eyes.
“Are you in pain?”
After a moment, Joe shook his head slowly. “Pa?” he whispered. He raised his
hand slightly and glanced down to make sure that the hand he could feel in his
was actually there. He had suffered many hallucinations on the trail home. “Is
that really you, Pa?”
“It’s really me, Joe,” Ben assured him. “Oh, Joe, we thought you were dead.” The
tears broke and spilled down Ben’s cheeks. “What happened to you?” A look of
distress flitted across Joe’s face and Ben hurried to soothe him. “It doesn’t
matter,” he comforted him. “Joe, it doesn’t matter.”
“How did I get here?” Joe asked.
“Don’t you remember?” Ben asked. “You rode into the yard yesterday afternoon,
Joe. You passed out and you’ve been asleep ever since.”
“I sort of remember riding home,” Joe whispered. He looked utterly exhausted and
defeated. “But I don’t remember getting here.”
“It doesn’t matter now,” Ben repeated. “You’re home at last.” A thought occurred
to Ben and he asked, “Joe, what about Jon?”
A cry escaped Joe’s lips and he made an effort to move. But his body didn’t have
the strength to allow that and he barely twitched. “He’s not here, is he?” Joe
asked urgently. His eyes were huge in his thin face. “Pa, please, Jon’s not
here, is he?”
“No, Joe, he’s not here,” Ben replied, perplexed by his son’s behaviour. It was
almost as though Joe was afraid of Jon, yet they had been friends. “He hasn’t
been seen since you disappeared.”
Gradually, Joe’s tense muscles relaxed, but his eyes were still riveted to
Ben’s. “I can’t…” Joe tore his eyes away as the memories of the past 8 weeks
swept through him. “Pa, I can’t.”
“It’s all right, son,” Ben soothed. “You don’t have to tell us until you’re
ready.” Nodding in relief, Joe raised a hand weakly to wipe the tears from his
face. The expression when he felt the beard on his face was comical. Ben smiled.
“We bathed you, Joe, but decided to leave shaving until you were awake.”
“Now, please,” Joe urged. “Pa, now!” He was quite vehement, despite the
quietness of his voice.
“As soon as Hop Sing can heat the water,” Ben assured him. “It’s very early,
Joe. You’ve got to give us time to get organised.” He smiled to reassure his son
even more. “Now, what would you like to eat?”
“I’m allowed to eat?” Joe asked, amazement clear in his tones.
“Of course you are,” Ben avowed stoutly, denying the fear those words set up in
his heart. “But I’m afraid that you’re restricted to fluids just now. So how
about some broth? Hop Sing made up some beef broth for you last night.” Seeing
the uncertain look on Joe’s face, Ben asked, “Were you not allowed to eat?”
Slowly, Joe fought down the memories again and shook his head. “Not often,” he
replied, and the pain in his voice tore at Ben’s heart. How could anyone treat
another human being like that? How could anyone treat his son like that?
Swallowing down the tears and the outrage, Ben said, “Well, you can eat what you
like here, Joe. You know that.”
“All right,” Joe replied. “I’ll eat the broth.” He closed his eyes and slipped
into slumber again without meaning to, his small reserve of strength already
exhausted.
Looking at Joe sadly, Ben rose to organise the broth and water to shave his son.
His heart ached for all that Joe had been through, even though he knew that
there were more revelations to come. Somehow, Jon was all mixed up with it,
although Ben could not guess how.
Hoss was the person who had the honour of shaving Joe. Adam was allowed to feed
him small sips of the nourishing broth Hop Sing had made the night before, while
Ben had something to eat and a couple of hours sleep. By the time Joe was once
more clean-shaven, he was worn out and more than ready to sleep again. Adam
looked ruefully at the broth, thinking that the six small sips weren’t enough to
keep a bird alive, but Paul had explained to them the night before that Joe’s
stomach had shrunk quite drastically, and that he might find it very difficult
to keep anything down. The fact that he had kept down that tiny amount was
encouraging, Adam felt.
“Will you sit with him, Hoss?” Adam whispered.
“Sure,” Hoss agreed. He frowned slightly at Adam. “Where’re you goin’?”
Pulling Hoss away from the bed so that they didn’t disturb Joe, Adam whispered,
“I’m going to get a tree. Later, when Pa is sitting with Joe again, you and I
can decorate it, so that when we bring Joe down for Christmas, its there to
cheer him up.”
For a moment, a smile spilt Hoss’ face, then it dimmed to a frown. “What if he
ain’t up ta gittin’ up fer Christmas?”
Frowning back, Adam scolded, “Don’t go borrowing trouble! He’ll be able to sit
downstairs for his presents, if nothing else.” Adam’s eyes opened wide.
“Presents! We don’t have any!” For a moment, Adam’s eyes were drawn back to the
still figure on the bed. “I’ll go into town, too. Will you be all right alone
with him?”
“Naw,” Hoss replied, sarcastically. “I don’ think I’m able ta pick him up,
Adam.”
“Ha ha!” Adam sneered back, then smiled. “I’m sorry; I’m just worried about
him.”
“We’re all worried about him,” Hoss corrected him gently. “You’re feelin’ guilty
‘cos ya quarrelled afore he disappeared. It weren’t none o’ yore doin’, Adam.
And Joe don’ hold nothin’ agin ya.”
Blue eyes locked with brown, and love and understanding poured from one to the
other. “Perhaps,” Adam murmured, breaking the eye contact. He often had the
impression that Hoss could see deep into his soul, especially when he was
troubled, and his younger brother often knew exactly what to say to help him
feel better. “But I still want to spoil him a bit now he’s home.”
Patting Adam heavily on the shoulder, Hoss nodded his understanding. “Sometimes
ya c’n be real stuck-up, Adam,” he teased. “An’ other times yer just plain
nice!”
Grinning, Adam retorted, “Flattery will get you nowhere!”
The ride to town took longer than usual, thanks to the snow, but at least the
sun was shining and Adam didn’t have to fear being caught in a blizzard. As he
dismounted outside the store, he was hailed from across the street. “Adam!”
Turning, Adam saw Roy Coffee coming towards him. He paused, waiting for the
sheriff to negotiate the icy street. “Morning, Roy,” he replied. “Did you hear
that Joe is home?”
“Sure did,” Roy answered. “Paul come by an’ tol’ me last night. How is the boy?”
“Not too good,” Adam answered truthfully. “But he was able to eat a little this
morning, so we’re taking that as a good sign.”
“He say what happened to him yet?” Roy asked.
“Pa tried asking him when he wore up, but he couldn’t say, Roy.” Adam bit his
lip. “He’s very weak, Roy. He can barely move without help and he’s so thin…”
Adam’s voice trailed off as he envisaged his younger brother’s skeletal frame
again. Shaking his head to dispel the image, he concluded, “Pa says he became
very upset when he was asked what happened, so Pa decided to leave it until he’s
feeling stronger.”
“I suppose that’s sensible,” Roy admitted, although his tone told a different
tale. From a lawman’s point of view, Roy wanted to know now what had happened,
so he could pursue the person or people who had done this to Joe and get them
behind bars. “I intended ta look out this mornin’, Adam, but I was real busy. I
might come out later, if that’s all right.”
“Of course,” Adam replied, politely. “But don’t expect too much of Joe, Roy.
You’ll understand when you see him.” He went on into the store.
It was amazing how quickly word of Joe’s arrival home had spread through the
town. A number of people stopped Adam to ask after Joe with genuine concern.
Adam was touched that so many people held his brother in such affection. He was
also amused at the number of young women who asked after his brother.
The supplies for Christmas dinner had already been secured, but Adam wasn’t
after food, although he bought a few sweets to tempt Joe’s appetite. He bought
Joe some new clothes, replacing his brother’s favourite green jacket with an
identical one. A new warm dressing gown for him to wear on Christmas morning and
slippers – probably too large for day to day wear, but that would slip on over
the bandages on Joe’s feet. He bought a new holster and gun, since Joe’s ones
were missing. To top it off, he bought a pile of dime novels. Personally, he
hated them, but he knew Joe liked them, and they were light enough reading for
someone who was so sick.
To conclude his shopping, he bought a new pipe and books for Ben and a coat for
Hoss, who had been wearing the same old winter coat for many years. Happy with
his purchases, he turned his horse for home.
A couple of hours sleep had done Ben more good that morning than all the
previous nights had. He went into Joe’s room with a lighter step than of late.
Hoss was sitting by Joe’s bed, while the younger man slept. Pausing, Ben was
struck afresh by the thinness of Joe’s face. His skin seemed to be less ashen
than the previous day, but in no way could it be said that Joe’s colour was
good.
“How is he?” Ben whispered, crossing to the bed and stroking Joe’s curls gently.
“A mite hot,” Hoss replied, “but he ate a little bit this mornin’. He’s bin
asleep ever since.”
“I’ll sit with him now,” Ben said. “Why don’t you have a break?” he urged.
“Where’s Adam?”
Grinning Hoss relinquished the chair to his father. “He went into town to buy
p-r-e-s-e-n-t-s for someone.” He winked massively at Ben, delighted with his
ploy of spelling out the word in case Joe woke up. It had quite escaped his
notice that Joe was more than able to spell.
“Oh, I see,” Ben replied, gravely, fighting not to laugh out loud. There were
times when Hoss was just like a little boy and it showed especially around
Christmas time. The big man just loved giving presents and he and Joe were very
alike in this. Joe loved presents – giving and receiving.
“He’s gonna git the tree, too,” Hoss continued. “Him an’ me’ll decorate it
later.”
“Thank you, son,” Ben replied, smiling. “We have something to celebrate this
year.”
“We sure do,” Hoss agreed, huskily.
tried to pull himself up slightly, but his body still wasn’t
ready to allow him to do that.
“Hi there,” Ben replied, smiling. “How do you feel?” Joe’s temperature had
dropped again a while before and he was currently cool to the touch.
“Tired,” Joe admitted. He frowned. “Pa, I need to go.”
“All right, son,” Ben replied, understanding his son’s embarrassment. He pulled
out the chamber pot and assisted Joe in using it. Then he settled Joe back into
bed, took away the pot and when he came back into the room, he saw that Joe’s
eyes were still open. “Hop Sing is bringing up some broth for you,” he told Joe
gently. “Dr Martin says you have to try and eat every time you’re awake.” He
raised his hand to stroke Joe’s head and was horrified when Joe flinched away
from him. “Joe? What’s wrong?”
“Nothing, I…” Joe looked away, embarrassed afresh. “I thought you were going to
hit me,” he admitted, in a low voice.
“But, Joe, I wouldn’t!” Ben denied, appalled. He sat down on the edge of the bed
and looked into his son’s face.
“I know that,” Joe replied. “But you see…” He paused to try and think how best
to say this. Raising sorrowful eyes to his father’s, he blurted, “Jon used to
hit me all the time.”
“Jon?” Ben echoed. “Jon beat you?”
“Yes,” Joe replied, the relief of finally telling overwhelming him. He could
tell from Ben’s voice that his father believed him. He licked his dry lips, not
liking to ask for water, but Ben could read the signs, and offered his son a
drink, tenderly holding his head while Joe slowly sipped. “Thanks, Pa,” he
whispered and closed his eyes for a minute.
It was obvious when Joe opened them again that he had fallen asleep. He could
smell something delicious and turned his head slowly to see a steaming bowl of
broth on the bedside table. It was about as far away as the moon at that moment,
and there was no one in the room with him. For an instant, Joe panicked,
remembering how he had been chained after the first few days with Jon and
fearing that he had been chained while he slept. Despite finding himself still
free, Joe could not quell the fear that they had gone to get chains for him
again.
But just as the panic was beginning to overwhelm Joe, the door opened and Ben
came in. He saw at once how distressed Joe was and hurried over to reassure him.
“I’m sorry, son, I just stepped out for a minute to ask Hop Sing for something.
I didn’t mean to leave you alone.”
Blinking back tears, Joe couldn’t say anything for a minute. “Can I have some of
that?” he asked, gesturing to the bowl.
“Of course you can,” Ben replied. “It’s for you.” He helped Joe into a sitting
position, and propped him up with lots of pillows. Then slowly, he fed Joe the
broth, relieved that his son had more than the few sips Adam had reported him
taking that morning, but wishing that Joe had been able to eat more than just
half a bowl.
“I’m tired,” Joe complained, as he lay down again. He snagged Ben’s sleeve. “Pa,
you weren’t asking Hop Sing to get…” he swallowed convulsively and tears filled
his eyes. “To get chains?”
“Of course not, Joe!” Ben declared. He gathered his son into his arms. “Joe this
is your home; nothing like that will ever happen to you here, I promise. You can
eat and drink what you like, and no one will chain you up. You have to try and
hold on to those thoughts, son, and tell yourself you’re free.”
“I’ll try,” Joe promised. He leaned his curly head against Ben’s shoulder and
was soon asleep. For a long time, Ben just sat there, holding him.
As the hand reached for the chains on his wrists, Joe jerked awake to find
himself safe in his own bed, drenched in a cold sweat. Adam was sitting by the
bed reading, and as Joe gasped, he glanced up, immediately putting aside the
book to tend to Joe’s needs. “What is it, Joe?” he asked, seeing the dilated
pupils, and hearing Joe’s panting breath. “A bad dream?”
Slowly relaxing, Joe nodded. “Yes,” he panted. He glanced round the room.
“Where’s Pa?”
“He’s talking to Roy Coffee and Dr Martin downstairs,” Adam replied. “He’ll be
back in a minute, with something for you to eat.” Taking a cloth, he wiped the
sweat from Joe’s brow. “Can I get you anything?”
“A drink, please?” Joe asked.
Since Ben had told both Adam and Hoss that Joe had been deliberately starved,
Adam did not act as though there was anything odd about the way Joe asked for a
drink. “You can have as much water as you like, buddy,” he assured Joe and tried
not to notice the way Joe flinched as his hand went past Joe’s face. He was
horrified by what had happened to Joe. After Joe was finished, Adam went to the
door and called to Ben that Joe was awake.
A few minutes later, Ben and Hoss arrived with Roy and Paul. Paul went over to
the bed first and began to check Joe over, asking if he had any pain and making
sure the infection in his feet was dying back. The fact that Joe’s fever had
broken told him that it had, but he wanted to be absolutely certain. “How do
your ribs feel?” Paul asked, feeling gently.
Joe shrugged. “Like they’ve felt for ages,” he responded, dully.
“And how is that?” Paul persisted. “Sore? Sharp, stabbing pains? A grinding
ache? What?”
“They ache,” Joe agreed. “But no more than they have for a long time.”
“All right,” Paul nodded. “Ben, you can feed him now. I have to say, I’m much
happier about his condition than I was last night. It’s going to take a long
time, but I think this lad of yours is going to get better!”
“C’n I talk ta him now?” Roy asked.
“Only after he’s eaten and only if he feels up to it,” Paul cautioned. “He’s
been through a lot.”
“I c’n see that,” Roy agreed, for the first sight of Joe had shocked him to the
core.
Again, Joe ate about half a bowl of broth. Ben put aside the rest and took Joe’s
hand. “Joe, Roy wants to ask you some questions. Do you think you can tell him
what happened? It doesn’t matter if you can’t.”
Sighing deeply, Joe wondered if he could bring himself to tell anyone about what
had happened to him .He didn’t really want to, yet the words were about bursting
out of him. He felt the reassuring warmth of Ben’s hand on his arm and looked up
into those compassionate brown eyes that told Joe he was loved very much. “All
right,” Joe sighed.
“Hoss and I will leave,” Adam offered, but Joe shook his head.
“You might as well stay and hear it from me,” he told them. “Jon and I left to
get the coach,” he began, his voice thin and frail.
Slowly, Joe told of meeting Jon’s gang, and of being held prisoner while they
journeyed into Arizona. His voice faltered as he told of the deliberate
starvation and the chains, but Ben’s hand tightened on his arm to remind Joe
that he wasn’t alone any more, and Joe’s voice gained strength as he explained
about being their servant, and then the final gun battle with the sheriff’s men.
“I knocked myself out when I fell down the stairs,” he concluded. “When I came
too, there was nobody there. The posse hadn’t checked the place very well,
because Cochise was still in the barn. I managed to get the leg irons off, but I
couldn’t remove the handcuffs. Next morning, I got onto Cochise and rode home. I
ran out of food on the way home, but it didn’t matter, because I couldn’t keep
it down anyway.”
“It was overloading your stomach,” Paul explained. “That’s why you’re living on
broth right now.”
“Are you sure it was a posse and not another gang?” Roy asked, as Ben
unashamedly wiped the tears from his face. He would have given everything he
owned to spare Joe the ordeal he had gone through.
“No, I’m not sure,” Joe admitted. “It just seemed to me that it had to be a
posse.” He yawned suddenly and his eyelids dropped. “I’m tired.” The catharsis
of telling his story had drained him emotionally, as well as physically and he
slipped quietly into sleep.
Glancing round, Ben saw that Adam had his hand on Hoss’ shoulder and the big man
was wiping away tears. Adam’s eyes were glittering unnaturally, but he wouldn’t
allow the tears to fall where others could see it. He would shed his tears
alone, if at all. Ben could wish it were otherwise, but there was nothing he
could do about it.
“I’ll find out fer sure, Ben,” Roy whispered, patting his friend’s shoulder.
“I’ll let ya know when I know.”
“Thanks,” Ben replied. He looked back at Joe as Paul began to feel gently round
his head. “What are you looking for?” he asked.
“I was just checking to make sure I didn’t miss any lumps on Joe’s head. I
didn’t think I had, but with Joe saying he’d knocked himself out, I thought I’d
just double check.” Apparently satisfied, he straightened. “No, he’s fine. And I
meant what I said earlier. I do think he’ll be all right, but it will be months
before he regains that lost weight. I think, now his feet are on the mend, that
you ought to try and get him out of bed and doing a little walking as soon as
possible. If he lies there too long, he’ll become bed-bound.”
“Now?” Ben asked, astonished, for Joe could still not turn himself in bed.
“No, give him another couple of days. By then, he should have gained enough
strength to stay awake longer. It will be incredibly difficult for him, Ben. I
don’t know how he managed to get home, despite his horse! But you’ll see an
improvement in time. If there’s anything worrying you, just call me.” Paul
smiled at them and left.
As Adam carried on making preparations for Christmas, Ben continued to sit with
Joe, making sure he had everything he wanted. Joe had said no more about his
ordeal, but he was having fewer nightmares, so Ben said nothing, either. Joe
soon became used to the routine. Whenever he woke, he was given something to
eat, and by the end of three days, he was feeling a bit better and was able to
stay awake for longer. As Ben noticed this, he enlisted Hoss’ help to get Joe
onto his feet again. The first time, Joe could only take a few shuffling steps
before he slumped, exhausted, between father and brother, but later he was able
to try again and took a few more steps this time.
“Pa, how long was I gone?” Joe asked, as he lay thankfully back on the bed. His
face glowed with triumph, for he had managed to walk all the way across his room
and back, with only Hoss helping him.
“Eight weeks,” Ben replied, watching Joe closely to see his reaction.
“Eight weeks?” Joe repeated, stunned. The new colour drained from his face as he
tried to assimilate this information. “I… I knew it had been weeks, but… I never
thought that long.” Anguish filled his eyes as he looked at Ben despairingly.
“You must have thought I was dead,” he whispered, stricken with the knowledge.
“We didn’t give up hope,” Ben told him. “We looked everywhere for you, Joe, you
must believe that. And when we realised that you were really gone, we never gave
up hoping you would somehow come back to us. We knew that you wouldn’t go off
like that, with no word, even after quarrelling with Adam.”
“Did I?” Joe asked. “Oh, yes, so we did. I’d forgotten.” He raised his eyes to
his father’s again. “I didn’t ask… I didn’t think… Adam. Oh, Pa, is Adam all
right?”
“Yes, of course Adam is all right,” Ben replied, perplexed. “You saw him this
morning, Joe.”
“Oh, I know that, but I meant…” Joe took a deep breath and put his thoughts into
order. “I never thought what effect telling my story would have on Adam. Jon was
his friend, Pa and I just blurted it all out. Adam must be so hurt.”
“Yes, he is,” Ben agreed. “Hurt for you, that a friend of his could do such a
thing.” Ben rubbed Joe’s arm gently. This sudden concern for others was a sign,
to Ben, that Joe was on the mend. He could spare time to think of others, not
just his own survival. “Did you think Adam cared more for Jon than for you?”
“No, of course not,” Joe replied. “But I didn’t think of how it would make him
feel when I told you. Why didn’t I think of it?”
“You were pretty sick, Joe,” Ben told him. “You still are, but you are on the
mend. Then, you told us to get it off your mind and to make us go away.” He
smiled at the look on Joe’s face. “I know you didn’t think of it that way, but
that’s how it was. You needed rest and your sub-conscious told you that the best
way to get rest was to get rid of your audience and the best way to do that,” he
grinned, “was to tell the story. That’s why you didn’t think of Adam. He
understands that. After all, he hasn’t been treating you any differently, has
he?”
“No,” Joe admitted. “Pa, could I talk to Adam, please?”
“Of course,” Ben agreed. He had yet to say no to anything Joe really wanted.
Smiling at his son again, Ben rose and went to fetch Adam.
Although he had wanted to talk to Adam and clear the air between them, Joe found
it surprisingly hard to begin. He suddenly couldn’t meet his brother’s eyes. “I
wanted to apologise for telling you about Jon like that,” he blurted. “I didn’t
mean to. I didn’t want to hurt you. I know he was your friend.”
“I thought so while he was here,” Adam agreed. “But he stopped being my friend
the moment he took you prisoner, Joe.”
Looking up, Joe saw that Adam meant every word. “Really?” he asked, still
unwilling to believe that absolution could come so easily. “We quarrelled,
although I don’t really remember too well. I thought… well, to be honest, I
don’t know what I thought.” Joe immediately contradicted himself, but Adam
didn’t interrupt as he could see how important this was to Joe. “I thought you
might hate me for not telling you about Jon when we were alone. But I didn’t
really think about that then.”
“Joe.” Adam took a deep breath. He found it difficult, always, to say what was
in his heart. But this mattered too much for him to keep it private. “As long as
I have my brothers, it doesn’t matter if I don’t have any other friends. A
friend could never come before you, or Hoss. I…” he paused and bit his lip.
Joe’s green eyes never wavered from his face. Finally, the difficult, important
words came. “I love you, Joe.”
Tears spilled down Joe’s face as he reached for his brother. For no matter how
they quarrelled, they were still brothers and this bond mattered more than
anything. Joe knew how difficult it was for Adam to tell them what was in his
heart and he felt the last burden of his captivity lifting with those precious
words. “Thank you,” he whispered. “And I love you, Adam.” He smiled through his
tears. “You stubborn Yankee Granite head!”
The next afternoon, December 24th, Christmas Eve, Roy Coffee arrived at the
Ponderosa through a light dusting of snow. He gratefully accepted coffee to thaw
out and told the Cartwrights his news. “That weren’t a posse Joe saw, Ben. It
were another gang. Jon had moved into their area, and there was a fight. The
other gang, led by someone called Big Lem, took Jon and the rest and hanged ‘em
all from the nearest trees. Joe were downright lucky that they never found him.”
“He was indeed,” Ben murmured.
“Big Lem was caught the other day robbin’ a bank. He told o’ the killings afore
he died from the bullet the sheriff had put in him.” He shook his head. “Well,
that’s the mystery solved, Ben. How’s the boy doin’? Paul says he’s improvin’.”
“Yes, he’s doing much better,” Ben replied. “He doesn’t know this, but we’re
bringing him downstairs for Christmas tomorrow.”
“That’s right good ta hear,” Roy agreed. “Merry Christmas, folks.”
“And to you,” Ben returned.
Later that night, Ben told Joe what Roy had said, and Joe simply nodded. But Ben could see the last lingering doubts vanishing from Joe’s eyes.
“Good morning,” Ben said, gently, as Joe wakened the next day. “Merry Christmas,
son.”
“Huh?” Joe responded. “Christmas? Is it Christmas already?”
“Sure is!” carolled Hoss from behind Ben. “Here’s yer breakfast.” He plunked a
tray with a scrambled egg on it onto Joe’s lap. It was the first solid food he
had had since returning home. He ate it slowly, enjoying every bite. He couldn’t
remember anything ever tasting so good.
“Here you go, Joe,” Adam smiled and dropped two packages onto Joe’s lap.
“For me?”
“Open them!” Adam urged and Joe did so, drawing out the dressing gown and
slippers.
“Are these a joke?” Joe demanded, his eyes flashing, as he held up one large
slipper. “They’d fit Hoss!”
“Sure would,” Adam agreed, cheerfully. “But they also fit over those bandages.
You’re coming downstairs, so get those things on!”
Despite Joe’s protests, he was soon warmly wrapped in the dressing gown and
slippers and walked out of his room before his strength began to give out. Hoss
carried him downstairs, where he was tenderly tucked up on the sofa.
“The tree looks great,” Joe whispered as he looked at it with tear-filled eyes.
He was suddenly overcome with emotion. He hadn’t know it was Christmas.
Presents were handed out and Joe was overwhelmed by the things he received.
Looking at it all, piled on his legs, while Adam, Hoss and Ben opened their
parcels from each other, he could hardly believe it. “But, I don’t have anything
to give to you,” he complained. Tears were standing in his eyes again.
“We have our gift from you, Joe,” Ben replied, gently. Seeing the
non-comprehension on Joe’s face he added, “All we wanted was for you to come
home for Christmas. We got our gift, and we don’t need anything else.”
Merry Christmas.
The End