When Will I See You Again?
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Prologue
The young man opened one eye and gazed lazily at the window. Judging from
the angle of the sun, it was already late afternoon.
“It’s getting late –I’ve got to go, honey,” he whispered, dropping a kiss onto
the girl’s bare shoulder, as she moaned sleepily and twisted around to stare
beseechingly at him.
“Don’t go – please? Can’t you stay here with me for once?”
Isabella’s voice was like molten honey and it was hard to resist her pleas,
especially when her eyes beseeched him like that and her tousled hair did little
to disguise the lush curves of her body, but he forced himself to get out of bed
and began shrugging on his clothes. Propped up on her elbows, the girl watched
him silently, admiring the strong muscles, the way his hair curled at the nape
of his neck – she could never tire of watching him.
“When will I see you again?” Isabella looked incredibly vulnerable, sitting
upright and clutching the sheets around herself, her apprehension making her
suddenly modest.
“Soon, sweetheart, real soon,” he reassured her, bending down and kissing her
tenderly on the forehead, before rushing out of the room, running down the
stairs and back into his real life.
Exiting onto the busy, Boston street, Adam Cartwright breathed a sigh of relief
and then strolled slowly back to college, tipping his hat and smiling roguishly
at two fetching young girls who rode past in an open carriage with their mother
and received identical squeals of delight at his gallantry. Replacing his hat at
a jaunty angle, he set off towards his college, never thinking to look up
towards the upper storey window of a dilapidated house, where a young girl, clad
only in a threadbare robe, stood watching him wistfully. He was young, he was
far from home and Adam was having the time of his life.
Chapter One
The sound of swift hoof beats made Ben raise his head and furrow his brow in
displeasure as Joe rode into the yard at full tilt. Even from a distance he
could see how Joe’s eyes sparkled with mischief and a broad grin displayed a
flash of white teeth in his tanned face.
“One of these days,” Ben murmured grimly, rising to his feet, about to shout out
a reprimand. A sudden flash of memory stilled his tongue, as he remembered one
fateful day when Joe had misjudged his headlong rush home and had nearly broken
his neck in the process, just as his mother had, in almost the very same place.
The boy is so like his dear mother, Ben thought, so very like Marie, in both
looks and personality.
In many ways, he often felt that his sons resembled their mothers more closely
than they did himself. Adam – with his calm, reserved, phlegmatic exterior and
reluctance to share his inner soul with his family; Hoss, with his ready smile
and wide, open heart, always ready to help anyone or anything that crossed his
path. And Joe! Joe with his exuberance, his love of life, his wholehearted and
ready acceptance of any challenge that crossed his path. All very different,
which was as it should be. Ben prided himself in having raised three
independent, individual sons and celebrated their differences. No matter what,
Ben knew he would not change a single fibre of any of his boys.
Boys! Now, there was an irony. Joe was in his mid-twenties, which meant that
Adam had to be… Ben paused for a moment, doing the arithmetic in his head – Adam
was nearly forty! It scarcely seemed possible that he had a middle-aged son.
Surely he wasn’t old enough for that? Where had all the years gone?
“Hi Pa!” Joe grinned broadly, his insouciant smile flashing out brightly. “Guess
what was waiting for me in town?” Without waiting for an answer, he fished
inside his jacket and pulled out an envelope. “A letter from Adam!” he said,
waving it with a dramatic flourish before leaning down and dropping it into his
father’s waiting hands.
Ben received the missive gratefully, smiling back up at his youngest son, the
child he had thought he would never see and was unable to utter a single word of
reproach. Joe lives life fully and that is way things should be, even if he did
turn my hair snow white! Ben thought fondly. Restraining his whole-hearted
approach to life would be like breaking all the spirit out of a horse.
Joe caught the wistful look in his father’s eyes and instantly regretted his
impetuous arrival. He knew how much his father worried about him. Although he
did his best to stand back and allow Joe to make his own mistakes, Ben was never
quite able to suppress his concerns. That was part of being a parent – letting
your precious child venture forth into the world, yet longing to keep him safe
at home, where you could protect him. No matter how hard he tried, Ben was never
quite able to let go of Joe in the same way he had relinquished Adam and Hoss.
Joe knew this and although he sometimes chafed against his father’s concerns, he
knew they were born out of love.
“Sorry, Pa – I didn’t think. I was so fired-up with excitement when I saw the
letter…” Joes voice trailed off uncomfortably, for Ben Cartwright still had the
ability to reduce his adult sons to bashful boyhood with a single look. It
seemed just yesterday that he had sat at the table and surveyed two small boys,
eagerly demolishing the rare treat of ice cream…
Chapter Two
Ben sat back in his chair with a sigh of utter contentment and watched as Adam
and Hoss scooped up the ice cream with eager relish. He caught Marie’s glance
and gave an almost imperceptible nod. He had held off long enough, but now the
time was exactly right.
“Boys?” For once his normally commanding and confident voice held a note of
uncertainty. “Your mother and I have something to tell you.” Apprehension
coloured his words and transmitted his nervousness to his family.
Dark-eyed Adam darted a resentful look at his stepmother, still unreconciled to
the term “Mother”. He felt a certain deliciously guilty satisfaction watching
her squirm uncomfortably in her seat under his steady gaze.
“Yes Pa?” he replied sweetly, as Hoss scraped around in his bowl, intent on
retrieving every last morsel of ice cream, internally debating if he should
ditch the spoon and just use his tongue instead.
Ben cleared his throat and wondered why he found it so difficult to meet his
eldest son’s eyes. “We, that is, your mother and I… well…” He cast a pleading
look at his wife, who coloured as prettily as a peony rose, while giving an
almost imperceptible shake of her head. Realising he was going to have to
continue without her help, Ben took a deep breath and managed to continue,
albeit with some difficulty.
“We’re going to have a baby! You boys are going to have a little brother or
sister!” Having delivered the news, Ben sat back in his chair and exhaled in
relief, watching keenly as the boys digested the news.
“Really?” Hoss squealed. “I’m gonna be a big brother, just like Adam?”
Marie nodded and opened her arms wide, enveloping the child in a warm embrace.
Over the top of his sandy head, she watched Adam carefully; aware of how
difficult this news must be for him to digest.
“ A baby?” Adam murmured in wonder. He was nearly twelve – he knew what that
meant. Just this a few weeks ago, Pa had taken him for a long ride and explained
a whole lot of things. He felt embarrassed just thinking about what must have
taken place… But a baby! The first baby born on the Ponderosa – that really was
something! The thought pushed Adam’s embarrassment to the back of his mind.
“When?” he asked eagerly. “When will the baby be born?” The words tumbled out in
excitement and Marie felt a sense of peace suffuse her whole being as she
observed the delighted sparkle in her stepson’s eyes and heard the exuberance in
his voice.
“In the summer,” she replied and revelled in the love that shone out from Ben’s
eyes. They had hoped, prayed and planned for this child, for this most wanted
child and now, now that the time for worry was finally past, her only worries
were as to how her stepsons would take the news. Their joyous reactions
convinced her that her fears were unfounded, that she was truly a part of the
family and at last Marie felt she could relax and enjoy her pregnancy.
There was so much to do – a room to be prepared in readiness for the baby, a
cradle to be made and a myriad of tiny garments to be lovingly fashioned from
the finest, softest cloth she could find. Marie sat back in her chair, lifting
her eyes from a delicate chain of forget-me-nots she was embroidering around the
neck of a small dress, folded her hands across her stomach and let her thoughts
drift pleasantly into dreams of the future, dreams where she and Ben would sit
on the porch and watch their children frolic contentedly, happy and healthy and
living life to the full.
The dark days of the past were pushed to the corners of her mind, for although
her sorrows were still present, their pain was diminished and put into
perspective. The memory of her long-dead baby and the nightmarish disintegration
of her first marriage would always be with her; indeed they had made her the
woman she was. Marie had suffered greatly during her life, but now there was a
bright, shining future to look forward to, with the man she loved by her side
and the baby she craved in her arms. Life seemed very sweet indeed and Marie
gave heartfelt thanks for all her blessings.
“What are babies like, Adam?” Hoss asked, as he helped his
brother to milk the cow.
“Little!” Adam said prosaically. “Little and squirmy and noisy!” He grinned at
Hoss, who stood beside the milking stool, his blue eyes wide with curiosity.
“But cute with it. I can remember holding you and feeling there wasn’t anything
I wouldn’t do to protect you.”
It took Hoss a moment to unscramble this complicated sentence. “You loved me
right from the start?” he queried, furrowing his brow.
Adam nodded. “Before you were born, even. Just like I love this baby, even if it
isn’t here yet.”
Hoss looked worried. “But I don’t know how to be a big brother!” he exclaimed.
“Will you help me, Adam?”
“Of course I will.” Adam smiled reassuringly at his brother. “Don’t worry, Hoss
– you don’t need to be taught to how to love – it comes from your heart. Love
just blossoms forth and we can’t do anything about it. Just wait until the baby
is born – you’ll see. Once you hold the baby, why - all of a sudden, this love
pours out and you’ll wonder where it came from and how you ever lived before the
baby was born.”
At the back of the barn, standing half-hidden in the shadows, Ben Cartwright had
to blink several times in succession and felt an incredible surge of pride
towards his eldest son.
It was difficult for Marie to sleep at nights – the warmth of early summer, the
activity of the baby and the pressure on her bladder all contributed to ensure
that she slept only in short bursts. She spent many hours in the calm solitude
of the night, staring up at the stars and dreaming of the day when she would
hold her baby in her arms and enfold it in love. Eventually, her eyes would grow
heavy and she would return to bed, giving her stomach a final, loving pat and
whispering “Dors bien, mon enfant”.
And then it happened. Suddenly, without warning, the baby
stopped moving and Marie felt a part of her die along with the infant. She clung
frantically onto her hopes and dreams, refusing to accept the inevitable, even
when Paul Martin sat on the side of her bed and explained, in slow, halting
tones, even when Ben leant against the wall, unable to speak, but with tears
rolling down his face.
They sent the boys away, as far away as possible, to stay with friends, so that
they would not hear Marie’s cries of anguish as she laboured long and hard to
painfully deliver her dead baby. Such a perfect little baby, but one that would
never breathe or even open its eyes, a baby that would never suckle at her
breast or feel the painful fervour of her love.
Marie held her child, swaddled in a blanket, yet cold and unresponsive. She
looked down at the tiny face, pinched and waxen, but still beautiful, pure and
unsullied. There were no answers, no reasons, no comfort that anyone could give
her. Her love was as boundless as the ocean but it thundered fruitlessly upon
deserted shores. Ben watched in terror as his wife seemed to slip away between
his fingers like sand in an hourglass, unable to breach the terrifying passivity
of her response. She was as quiet and still as the baby they both mourned.
The boys returned home the next day, to hold the baby and weep for the sibling
they would never know. Hoss realised that the love within his heart was pouring
out with nowhere to go and tried to comfort his stepmother, but while she
accepted his hugs and kisses, she could not help him in his grief. Unable to
deal with her own heartbreak, Marie was barely holding on to the corners of her
sanity. It felt as if the slightest breeze would whip away her reason altogether
and she clung to her impassivity. Twice she had given birth, and twice her
babies were taken away. Her belly was empty, but once again there was no baby to
hold in her arms. She felt hollow - how could she ever risk loving again?
Marie was the only member of the family who did not cry. There was no point in
crying. It would not bring her baby back and there were not tears enough to
begin to express her grief, even if she should live to be one hundred. She
hugged her mourning and sorrow to herself, wearing her grief like a shawl,
wrapping it close around herself as if it might help to contain her misery.
He placed a white flower placed between the tiny hands and
marvelled at how the baby looked as if it merely sleeping, with a sweet serenity
on its face. It was hard for Ben to acknowledge that his child had never woken,
never felt the warmth of the summer sun, never heard the sweet song of birds in
the morning – and never would. Saying a final farewell and closing the coffin
lid, in the full and certain knowledge that he would never again see the sweet
face of his third child was the hardest thing Ben had ever done. No other sorrow
had come close to piercing his soul with such exquisite, exacting pain.
They buried the baby by the lake, where the sound of the waves lapping against
the shore would provide a gentle lullaby for a child that never knew its
mother’s voice. Marie watched as the priest blessed the tiny soul and sent it on
a journey into eternity and wondered how God could let such a tiny being make
such a long voyage all alone. When would they meet again in Paradise? Would she
recognise her two children? Would they know her? So many questions, all
unanswered, all unanswerable. So many dreams, ground into gaping nothingness.
Ben had insisted on carrying the tiny coffin in his own arms, trudging slowly up
to the lake, his head bowed and his entire body pressed down by crushing sorrow.
He bent down, kneeling on the warm earth and laid his burden down as gently as
if he were laying this precious child into a crib. Except there was no warm safe
bed for this baby, whose only blanket was a miniscule shroud, while the dry,
sandy soil of the Ponderosa proved a poor substitute for a counterpane. He
remained at the graveside for a long time, until Marie tugged at his elbow and
led him away. She could not bear to stay there a moment longer, for the threads
of her control were unravelling with dizzying rapidity.
They stopped at the foot of the slope and turned for one final look, for what
parent does not worry each time they lay their child down to sleep or pause in
the doorway for a final look at beloved little being?
Back home, Ben took out the family Bible, opened it and stared long and hard at
the list of names, written in many different hands. He dipped his pen into the
inkstand and slowly inscribed the pitiful legend, recording birth and death on a
single day. It seemed too bleak, too final and too impersonal to give his baby,
his baby who had never lived, such a short memorial and, more than that, it felt
like a betrayal. After a pause, he added “dearly beloved child of Ben and Marie
Cartwright.” It wasn’t enough, but Ben knew he could never put into words what
this child had meant to him.
Late that night, Ben took a solitary walk back towards the lake. Under the
golden light of a harvest moon, he stood by the pathetically small mound. To his
right, a bird rose from the buses and flew upwards, the moonlight beating down
on its wings as it soared towards the sky, free and beautiful. Ben thought of
the child he would never know, fell to his knees and wept out his love and
sorrow into the still night air.
A sudden, splashing noise caught his attention and, looking up, Ben saw not one
but two birds land upon the shimmering water and then start to paddle across the
lake in perfect unison. They swam closely together, moving along a bright,
moonlit path that turned the wine-dark waters into molten gold, guiding them
towards an unseen destination. He watched, entranced, until they were out of
sight and fancied that perhaps, just perhaps, he was watching Marie’s two
babies, united in death and travelling into eternity together. It was a small
comfort, for the thought of leaving his baby all alone in the dark emptiness had
troubled his soul deeply.
For a long time afterwards, Marie flitted around the house,
as pale and unsubstantial as a ghost. A pall of sorrow seemed to overwhelm
everything, yet still she did not weep, could not weep, for in truth Marie was
beyond tears. Nothing could begin to express her grief. She even refused to have
any marker erected on the gravesite, for what need was there? The memory of her
baby was burned into her heart and all those who truly mourned knew where the
child was buried. Her baby haunted her dreams. Night after night, Marie dreamt
that she held a warm, living baby in her arms, only to awake to dull, despondent
reality. Each day was a trial of endurance, a nothingness that seemed to stretch
out towards an endless horizon.
Ben began to wonder if he would ever see the woman he married again or if she
was gone and lost forever. He watched as she carefully folded up all the tiny
garments, with love stitched into each seam and into each delicate piece of
embroidery. Next, Marie tucked sprigs of fragrant dried lavender between the
folds and then packed her dreams carefully into a cedar chest, which she gave to
her husband to store in the attic, to be stored out of sight underneath the
eaves. After completing that chore, Ben took the cradle out to the barn and
smashed it with three swift, savage strokes from an axe.
Days passed in dreary succession, lengthening into months and yet nothing
changed. Summer eased into autumn, and then froze into winter. Ben was heartily
relieved when the year drew to a close knew that things had to change, that they
had to find the strength to make a fresh start together. Late on Old Year’s
Night, as the hands on the clock inched towards midnight, he sat down beside
Marie and took hold of her hand.
“I want to start again – to move on. For your sake – for the boys’ sake – we
can’t continue like this. This is tearing us apart, little by little.”
Marie nodded, knowing he was right, longing for Ben to take hold of her hand and
pull her out of this pit of despair. She no longer felt she had the strength to
do that herself and desperately needed someone to help her, to save her from
downing in sorrow.
“I love you.”
Ben stared deep into her eyes, anguish etched on his face and searing into her
heart like a lance. With a start, Marie noticed how tired and worn his face
seemed and realised his grief was as deep and unresolved as her own.
“I love you, as I have never loved any woman. You are my life – my whole
existence. And I can’t bear to stand by and watch you leave me. We lost the baby
– but I can’t loose you too. I’m loosing you and I can’t stand it. I need you so
much.” Unbidden, the tears rolled down Ben’s pale cheeks and then deep sobs
racked his whole body as he burrowed his head in Marie’s skirts.
A gentle hand soothed across his head. “I will never leave you, Ben. I love you
too much. I will always be with you. I will always love you.”
A pang of joy suffused Ben’s whole being as he raised his head, clasped her face
between his hands and kissed her, knowing that they had made a start, but that
some hurdles still had to be overcome.
“We will have another baby, I promise you,” Ben whispered, suddenly unmanned by
the way her body folded in to his own, pressing and caressing. “I promise you –
we will have another baby.”
And at last, at long last, Marie was able to cry. She wept healing tears, but
ones that flayed the tender flesh of her soul. “I know, my love. But I wanted
this baby.”
Finally, she could let her anguish and anger pour forth. Marie threw her head
back and howled out her misery and bitterness at the injustice of the world .She
wept for the children she would never hold, no matter how deep her love was; she
wept for the loneliness that threatened to engulf her and she wept for the
injustice of a world that denied her a baby to love and nurture. There were so
many unwanted babies – why was she being punished in this way?
Holding on to one another for support, grasping at each other for succour,
sharing their grief and gaining new strength and understanding, the New Year
slipped in unnoticed… and slowly, life once again began to flourish, putting
forth faint, green tendrils of love that entwined around their hearts and bound
Ben and Marie even closer.
“A baby? Are you sure?” Adam frowned. “Is it safe? Will it be
alright?”
Ben wanted to reassure his son, to pacify him – but knew he could not lie. Both
boys had lived with the dreadful reality of the stillbirth and they were still
adjusting to the aftermath. “We have to hope and pray,” he said. “And help Marie
all we can.”
“I don’t want another baby!” Hoss howled. “I don’t want Mama to be sad again!”
Nothing anyone could say or do would reconcile him to the prospect of a new baby
arriving before Christmas. Marie tired to involve him in preparations and told
him how much she would need his help, but Hoss could not stand the thought of
seeing his beloved mother being hurt again so badly. In vain, Adam tried to
involve him, asking for his help to make a new cradle but Hoss resolutely
refused to have anything to do with the new baby.
“Don’t see why we need a stupid baby!” he proclaimed stubbornly one autumn
evening and then stumped off to prepare for the school Halloween recital.
“Don’t worry, he’ll come around!” Ben soothed, noticing the anxious look on
Marie’s face and the way she clutched her stomach protectively.
“It’s not Hoss I’m worried about!” The words hissed out between her lips. “It’s
the baby – it’s coming!” She grabbed onto his arm for support, her nails digging
painfully into his flesh.
“Are you sure?”
“Yes! I’m perfectly sure!” Marie yelled, wondering why men felt compelled to ask
such stupid questions at the most inappropriate times.
Ben gulped hard, and then yelled for Adam. “Go get Doc Martin – and hurry! Tell
him the baby’s coming!”
Adam looked at his stepmother, who was clinging onto Ben, her face as white as
paper. “But it’s too early,” he protested.
“Try telling that to your little brother or sister!” Ben informed him tersely.
“Now ride into town!”
Adam nodded grimly, clapped on his hat and raced out to the barn, while Hop Sing
rushed upstairs and returned, clutching Hoss in a firm grip.
“Need help in the kitchen,” he announced blandly, ignoring Hoss’ protests and
Ben nodded his appreciation as Marie endured another burst of pain.
The brain refuses to allow us to recall pain in the abstract – but once it
returns, its exact nature is unmistakeable, prompting instant recognition. “I’d
forgotten how much this hurts,” Marie forced out between gritted teeth, knowing
that much worse was to come. Now she remembered just how badly it hurt and
remembered all too clearly how the pain would build to a sustained crescendo.
“I know,” Ben soothed rubbing her back.
“How can you possibly know – you’re a man!” she retorted, pushing his hand away.
“And don’t do that – it’s annoying!”
“I was only trying to help,” Ben said meekly and then wisely decided not to push
matters any further. Slowly, supporting her with his arm around her waist, they
went upstairs.
“It’s too early!” Marie moaned. “Ben – the baby is coming far too soon. I
couldn’t bear it if anything happened to this baby too. Please Ben, don’t let
anything happen to my baby.”
“Everything will be fine,” he assured her, with a certainty he did not feel.
Prayers from childhood circled around in his head.
“Thou that sitteth on the right hand of the Father, have mercy upon us….Lord,
have mercy upon us, Christ, have mercy upon us, Lord, have mercy upon us…Oh Lamb
of God, that takest way the sins of the world, Grant us they peace.”
They clung together, riding the waves of her labour, tossed up and down on an
emotional sea that raged around their hearts, searching frantically for a beacon
to shine a path to safe harbour.
“Baby determined to make an appearance, I hear?” Paul Martin’s voice was very
reassuring. “These things do happen.” He set his bag down on the dresser and
made his way over to the bed.
“Will it be alright?” Marie gasped, willing him to soothe away her fears.
Paul shook his head, “I can’t say for sure. But you’ve kept well all along,
rested and eaten sensibly – you’ve done everything you could do - and more – to
give this baby the best chance possible. And there is a possibility you might
have got your dates wrong, isn’t there?”
“Maybe,” Marie sniffed. “I don’t think so, though. And it’s still too early,
isn’t it?”
Paul finished his examination. “Too early or not, this baby is determined to see
the world tonight.” He gave Ben a meaningful look. “Everything ready?”
Nodding, Ben stationed himself at Marie’s side. “I’m not leaving,” and smiled
down at his wife, trying to impart some of his strength. Marie nodded briefly
and then concentrated on enduring another barrage of pain that threatened to rip
her apart.
Hop Sing tried his best to keep the boys occupied, even going
so far as to let Adam use some of his precious store of sugar to make toffee.
Hoss shivered each time a low moan, or higher pitched scream made its way
through the floor boards and more than one salty tear dripped into the saucepan,
as he watched the sticky mass intently and tried very hard not to think of his
beloved Mama in pain. He hated this baby for hurting her. He would never forgive
it for doing this to his Ma and he certainly would never love it.
Adam shuddered as a particularly piercing shriek issued forth, followed by a
silence that somehow seemed even louder and more sinister. He did not dare to
look at Hop Sing and busied himself buttering a tray in preparation for the
molten toffee. And then, a fierce, angry squeal shattered the air. With a start,
Adam realised he had been holding his breath, as it whooshed out of him in one
long stream.
“Hear that?” He took hold of Hoss by the shoulders. “I reckon we’re both big
brothers now, eh little brother?”
Hoss refused to meet his eyes. “Yeah,” he muttered. “Ain’t this toffee ever
going to be ready?” He didn’t want to think about anything else, until he knew
his Mama was all right. That was all that mattered. He didn’t care about the
stupid baby, which had caused his Ma all that pain. In fact, he hated it.
“My baby – is my baby alright?” Marie struggled up onto her
elbows and watched as Paul bent over a small, squirming bundle, that continued
to make loud, protesting noises.
“Hear those lungs? Nothing wrong with this little chap at all! He’s a bit on the
small side, but otherwise – you have a fine, healthy baby boy!”
Swaddling the child in a shawl, Paul handed him to his parents, who were
immediately lost in a world all of their own, where nothing and no-one could
possible intrude. They stared with wonder at their baby.
“A boy – we have a son, Ben! A son!” Marie ran a finger down the tiny, puckered
face. “Isn’t he the most beautiful baby you ever saw?”
Ben kissed the top of her head and joined in the baby-worship. “He’s perfect.
Just perfect. Thank you, my love.”
Marie started to undo the folds of blankets, eager to examine every inch of her
baby. She marvelled at the tiny hands and feet, that curled and then uncurled in
an ancient, primal rhythm, anxiously counted each finger and toe and placed her
fingers on his tiny chest so that she could feel the reassuring thump of his
heart. The baby subsided into a series of small whimpers, bemused by his strange
new surroundings.
“I’ll go and tell the boys, shall I?” Paul said and received an abstracted nod
from Ben, while Marie remained lost in adoration. Smiling happily, for welcoming
a new life into the world was one of his greatest pleasures, Paul almost skipped
down the stairs.
At the sound of his footsteps, Adam rushed forward, dark eyes burning in a pale
face.
“Congratulations – you have a new baby brother!” Paul announced and revelled in
smile that broke out across Adam’s normally solemn countenance.
“And Marie – is she? I mean…?”
“Mother and baby are both doing well,” Paul reassured him.
Hoss scowled. “Who cares about the stupid baby anyway?” he muttered, but only
Hop Sing heard him, as Adam was busily demanding to know when he could go
upstairs.
“Come on!” He grabbed Hoss by the arm and dragged him bodily along, ignoring the
younger boy’s whimpers of protest. Ben met them at the bedroom door.
“Just a few minutes, boys – your mother is very tired and so is the baby,” he
warned, guiding them in solicitously.
“Ma!” Hoss yelled in joy, and would have jumped onto the bed, had Ben not
retained a strong hold of his shirt collar.
“Careful, Hoss – be gentle!” he urged, as his son wriggled free and trotted
eagerly to the bed.
“I was worried about you,” he confided, snuggling to Marie, thankful beyond
words that his mother was all right.
“I’m fine,” Marie soothed, stroking back his fine hair. She looked up and Adam
was taken aback at the look of serene joy and utter contentment on her face.
“And the baby?” Adam’s voice was no more than a whisper.
“Come and see,” Ben urged, and watched proudly as Marie eased back the shawl so
that Adam could at last see his new brother.
“Isn’t he tiny?” he breathed, too scared to dare to even touch the child. “Tiny
– but sweet!” he amended and then leant forward and kissed Marie on the cheek,
then sat down beside her to study the baby intently. Hoss leant over and took a
critical look.
“He looks like a skinned rabbit! All red and scrawny!” he said in disgusted
tones and then promptly lost interest. “I made some toffee, Ma – do you want
some?”
A firm hand pressed down on his neck. “Time for bed, boys! You start getting
ready and I’ll be in shortly.” Ben propelled them out of the room, closed the
door firmly behind them and then returned to gaze at his newest and most
precious son with rapt adoration. Holding a new life, one so tiny he could
almost balance the babe in one hand – was there any feeling in the world to
compare with that? How could you rationally explain the feelings of love that
suddenly poured forth?
Ben looked at his longed-for child and felt utter contentment fill his soul and
heal the void that had existed for so long. It was not a betrayal of the baby
who had died – it was a vindication. This baby was doubly precious.
“Have you chosen a name yet?” Paul asked curiously.
Ben shook his head. “Not yet. We didn’t dare let ourselves think that far ahead,
just in case…” He smiled and mentally apologised to the baby, who was still
without a name!
Too excited too sleep, Adam had begged to be allowed to stay up for just a
little while longer. Sitting by the fire, he pulled his nightshirt down over his
knees and started to quote.
"I have no name:
I am but two days old."
What shall I call thee?
"I happy am,
Joy is my name."
Sweet joy befall thee!
Pretty Joy!
Sweet Joy, but two days old.
Sweet Joy I call thee:
Thou dost smile,
I sing the while,
Sweet joy befall thee!”
After a moment’s silence, Ben filled two glasses with whisky, added a dash of
water and then he and Paul raised them aloft.
“Joy and happiness!” Ben proclaimed, feeling quite giddy even before he had
swallowed a single drop. His heart sang, suffused with the wonder of everything.
Life seemed utterly wonderful and completely perfect.
“Long life to the newest member of the Cartwright family!” Paul responded
joyfully.
Raising his glass of milk alongside the men, Adam joined in the toast and
wondered if his Pa might see his way to allowing him a taste of whiskey. After
all, he was a big brother twice over and surely that meant he was almost a man?
Ben clasped Paul’s hand warmly. “Thank you, Paul – for all your help and for
being a good friend. Marie and I wondered if you would possibly do us the honour
of standing as Godfather to the baby?”
Flushed with pride, Paul agreed readily and sipped his whisky with even deeper
appreciation, while Adam tugged urgently at the edge of his father’s vest. “Pa –
the baby will need two godfathers won’t he? And I’m old enough, aren’t I?”
“I couldn’t think of a better person,” Ben assured him, with a pang of remorse.
Why hadn’t he thought of this before? “The baby is very lucky to have you as big
brother and you’ll make a splendid godfather.”
“I’ll look after him,” Adam vowed. “I promise.”
Chapter Three
A letter from Adam was always welcome news, for although it was nearly four
years since his eldest son had left the ranch, Ben still felt an occasional pang
of loss. It was a matter of deep personal regret to him that Adam felt
constrained on the ranch and could find no constructive outlet for his
frustrated talents.
Joe had accepted his brother’s departure with comparative equanimity, regretting
Adam’s decision but willingly shouldering the extras responsibilities and
developing a new confidence and a maturity that had sometimes been suppressed by
his elder brother’s presence.
In many ways, Adam’s departure made the Joe the fine man he is today, Ben
thought and then felt immense sorrow that this should be the case.
Things had been completely different with Hoss. Supremely happy in his own life,
he vehemently opposed Adam’s plans, which he perceived as a rejection of Ben’s
legacy, a betrayal of all the man had worked a lifetime to achieve. Just when
his father should be looking forward to relaxing and letting his sons take
charge, Adam had to decide to leave! It was rare for Hoss to express his anger,
but Adam had actually quivered when Hoss unleashed the full extent of his fury.
Joe had interposed himself between his two elder brothers, grabbing hold of Hoss’
arms and, just for a moment, was afraid his brother was so enraged he would take
the brunt of his anger.
“Hoss! If you really love Adam, then you have to let him go,” Joe gasped and
watched as his brother’s face crumpled as he was realised the truth of this
statement.
Adam smiled wryly. “Maybe one day you will understand why I have to leave.” He
gave a self-depreciating shrug and went outside.
Ben often thought of these words and wondered if there was some deeper meaning
hidden behind them. Adam had never been willing or able to share his feelings
with others, but perhaps he should have probed a little further. The more Ben
thought, the more he was sure that something had been gnawing at his son’s
conscience.
“Come on, Pa! Don’t keep me in suspense!” Joe vaulted lightly
off Cochise in a smooth movement and slung the reins over the hitching rail,
tying them in a loose knot before draping an arm around his father’s shoulders.
“A letter from Adam is a rare treat these days.”
“Which is precisely why I want to wait until Hoss gets back home,” Ben chided.
“You really will have to develop some patience, Joe!”
Pulling a face, for he knew better than to argue with his father when he was in
one of his intractable moods, Joe ambled into the house in search of a
well-earned cup of coffee.
With a deep, throaty chuckle, Ben followed his son, tucking the precious letter
into his vest pocket. A pleasure delayed was often infinitely sweeter, he
thought.
After dinner, Ben settled comfortably by the fireside, packed his pipe with
sweet smelling Virginia tobacco, carefully opened the letter and began to read
out loud.
Dear Pa, Hoss and Joe,
Boston is interminably hot! And the crowds – why it is impossible to walk more
than two steps before one is obliged to make a sudden dart to the side in order
to avoid being mown down by groups of eager young students, or young ladies
intent on seizing a bargain from one of the large stores. I am considering
investing in a stout walking stick, for my own defence, of course!
I have met a good many old acquaintances during my stay here, and was even
offered some interesting prospects, which I was sorely tempted to accept. But
for the past few years, my life has been unsettled and living out of a suitcase
is becoming more than a little wearisome! Perhaps returning to Boston again has
finally allowed me to consider matters more clearly. I can almost see the ghost
of the boy I once was, standing by my college, looking at the man I have become
and shaking his head.
A man must make a commitment – and I now feel ready to do that. I’ve been to
Europe, I’ve travelled across this wonderful country of ours and I have a store
of precious memories. But now I want to see my family again and to walk once
again in the high woods of the Ponderosa. I want to come home, Pa – if there is
still a place for your errant son?
Your loving son and brother
Adam.
“Well!” Joe puffed out his cheeks and bounded to his feet. “Adam’s coming home!
I’d say this calls for a drink to celebrate.” He rushed over to the sideboard
and picked up the brandy decanter.
“I never thought I would see the day,” Ben murmured, staring at the letter as if
he could not quite believe the words he had just read out.
Hoss sat in silent contemplation on the sofa, wondering why he felt a disturbing
sense of unease at such joyous news. Busy pouring out three generous glasses of
brandy, Joe did not notice his brother’s uncharacteristic silence and his step
was light and carefree as he handed out the glasses.
“To Adam!” he proclaimed. “Here’s to a safe journey – let the road rise up to
meet him, may the wind be upon his back and the sun shine on him until he
returns to us and we meet again.”
“To Adam!” Ben and Hoss echoed.
“Now, go and write that letter and tell him to come home as fast as he can!” Joe
demanded impetuously. “Or, better yet - send a telegram. I’ll ride into town at
first light and send it off.”
Hoss shook with laughter. “It’s been nearly four years – surely a few days won’t
make a difference?”
The laughter faded from Joe’s face. “Every day counts, Hoss. Every single day. I
want to see Adam home again as soon as possible.” He put his glass down on the
table and wandered over to stare at the fire. “I’ve missed him,” he mumbled,
watching as the flames danced and blurred out of focus.
A warm hand pulled him into an embrace. “We’ll see him soon, I promise,” Ben
whispered. “Just as soon as he can get here.”
“Joe! Aren’t you going to even say hello?”
Looking slightly abashed, Joe sidled over to the vivacious saloon girl, waving
coquettishly at him.
“This is a fine way to treat a good friend,” she teased, curving her body
towards his and resting her head on his shoulder in a proprietorial manner that
made him feel uneasy.
Joe pulled away. “I can’t stay,” he protested, looking around anxiously. “I’m
here with Pa and Hoss - we’re waiting for the stage.”
“You find the stage more exciting than me?” she pouted and Joe had to laugh.
“Not normally – but today is different. My brother’s coming home today.”
Sally looked confused. “But I thought you said Hoss was with you?”
“Not Hoss,” Joe explained. “My other brother – Adam.”
“I never knew you had another brother,” Sally accused. “Nobody has even
mentioned him before.”
“Adam’s been away for a long time, but I can assure you that he definitely
exists!” Out of the corner of his eye, Joe saw a cloud of dust billowing around
the bend of the street and knew this signalled the imminent arrival of the
stage. “I really do have to go now.”
“When will I see you again?” Sally wailed.
“Next time I’m in town and free as a bird!” Joe promised, throwing the words
back over his shoulder as he broke into a run.
For a moment, Sally watched him sprinting towards the depot, admiring his lean,
athletic build, the way his hat slipped back I could almost let myself fall in
love with Joe Cartwright, she thought. Then pragmatism returned and, giving
herself a little shake Sally smiled adoringly at a cowboy who was strolling
past.
“Hey Hank! Aren’t you going to say hello? My, that’s a fine way to treat a good
friend like me!” Ignoring his blushes, she tucked her arm into his and led him
into the saloon.
“You cut that fine!” Hoss whispered, as Joe dashed up, just as the stage turned
the corner and trundled sedately towards them, the horses slowing down
automatically as they recognised their rest stop, where fresh water awaited to
slake their thirst.
Joe glared at him, but before he could say a word, the coach door opened and the
passengers streamed out, eager to stretch their legs after the long journey. An
elderly lady, carrying a small pug was first, followed by a young girl, who
blinked owlishly in the bright sunlight. Two men in dark suits, covered with a
fine powdering of dust followed and then, finally, Adam stepped out.
“Hi Pa.” For a moment he was bashful, uncertain what to do next. “I’m home.”
After that, there was no need for further words as Ben took his hand, shook it
firmly and then pulled his son into a brief hug that was all the welcome he
could ever have dreamed of.
Chapter Four
Hoss barrelled forward and clapped Adam heartily on the back, then turned him
around, held his brother at arm’s length and scrutinised him carefully. A slow
grin spread across his face.
“Don’t say it!” Adam warned meaningfully, but laughter lightened the threat.
Hoss just shook his head meaningfully, while running a hand across his thinning
crown and looking gleefully at Adam’s similarly balding pate.
“Guess I’m last in the queue again,” Joe complained. “Never did understand why I
had to be the youngest.”
“Pa needed all the practise he could get before he was ready to deal with you!”
Adam informed him, with a familiar hint of acerbity flashing forth.
Joe shrugged carelessly. “Positive, comparative, superlative!” he countered and
then suddenly grew serious in the blink of an eye, wondering why he felt so shy.
“It’s good to have you back,” he said softly.
Adam patted him on the shoulder. “It’s good to be back,” he assured his brother.
“Let’s go home boys.” Ben was anxious to get back to the Ponderosa – only once
he saw his son sitting in his familiar place by the fireside would he really
believe that Adam truly was home once more.
“This brings back a few memories,” Adam said, as they bowled along in the buggy.
“Reminds me of the time you all met me when I came home from college. Nothing’s
changed much, has it?”
Hoss punched him on the arm. “You’re still the smart one, I’m still the strong
one and Joe’s still the small one!” he joked.
“Don’t tease your little brother!” Ben admonished, entering into the joke and
watching as Joe folded his arms and leant back in his seat with a resigned
expression on his face.
“What’s with the gloves?” Adam asked curiously, noticing the black leather
gloves that fitted snugly across his brother’s hands.
Hoss choked back a snort. “Oh, he’s gotta keep his hands smooth and baby-soft
for all these young ladies he’s sparking.”
“They’re very practical!” Joe protested, surreptitiously flexing his fingers and
admiring the way his hands looked in the supple fabric.
Adam gave him a consoling pat. “Of course they are,” he soothed. “It does seem
strange to see you wearing gloves, especially when I remember the trouble Marie
used to have keeping gloves and bootees on you when you were a baby. She was
determined you would be properly dressed and you were equally determined not to
wear them.”
“I recall one trip to church when Pa had to stop the buggy five times to go back
and pick up your little socks, ‘cos you kept pulling them off and tossing them
out onto the road!” Hoss laughed. “Boy, was he furious and he gave you the
biggest scolding, but you just sat on your Mama’s lap and chuckled at him!”
“It was the same with bonnets too,” Adam reminisced. “No sooner did Marie put a
bonnet on you, than you pulled it right down over your face!”
Joe turned around to face him. “I’ve developed a modicum of sense since then,”
he assured his brother solemnly. “I know the effect my devastating good looks
have on ladies and I decided it’s no good hiding my light under a bushel – or
even a bonnet! But I don’t let it go to my head,” he added, running his fingers
through the thick hair that curled riotously over his head. Adam and Hoss
exchanged mock-aggrieved looks and, satisfied that his jibe had hit home and the
honours were once again even, Joe flashed a triumphant smile at his discomfited
brothers and settled back down for the rest of the journey.
“I don’t believe it!” Adam breathed, as Ben pulled the buggy
to a stop. The porch was bedecked in paper lanterns, each of which shone with a
tiny light and underneath them, Hop Sing stood, wreathed in smiles.
“Memory failing you, older brother?” Joe chided teasingly. “Surely you remember
that no celebration on the Ponderosa is complete without the Chinese lanterns?”
“I remember,” Adam said, his eyes misting over as he recalled the very first of
those celebrations and how he had stood so proudly under the very same lanterns.
He could see his baby brother so clearly: lying soundly asleep in his arms,
gloriously bedecked in an elaborate christening gown, newly baptised with the
resplendent name of Joseph Francis Cartwright. Once again Adam could smell the
balsam-scented oil of chrism floating up towards him and it was almost
impossible to believe that twenty-six years had passed - until he looked at the
young man walking beside him.
Hop Sing had prepared a fabulous meal, which was complemented
by a selection of fine wines from Ben’s carefully assembled cellar. The table
rang with chatter as the Cartwright’s reminisced and brought Adam up-to-date
with everything that had been happening.
“Port? Or would you prefer a brandy?”
“Port will be fine.” Adam swirled the liquid around in his glass before taking a
deep draught. He sat up a little straighter in his chair. “I have something to
tell you,” he began, steeling his soul. “I didn’t come alone – I had company on
my journey from Boston.”
“A lady?” Joe asked, his green eyes twinkling with mischief. “I always said you
were a dark horse, Adam! You never mentioned her once in any of your letters,
did you? Have you set the date yet?”
“It’s not like that! You really have no idea what you are talking about. How
dare you make such crass assumptions?” Adam flung angrily at him. The vehemence
of his words startled everyone, especially Joe, who visibly flinched at the
barely restrained fury and loathing in his brother’s words.
“Adam?” Ben’s voice was a curious mixture of reproach and understanding. “Why
don’t you explain?”
Leaning his elbows on the table, Adam propped his chin on them and spoke in a
low, unemotional voice.
“I travelled with a young lady who wanted to meet her family. You saw her
briefly at the depot.”
Ben nodded, recalling a young woman in a plain gown.
“She’s my daughter,” Adam said baldly.
“What?” Ben wondered if he had heard correctly. The woman he remembered was not
that much younger than Joe. “You have a daughter? A grown up daughter?”
Adam nodded, not trusting his voice.
“And you never thought to mention her until now?” Ben demanded acerbically.
Before Adam could respond, Hoss broke in. “That’s why you left four years ago,
ain’t it? I allus knew there was something you weren’t telling us.”
“It seems that there is a good deal Adam has not seen fit to share with us!” Ben
commented, one dark eyebrow raised in silent query.
“My daughter is called Catherine. Catherine Rose.” Adam said defiantly. “She
will be twenty-one next summer.” He was absurdly gratified to see the start Ben
gave when he announced these details.
Chapter Five
Carefully tucking his textbooks under his arm, Adam locked his door of his
college room. He was not looking forward to the morning’s tutorial in the
correct use of the genitive in Latin, but it was a compulsory element of the
curriculum, so he forced himself to endure the subject and applied himself as
best he could. It was not always an easy task or one that Adam relished. As he
passed the linen room, Isabella popped out her head.
“Adam! Thank heavens – I’ve been waiting to see you for ages,” she whispered,
and dragged him inside, discarding the sheet she was mending. She had worked as
a maid at the college for some months now, laundering the students’ clothes and
mending their bed linen. Most of the young men ignored her, but from the first
moment Isabella saw Adam, she knew he was different to the sophisticated,
town-bred students. For a start, he always greeted her with a pleasant smile and
this soon progressed into small, inconsequential chats. Finally, Adam plucked up
enough courage to invite Isabella out for tea.
His first few weeks in Boston were, quite frankly, miserable. Adam missed his
home, his brothers and most especially his father. He had never found it
particularly easy to make new friends, a legacy from his childhood when he and
Ben had continually travelled westwards and the young boy had never been in one
town for long enough to bond with his peers. Adam still experienced a clench of
fear in his stomach whenever he was introduced to a new group and felt ill at
ease at large social gatherings.
Two lonely people, thrust together by circumstances, they found a kindred spirit
in one another, a spark of kindness that was otherwise missing from their
essentially lonely lives. Adam and Isabella discovered one another and were able
to push the heartlessness of the world far away, loosing themselves in the
intimacy and exhilaration of their love.
“Can’t it wait? I’ve got a tutorial in ten minutes.” Adam looked over his
shoulder, fearful that they might be interrupted. Students were expressly
forbidden to associate with the college servants and he lived in fear that their
liaison might be discovered, knowing it would result in his expulsion and being
sent home in disgrace. “I’ll come round this evening,” he promised, noticing
pale and upset she looked.
“It can’t wait any longer,” Isabella said sadly. She laid a hand on his arm and
looked up into his face, her eyes searching frantically. “I need to tell you
something and it can’t wait any longer. I’m pregnant. We’re going to have a
baby.” She looked very young and vulnerable.
“A baby? Are you sure?” Her pronouncement seemed to echo hollowly in Adam’s
ears, his head was spinning and he closed his eyes for a brief second, trying to
make sense of things.
She nodded, as a tear trickled slowly down her cheek. “I’m certain.” Isabella
struggled to keep calm, but she had kept her secret to herself for too long now,
and she was terribly scared. “I’m sorry, Adam. I’m so very sorry!”
“You’ve nothing to be sorry for,” he said mechanically, feeling completely numb.
“It’s my fault, I should have been more careful.” All his hopes and dreams
tumbled down around him and Latin had never seemed more pointless or irrelevant.
“Let’s go for a walk,” he suggested, overcome by the need to get far away from
college, where anyone might overhear. “We’ve got a lot of talking and planning
to do, haven’t we?”
Cheered by the use of “we” and beginning to feel that there might be some way
out of this nightmare, Isabella agreed.
They walked for a long time, strolling slowly through streets and parks of the
city, talking quietly, trying to find a solution. Eventually, noticing that
Isabella was starting to look very weary, Adam hailed a cab and barked out a
destination
“Where are we going?” Isabella asked, sinking back onto the leather seat with
relief and watching as the driver encouraged the horse through the traffic with
a deft flick of his whip.
Adam slipped his arm around her. “To the only person who can help us – my
grandfather.”
Abel Stoddard threw out the lifeline his grandson needed –
but not before delivering a stern interrogation that left Adam feeling as
mentally bruised and battered as if he had been keelhauled.
“You young idiot!” Abel concluded. “You stupid, careless young idiot.” He gave
Isabella a ferocious smile that also managed to convey considerable sympathy and
understanding. “And just what do you want to do, eh?”
Adam stood up straight and looked directly into his grandfather’s eyes, holding
his gaze with steadfast resolution. “I want to do the right thing,” he said
stoutly. “I want to marry Isabella.”
It sounded very grown up and terribly final, Adam thought as he gulped back his
fears. Actually, what he really wanted to do was to go to sleep and then wake up
to find that this had all been a dream. Or should that be a nightmare? No matter
- it was not about to happen and he had to make the best of things.
“I want to make a home for Isabella and the baby – and I need your help.” His
voice sounded very far away: it was almost like hearing another person speak.
Abel relaxed visibly. These things did happen, even in the best regulated
families – even in his family. A baby appearing a scant six or seven months
after the wedding was not an unheard of occurrence, after all. “You did the
right thing, coming to me,” he said gruffly.
Isabella felt relief wash over her and soothe away all her worries. There was
something very assuring about Abel and she felt that she could finally relax,
secure in the knowledge that he and Adam would look after her.
“We married as soon as possible,” Adam said. “A small, quiet
ceremony in a Fisherman’s Mission Church, with Grandfather and his housekeeper
as our witnesses. And then Isabella gave up her sewing job at my college and
went to live with in his house, while I returned to my studies.”
He sat back, relieved to have finally shared his long-held secret with his
family.
“Adam – I am very disappointed.” Ben poured himself a large glass of port,
wishing it would start to blot out the pain he was enduring, but knowing that
even the strongest opiates could not begin to deaden his emotions.
“I am disappointed in the fact that you did not feel you could confide in me.
That you did not trust my love for you was strong enough to conquer all odds, to
forgive any indiscretion and to offer whatever help and support I could. Hearing
your story makes me realise that I failed you – that I was not there for you, as
a father should be. And that disappoints me greatly.”
He stood up and pushed the chair back towards the table. “I would have supported
you and stood by you, no matter what. There was a home for you, your wife and
your child, right here on the Ponderosa. We would have accepted them with open
hearts. But you chose to deny us that opportunity”
Ben shook his head sadly, then started to walk slowly out of the room, haggard
with grief and looking much older than his years.
“Pa!” Adam sprung to his feet, his chair crashing to the floor behind him. “Pa –
it wasn’t you – it was me! Grandfather implored me to include you, but I
refused. I knew you had enough to cope with, without me adding to your troubles.
I did what I thought was best. For everyone. I didn’t want to hurt you again.”
He sounded like a contrite child.
Ben halted at the foot of the stairs, with a look of consummate sadness. “I
would have liked to have been able to help you, to comfort you,” he said. “I
would have loved to be included in your life.”
Joe could not bear conflict. Outwardly he was a supremely confident young man,
brimming with confidence and trusting in his own undoubted abilities. But
witnessing the death of his mother and then enduring the long depression of his
father and the departure of his brother to a college on the other side of the
country had left their mark. He sat perfectly still in his chair, casting
anxious glances at his father and brother, sympathising with both while longing
for a resolution to be reached.
Taking one look at the combative stances of father and son and only too aware of
Joe’s unease, Hoss stepped into the breach.
“So, young Catherine Rose wants to meet us, does she? I sure am looking forward
to that.” His smile held immense comfort.
“Why don’t you tell us more about her?” Joe invited, in a thin, anxious voice
that was a mockery of his normal insouciant tones. Ben walked slowly back to the
table and stood briefly behind Joe’s chair before he sat back down in his
accustomed seat at the head of the table.
“And Isabella?” he asked, wondering why Adam still did not mention his wife.
“Did she never wish to meet the rest of your family?”
Crumpling his napkin into a ball, Adam forced himself to continue. “We were very
young and never really knew one another. We had so little time together and,
after Catherine was born, we began to grow apart. I was busy with my studies and
she was engrossed with the baby. It was… difficult. I visited as often as I
could – but we grew apart.”
Joe concentrated all his energies on folding his own napkin into neat concertina
folds. He could not bear to look at the naked anguish that was evident in his
brother’s face. Just hearing the pain in Adam’s voice was almost beyond
endurance.
“I asked her to come back home with me, I really thought that if we could start
afresh out here, then we might have a chance – but Isabella refused. She told me
she had met someone else, and that they wanted to marry and be a real family.
When I saw how Catherine loved him, and how he adored her, I knew I couldn’t
refuse. You see, I only ever wanted them to be happy - both of them. So…I set
Isabella free, free to begin a new life - and then I came home, alone.”
“Poor old Adam.” Joe kept his voice low, not wishing to be
overheard. Sitting on the end of Hoss’ bed, with a quilt wrapped around his
shoulders to ward off the chill night air, he was trying to make sense of
things. “To think he went through all that heartbreak and never said a word. He
carried all that sorrow around for so many years and none of us ever guessed.”
“Sometimes it’s easier not to talk about things,” Hoss said. “It doesn’t mean
you forget about them or that they hurt any less though. Most people have their
own secrets, Joe, things they keep hidden from the world. You’d be surprised at
the things we hold in the secret places of our souls, locked up inside
ourselves.”
“I guess you’re right,” Joe admitted reluctantly. There were a few things he
carefully omitted to mention to his family, but he would not exactly class them
as secrets. Joe looked at his feet, which were slowly turning blue with cold,
pulled a corner of the bedding loose and tucked his toes underneath the
blankets. “Do you have secrets from me?”
His brother’s blue eyes were kind and guileless. “Reckon I do.” He regarded his
brother impassively, which only whetted Joe’s curiosity all the more.
“And?” Joe wheedled. When no answer was forthcoming, he prodded Hoss with his
big toe. “And?” he repeated.
“And I’m tired. It’s been a long day.” Reaching over, Hoss turned his lamp down
so that only a faint beam shone in the darkness
“I know when I’m not wanted!” Joe hopped off the bed and shook his head in mock
sorrow. “And I thought we were close!” he proclaimed, in mock-tragic tones.
Hoss chuckled richly and then remembered the deep resentment and, if he were
honest, near-hatred he had felt towards Joe when he was a baby. That had long
since transmuted into a deep love, but if Joe should ever discover how he had
felt… that was beyond contemplation.
With a new appreciation for Adam’s dilemma, Hoss stared up at the ceiling and
wondered if life would ever be the same again. Perhaps some secrets should never
be told, for once revealed, life could fracture beyond all hope of repair. He
thought back to his furious jealousy and cringed with shame and embarrassment.
Just thinking about how he had felt and how he had behaved made Hoss very
uncomfortable and normally he suppressed the memories, but some things can never
be forgotten, no matter how hard they are pushed them into the dark, untended
corners of the mind. Time after time, Hoss would remember how he had rejected
his baby brother and feel fresh sorrow at the heedless actions of his youth. No
matter how much he loved Joe now, he could never eradicate the past.
“Feel his hair,” Adam urged, drifting a gentle hand over the
soft fuzz that covered Joe’s head. “It’s as soft as thistle-down.” He studied
his baby brother carefully. “And I think it’s going to be curly, just like
Marie’s.”
Hoss busied himself with untangling a knotted bit of string, unearthed in the
depths of his pocket and wished that Adam would change the subject.
Adam laid his cheek on top of the baby’s head and marvelled at the warmth that
radiated from it. How tiny his brother was and how incredibly new. He looked at
Hoss and remembered holding him as a baby – only it seemed impossibly that Hoss
could ever have small enough to hold comfortably in his arms.
“Just look as his little hands and feet!” Adam offered his pinky to the baby and
smiled in a besotted fashion as Joe’s tiny hand clasped firmly around his
finger. “Isn’t he cute?”
“Sure,” Hoss responded in a disinterested tone of voice. Everything had changed
since the baby arrived and he did not like the new circumstances he was pitched
in to one little bit. Gradually, he became aware that Adam was crooning a
lullaby that sounded familiar. Despite his avowed intent to ignore Joe and
anything to do with him, Hoss found his curiosity aroused.
“Whatcha singing?”
Adam’s eyes did not leave the baby, who had started to yawn sleepily and Hoss
wondered what on earth he found so interesting. It wasn’t as if the little
shaver actually did anything, after all. He just slept, and cried and made a
nuisance of himself. Why everyone made such a dadburned fuss over such a small,
puny little creature was beyond his comprehension and Hoss wished fervently that
things would return to normal, to the way they had been before. Who needs a
stupid baby anyway? he thought.
“Inger taught me that song and we used to sing it to you, when you were little,”
Adam answered, rocking slowly back and forwards. He was totally unprepared for
the reaction his innocent statement would stir in his brother.
“Don’t you sing my Ma’s song to that baby! Don’t you dare!” Hoss jumped to his
feet and tugged urgently at Adam’s arm, joggling Joe, who immediately responded
to the rude interruption with a loud wail of protest.
“Hoss! Now see what you’ve done!” Having just spent ten minutes easing his new
brother into peaceful slumber, Adam was understandably disturbed. Hoss gave him
a wounded look, that eloquently spoke of the betrayal his young soul felt and
ran out of the house, his resentment stoked up with new fuel and burning more
brightly than ever.
Adam sighed in bewilderment, just as Ben came downstairs, having caught the end
of the exchange.
“Don’t worry, son. Hoss is just having a little trouble adjusting to his baby
brother.” With an experience born of long years of practice, Ben gently lifted
his crying son and rested Joe close to his chest as he walked slowly around the
room. “Babies like to feel secure,” he said in a low voice. “We all do – but
poor Hoss isn’t feeling too happy right now.” Gradually, the wails started to
subside and Ben sat down beside Adam.
“It’s a big change for all of us, but especially for Hoss. He was used to being
the youngest in the family and that has all changed. You are still the oldest,
but now Hoss is in the middle, he doesn’t know what to expect and he’s finding
it hard to adjust. Plus, he loves Marie so much and I think he is scared that
this new little one will compete for her affections.”
“I didn’t feel like that when Hoss was born, did I?” Adam screwed up his face
and tried to think back, but it was so long ago.
“No, you didn’t,” Ben agreed. “In fact, you were a great help to Inger and I.
But then, your life was very different to Hoss’ – you were used to change, as we
seldom stayed anywhere for very long. In fact you would get quite restless if we
stayed in one place for too long! Now, all Hoss can really remember is living
here and being a part of a family. At the moment, he sees his life changing and
he can’t do anything about it and that is making him feel angry and resentful
towards the baby.”
Adam thought about this carefully. “Things have changed,” he agreed. “But
they’ve changed in a good way,” he decided. “I just wish Hoss could see that
too.”
“It took you a while to accept Marie,” Ben reminded him. “And that wasn’t an
easy time for any of us either, was it?”
Adam felt his face burn as he remembered how rude, ungracious and unwelcoming he
had been at first. It wasn’t something he liked to think about and he wriggled
uncomfortably on the sofa. “I was horrid!” he admitted. “I made everyone
miserable – but most of all myself.”
Ben shifted Joe into the crook of his elbow, so that he could put his other arm
around Adam. “We knew you were hurting,” he comforted. “And we knew that we had
to give time and space. As I said, none of really like change, but it’s an
inevitable part of life. So just try to be patient with Hoss, will you?”
“I’ll try,” Adam sighed and then smiled down at the baby who was making little
snuffling noises in his sleep. “But he’ll miss so much if he won’t allow himself
to love Joe.”
“Hoss is one of the most loving children I’ve ever met and it isn’t in his
nature to be unkind,” Ben assured him. “Just try to remember that when he lashes
out, it just shows how confused and hurt he is. We all need to show him he is
still a loved and valued member of this family – and that nothing can ever
change how much we love him.”
Chapter Six
It was only to be expected that none of the Cartwrights passed a particularly
peaceful night after Adam’s dramatic revelations. Hoss tossed and turned, beset
by troubled dreams, while Adam tried to summon up the courage to arrange a
meeting between his daughter and his father and brothers. Joe sat by his window
and stared out towards the dark body of Lake Tahoe and wondered how he could
ever attempt to heal the hurt in his brother’s soul and heal the divide that
gaped to develop between father and his son. It seemed that the past was always
with them and Joe was beginning to believe that some secrets were best kept
hidden.
In his bedroom, Ben sat staring at a portrait of Elizabeth, another young girl
from so long ago and wondered if their union would have survived intact. It was
impossible to tell, he concluded. They were together for such a short period of
time, much of which was occupied with the heady excitement of becoming parents.
But had he really known her? Had he loved her enough to actually spend the rest
of his life with her? Could she have grown alongside him and been a part of life
on the Ponderosa? It seemed almost blasphemous to consider Elizabeth here,
living in the house that held so many memories of Marie, where every room
brought back an image of her and where her presence still sounded out clearly.
A part of his mind was still reeling at the news that Adam - sensible, reliable
Adam - could have been so foolhardy as to get a young girl into trouble. All his
teachings and tender words; his strictures to respect young ladies; his
carefully delivered information about the consequences, both moral and medical,
of entering into a physical relationship had been summarily cast aside, almost
from the minute Adam arrived in Boston, it seemed. Ben was no fool – he was a
highly realistic man, but he had never considered the possibility of Adam being
the son to fall from grace in this way. He knew that a dalliance of this nature
was totally against everything that Hoss stood for, but if Joe had come to him
and told him he had got a young girl in the family way, well, Ben knew that he
would have been equally disappointed, but not entirely surprised.
And therein lay the essential difference. Ben knew that Joe would have come to
him for advice and support. Joe would never have excluded his father from this
important part of his life. That Adam had deliberately suppressed the
information that he had a daughter for twenty years made Ben very sad. Not only
had he missed being a part of Catherine’s life, his own son had not been able to
share his great sorrow and joy with him. And it was truly ironic that Adam was
now a virtual stranger to his own daughter.
Where had his son gone? Was the little boy who had incessantly burbled at his
side on the high seat of the wagon now subsumed? Would he ever be able to reach
out and touch the young man who had shared his overwhelming joy at the birth of
his baby brother? Ben shivered to think that just a few years after Adam had
stood as godfather to Joe, he had become a father himself, even it he had not
been able to share that news with his family. The ties that bound them all
seemed to be stretched almost to breaking point.
He placed Elizabeth’s portrait facedown on his dresser and stared out of the
window, realising that a grey dawn was breaking. The faint hoar-mist still
hovered a few inches above the ground as Ben stretched his weary body and went
quietly downstairs.
The spicy scent of coffee tantalised his nostrils and Ben lengthened his stride,
craving the strong, sharp taste that would surely help to jolt him back to
reality. With an eventful day ahead, he needed to have his wits about him.
“Morning Pa,” Joe said, holding the coffee pot up invitingly. “Shall I pour?” He
tilted his head quizzically, with a faint hint of a smile. Ben nodded wearily
and sank down into a chair. All of a sudden, he felt very old and very tired and
was willing to be fussed over. He watched in silence as Joe savoured the aroma
wafting up from his cup of coffee, before adding a dash of milk and taking a
long, appreciative swallow.
Joe looked up and gave him a wry grin. “Cooch never has forgiven me for giving
up sugar!” he joked, patting the taught muscles of his lean belly. He took
another sip of coffee, wrapping his hands around the warmth of the cup. Ben
looked at the slender, well-shaped fingers and the memory of Marie was fierce
and sweet. He felt a fierce pang of love for this impetuous son, who relished
his father’s company and readily shared his life, loves and feelings.
A flood of remorse cast irrepressible dark hues over the early morning. Ben knew
it was not right to judge one son against another; it was something he had
always fought against. It was not Adam’s fault that he was self-contained, in
many ways it was a positive factor – but it did not make him an easy person to
live with – or, if Ben were totally honest, to love.
“Give him time,” Joe advised. It was almost as if he could read his father’s
innermost thoughts. “There is more to tell – I’m sure of that. Adam has always
kept his own council, and this isn’t easy for him.”
Ben nodded and gave thanks, as he did every day, that a small part of Marie was
still with him. Just looking at Joe brought back so many memories – the way he
would cock his head to one side, or how a small smile would tug irresistibly at
the side of his mouth before a peal of joy escaped in a laugh that was
inimitable, yet reminiscent of his mother. And it was not only the physical
traits that recalled Marie, for Joe’s overflowing love, so readily given and
returned and his impetuous, headstrong nature were equally strong reminders of
his mother. Adjusting to Adam’s departure had been hard, but Ben could not even
begin to contemplate life on the Ponderosa without Joe. He grew sombre as he
realised he had once thought exactly the same about Marie…
Reaching across, Joe laid his hand gently on top of Ben’s. “This will pass,” he
said softly. “Your pain and sorrow will lessen. Just give it time.” He gave a
rueful smile, thinking of all the times he had supposed his own heart to be
broken by a pretty girl, only to discover a few weeks later he could barely
recall the colour of her eyes.
“When did you get so wise?” Ben joked, trying to lighten the atmosphere.
Joe looked directly at him, his green eyes vivid in the soft morning light that
spread bright beans across the table that separated them. “I had a good
teacher,” he said. “The very best.”
The two men sat quietly, drinking their coffee and giving silent thanks for the
true love that bound them so tightly to one another.
Later that morning, Joe was schooling a horse intended for
sale to the Army. Concentrating hard on getting the animal to respond to the
smallest movements of his hands and legs, he was not aware of Adam leaning on
the rails of the corral, keenly watching his every movement. Sensing the horse
was beginning to pull against him, Joe decided the lesson had gone on for long
enough. Training a horse to this level demanded a lot of patience, as well as
skill and understanding, there was no sense in pushing things. He dismounted and
stroked the horse’s neck briefly, seeing how the combination of hot sun and hard
work had produced a faint sheen of sweat on the animal’s coat.
“Fred! Walk Torrin around for a bit to cool him off, then give him a good
rub-down, will you?”
The ranch-hand nodded, grabbing hold of the bridle and leading the horse away
from the corral. Joe stretched lithely, easing the muscles in his shoulders and
realised that his shirt was sticking uncomfortably to his body. Unbuttoning it
as he walked, Joe suddenly became aware of Adam.
“That’s a fine horse,” Adam said conversationally. “He works well for you. I can
see you’ve put in a lot of work there.” He was stunned at the way Joe had
controlled the horse: sitting so straight in the saddle, hardly appearing to
move, yet effortlessly coaxing the horse to change legs while cantering and even
moving into a diagonal trot. Joe had always been the best rider in the family,
but Adam could see that his skill had now moved onto a completely different
level.
“Thanks,” Joe said, undoing the last button and gratefully pulling off his
shirt. Flinging it over his shoulder he strode to the water barrel and poured a
dipper of water over his head and neck, shaking his hair so that a cascade of
water droplets flew through the air, sparkling in the bright sunlight.
“Just like a puppy!” Adam chuckled, watching as Joe repeated the process, this
time trickling the water down his chest, shivering slightly as the cold water
made contact with his hot flesh.
“Best way to cool off!” Joe retorted cheerfully, then slowly rolled his head in
a circular motion, trying to ease some of the tension in his neck and back.
Rotating each shoulder in turn, he could feel the muscles start to relax. After
a few moments, Joe held both his arms out at shoulder-height, turning them so
that his palms reached up to the sky, arched his head backwards and tilted his
chest up to the sun. There was something primal and elemental in his deliberate
movements that reminded Adam of a young warrior worshipping a deity.
“That’s better!” Joe stated, relaxing his stance and grinning at his brother,
who seemed frankly bemused by the whole performance. “We always make sure the
horses cool down properly, don’t we? Well, it makes sense to me that I should do
the same.”
“That’s good thinking,” Adam admitted. “And you look to be in good shape.” He
looked at Joe, as if seeing him clearly for the first time, his eyes taking in
the smooth golden chest, the long, taut muscles that covered his brother’s lean
frame and felt a pang of envy and regret.
“It’s hard not to be, working around here!” Joe gave him an appraising look. “A
few weeks from now and you won’t know yourself!”
The words lay uncomfortably between them as Joe realised what he had said.
“Adam! I didn’t mean…I’m really sorry…” His voice trailed off miserably.
Adam shrugged, trying to seem unconcerned. “I know you didn’t mean anything,
Joe. Don’t beat yourself up about things. We’ve all got a way to travel before
things settle down, but it will be a slow journey if you feel you have to walk
on eggshells the whole time.”
“If I can help in any way, just let me know?” Joe pleaded, as they walked slowly
back to the house, side by side.
“Just be yourself,” his brother said, and touched Joe lightly on the arm.
“You’re close in age to Catherine and I know she’s looking forward to meeting
you.” Adam could see the emotion painted clearly on Joe’s expressive face.
“Everything will be alright – I promise you, Joe.”
Dressed in a crisp white shirt and dark pants, Joe roamed
impatiently around the living room, pacing from the fireplace to the study
window; peering out and then wandering restlessly back to the fireplace where
his family sat awaiting the arrival of their guest.
“You’re gonna wear a path in that floor,” Hoss warned, tugging uncomfortably at
his string tie, which threatened to constrict his breathing.
“Why not go outside onto the porch and then you can give us a shout?” Adam
suggested. Part of him understood how Joe was feeling, but he also found his
brother’s constant motion deeply irritating. The tension in the room eased
palpably when Joe closed the door behind him and the three men exchanged
thankful glances.
“There are times when that boy would try the patience of a saint!” Ben murmured,
but the fondness in his voice took any possible sting out of his words.
Adam snuggled into his favourite blue chair, relishing how the familiar contours
eased around his body. “Never still for two seconds, is he? Always on the go,
seeking out new challenges…”
“New ways to torment us with his monkey tricks!” Hoss added.
Ben looked at them. “I often wonder if Joe would ever like to travel, to see a
bit more of the world,” he confessed. “I would hate to think that he stays here
out of a sense of obligation.”
“You really think that?” Hoss asked, genuinely perplexed. “You think Joe would
ever leave here? Can’t you see that the Ponderosa is everything to Joe – his
whole reason for existing? Joe knows that he would never be happy any place
else, don’t you worry about that, Pa.”
“And besides,” Adam smiled, “You know what Joe is like when he wants something –
he makes sure we all know about it. Remember the incessant pleadings of “Please,
Pa – can I have a pony?” I kept count one day and he said it one hundred and
fifteen times – until you sent him to his room! And even then, he stopped
half-way up the stairs for one final attempt!”
“Still, it worked, didn’t it?” Hoss said, giving his father a reassuring smile.
“Couple of weeks later, you got him that little Shetland pony, name of Glen.”
“Which only goes to show there are limits even to my legendary patience!” Ben
looked at the clock and was wondering when his granddaughter would arrive, when
a cry from Joe galvanised them all into action and they rushed to join him on
the porch, just as a hired buggy drew up.
Chapter Seven
Taking a deep breath to compose herself, Catherine gathered her skirts up in one
hand, accepting Adam’s outstretched fingers with the other. He gave her a brief
smile and then turned to the two men still sitting in the vehicle, looking ill
at ease.
“Welcome. Won’t you join us?” He gestured with his arm to where Ben, Hoss and
Joe stood on the porch, unsure of quite what to do next.
Catherine smoothed back her hair and walked towards her waiting family, trying
not to show how nervous she felt. It had seemed to strange to discover that she
had a grandfather and two uncles and she was not quite sure how to react to
them. “I wonder what the etiquette writers would advise in this situation!” she
thought and had to struggle valiantly not to laugh, certain that her peculiar
circumstances would never appear in the painfully correct newspaper columns that
devoted so many inches to the correct way to curtsey, or how many gloves a lady
should have on her gloves.
“Catherine?” The silver-haired man stepped forward. “You are very welcome here,
my dear.” He bent down and brushed his lips across her cheek and then tucked her
arm into his.
Tilting her head upwards, Catherine surveyed him carefully, searching for some
resemblance to herself, and saw that his eyes were as dark as her own, which
pleased her immensely.
Stopping for an instant, she looked back at her two companions. “Father! Matthew
– won’t you join us?”
With a pang, Ben realised that the man Catherine addressed as “Father” was not
his son, but a tall, spare man, with pale blond hair and a small moustache. He
noticed how Adam’s body tensed momentarily, but his son’s face remained schooled
to impassivity, even though a small muscle twitched in his cheek.
“Let’s go inside,” he suggested and a look of relief flashed across Adam’s face.
John Naismith looked at his surroundings with interest. Isabella had said very
little about her first husband, and even less about his family, so the obvious
wealth of the Cartwrights came as a complete surprise. As manager of a small
manufacturing company, John had been able to give his wife and child a
comfortable life, but the magnificence of the Ponderosa was something he had
never expected.
Sensing his nervousness, Hoss took the man’s hat and placed it gently on the
credenza, before guiding him over to a seat by the fire and offering him a cup
of coffee.
Joe wandered over to the younger man and held out his hand. “I’m Joe Cartwright
– Adam’s younger brother.”
So this is Catherine’s uncle! He doesn’t look much older than she is! Matthew
thought, before introducing himself. “Matthew Drummond. I’m Catherine’s fiancé.”
“Congratulations!” Joe wrung his hand firmly, his firm grip almost causing
Matthew to wince in pain.
Ben turned to Catherine and raised a quizzical eyebrow.
“That is the reason for our trip,” she explained, stretching out her left hand
to show the amethyst ring on her finger. “Well, one of the reasons,” she
corrected herself. “I’ve wanted to meet you ever since Adam came to Boston four
years ago, after my mother died.”
Hoss gave John a sympathetic look. “I’m very sorry,” he said in a low voice. “I
had no idea.”
“It was very sudden,” John said sombrely. “Isabella began to suffer from pains
in her chest and the doctors could do nothing to help. After she died, I wrote
to Adam. It was the least I could do.” There was no animosity in his voice, for
Adam had given John the greatest gift any man could – he had given John his
daughter and John loved her dearly.
“That’s when you went back east.” Hoss looked at Adam for confirmation.
“I wanted to see if there was anything I could do to help,” Adam agreed. “And to
say farewell to Isabella. We hadn’t met or corresponded for years, but she was
an important part of my life. Going back was the least I could do.”
He had not been prepared for the bitter jolt John’s letter would give him, but
straightaway, Adam had made plans to return to Boston. Unable to tell his father
and brothers the truth, he had made excuses about striking out on his own,
putting his skills to proper use, making his own mark on the world. How could he
tell them he was going back to see his daughter after fourteen years?
“Adam told me so much about you!” Catherine wanted this meeting to be a happy
one, she wanted to have pleasant memories of her family to look back on in years
to come. “I feel as if I already know the Ponderosa! For four years, I’ve been
hoping I could come out here – and now, here I am!” Her creamy skin was pink
with excitement and her eyes twinkled merrily.
Joe could not resist a little teasing. “I hope we’re not too much of a
disappointment, ma’am?” he enquired gravely.
“Why no,” she parried, without missing a beat. “You are just exactly as I
pictured you, dear Uncle Hoss!”
The initial tensions dissolved and the rest of the afternoon passed pleasantly
as shyness was put aside and new bonds forged.
“We’re on our way to Mexico,” Matthew explained. “I work for a shipping company
and I’ve been offered a good job down there.”
“I can’t believe I’m seeing so much of America!” Catherine bubbled. “I’ve hardly
been outside Boston, and now all this!” She flung her hands out expansively.
“All this and I’m getting married and meeting my family too!”
Yet despite her contagious joy, the visit was bittersweet. There was such a
short time and Adam sat, drinking in everything about his daughter, only too
aware he would probably never see her again in this life. He knew that even if
they should ever meet again, they would always remain as virtual strangers to
one another. The ties of blood could not come close to emulating the times of
love that clearly existed between Catherine and John. Yet, in a strange way,
this gave Adam some comfort, as it reassured him that he had done the right
thing, all those years ago. Catherine was happy and she was loved. He could not
ask for anything more. And if he grieved for the child he had never known, well
that was his own private business…and a man had a right to some secrets, didn’t
he?
“I’ve never really thanked you properly.” Adam shook John’s
hand firmly “For all you did, for all those years…”
John shook his head. “Thank me? Adam, there isn’t a day goes by that I don’t
thank you – you gave me the greatest gift any man cold – you gave me your
daughter and trusted me with her care. I’ll always be in your debt. You could
have come back east any number of times and been a part of Catherine’s life –
but from the start you wanted her to have one father, so she wouldn’t be
confused, or teased by her friends. I can’t imagine the heartbreak that must
have caused you – but I know that you did it out of love.”
“I only ever wanted what was best for Catherine – and Isabella. That’s all I
ever wanted.”
“Your sacrifice gave me the happiest life a man could ever imagine,” John told
him. “I’m forever in your debt.”
Adam nodded and then clasped Catherine in a fond embrace. “You be happy now,” he
commanded tersely, afraid all his self-control would fly away to the four winds.
Returning the hug, Catherine hugged him fiercely. “And you. You’ll always be a
part of my life, and now I know where to find you. Whenever I think of you, I’ll
picture you right here, on the Ponderosa.”
“If you ever need me, I’ll be right here,” her father promised. Adam took a step
back to stand and watch as his only child rode out of his life forever.
Chapter Eight
“She’s a fine girl,” Ben remarked, taking down the family Bible and opening it.
“And a part of this family.”
He looked at the page, with a long list of names and dates inscribed upon it
“Catherine Rose – you remembered.”
“She was my little sister, and I could never forgot her,” Adam whispered,
looking at the inscription from long ago, written in his father’s strong hand:
“Rose Anne Cartwright – dearly beloved child of Ben and Marie Cartwright.”
“No, you never forget,” Ben agreed, then picked up the pen and added a new entry
– Catherine Rose Cartwright.
They looked at one another with a new understanding – two parents who had each
loved and lost a child. The sorrow and the joy bound them together in a way that
had never existed before and spanned whatever differences there had once been,
coaxing their hearts back into complimentary rhythms.
Blotting the entry carefully, Ben ran a loving finger of the inscription that
detailed the brief life of his own daughter, the child who lay up by the lake
with a single white rose clasped between her tiny hands.
“The first of a new generation,” Adam mused. “I wonder when you’ll add another
entry?”
“Do you have something to tell me?” Ben felt secure enough now in his
relationship with Adam to make a joke, but he was stunned by the look of misery
that crossed his son’s face.
“No. Catherine is my first and last child.”
“You can’t be sure of that. I know Marie and I sometimes despaired of having
another baby, but then Joe came along and made our lives complete. Don’t deny
yourself the possibility of happiness, Adam.”
“It’s different for me.” Adam stood up and walked over to the stove, carefully
keeping his back turned. He could not look at his father and manage to break
this news.
“After I had that accident that hurt my back, when I was building the house for
Laura, well things haven’t been the same. To put it bluntly, I’m not the man I
once was.”
He forced himself to turn around and meet the compassionate gaze of his father.
“I thought time might sort things out, but it didn’t. I’ve been to doctors all
over – in Boston, New York, London, Paris – you name the specialist and I’ve
probably seen him. But I have to face facts – I’m never going to be able to
father another child.”
“Oh Adam.” There was a world of understanding and love in Ben’s voice. “I never
knew. I never even thought about such a thing.”
“The doctors tell me it’s not uncommon after a spinal injury,” Adam said in a
tight voice. “But I can’t help wondering if this is my punishment. I gave my
child away, so why should I be trusted to have another one?” He thumped his hand
hard on the wall, welcoming the pain that flared up.
“There are so many things in life we can’t explain, that we simply have to
endure.” Ben thought back to all the tragedies that he had experienced and his
heart wept for his son.
“You won’t tell Hoss and Joe, will you?” Adam pleaded. “I wanted to tell you,
but I couldn’t bear it if they knew as well.”
“Your secret’s safe with me,” Ben promised and embraced his son, trying to take
away a little of the pain, to ease his sorrow just a fraction. That was what
fathers did – they tried to comfort and protect their children, no matter how
old they were.
Unable to hold back his emotions any longer, Adam did something he had not done
for more years than he could remember – he wept in his father’s arms.
“You took your own sweet time!” Sally protested. “I was
beginning to think I’d never see you again!”
“I told you I’d be back. Just had to make sure the coast was clear.” He looked
around the busy saloon and saw his brother was engaged in a game of cards. “You
coming?”
“Is that any way to treat a lady?” Sally giggled, grabbing his hand and pulling
him towards her room.
“Sshh! I want to keep some secrets from my family! I don’t want everyone knowing
my business!”
In the dark safety of the hallway, he pulled her into a tight embrace that
almost took her breath away, his hands firmly caressing the rounded curves of
her buttocks, pressing her close to his demanding body.
“You Cartwrights – you’re uncontrollable!” Sally opened the door to her room and
ushered him into her room with a broad, welcoming smile.
Joe pushed his hat back and surveyed the cards with interest, before taking a
long pull of beer. “Anyone seen Hoss?” he enquired.
The other players assumed innocent looks.
“He was over by the bar, last time I looked,” Andy Martin said, exchanging a
broad wink as Joe looked back down at his hand. Every man deserved a little
privacy, after all. And only a fool would get on the wrong side of Hoss
Cartwright.
“I just hope he’s keeping out of trouble,” Joe mused, pondering his next move.
“It’s real hard being the responsible member of the family!” A happy smile
spread across his face. “Now boys – who wants to see me?” he challenged and
settled back to enjoy the evening.
The End
July 2004
(The poem Adam quotes is Infant Joy, by William Blake)