“The friendlies?” Wyeth drained his cup, setting it aside.
“Tribes what cotton up to the white man.”
“Yes! Like the ones here,” Wyeth cheered. “Flathead, Nez Perce.”
“Snake too.”
“Why, the Shoshone roam that Snake River country.”
“Good place as any for a man to be when he’s got him a passel of trade goods.”
Slapping both palms down on the tops of his thighs, the Yankee vaulted to his feet suddenly. “A good place where I’ll raise my fort—squarely in the middle! Right between the Hudson’s Bay at Vancouver on the Columbia … and the post Sublette and Campbell are raising at the mouth of La Ramee’s Fork! God bless you, Titus Bass! God bless you!”
“W-what the hell you bless me for?” and he found his cup being filled by the exuberant Yankee.
“All is not lost! Don’t you see?” Wyeth swept up his own cup again, pouring some amber fluid into it from a clay jug. “From the other outfits come here to rendezvous, I’ve somehow managed to add another thirty men to my brigade … and now I know where to base my operations! By building my own fort squarely in the western country!”
As for Wyeth, the Yankee did have little choice but to swallow the bone he had been thrown at this turn of life’s trail.
There truly was no recourse against those who had conspired against him, just as he himself admitted in correspondence written to his financial backers in the East over the last few days, “For there is no Law here.”
Fair play and honesty had apparently counted for nothing under the hot summer sun that second of July as the Wyeth brigade set out for the Snake country, escorting Jason Lee’s party of five Protestant missionaries bound for the land of the Nez Perce with what remained of their horned cattle.
A hungover Bass had finished loading up the last of the goods he had traded from Wyeth that morning as the Boston merchant eagerly prepared to pull out for the west, accompanied by a pair of naturalists he had escorted from St. Louis: Thomas Nuttall, a botanist, and John Kirk Townsend, a Philadelphia ornithologist.
Grittily shaking hands with the two partners who had done nothing to stop Sublette’s underhanded scheming, Wyeth grimly prophesied to Fitzpatrick and Bridger, “You will find that you have only bound yourselves over to receive your supplies at such price as may be inflicted on you, and that all that you will ever make in this country will go to pay for your goods. You will be kept as you have been—a mere slave to catch beaver for others.”
Upon marching away from that rendezvous in the valley of Ham’s Fork, the Yankee tipped his hat and smiled at Sublette and Campbell, those who had done everything in their power to destroy the success of his business enterprises, vicious competitors who out of some species of curiosity had come to see him off.
To them and the remnants of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company partners, Wyeth vowed, “Gentlemen, I will roll a stone into your garden that you will never be able to get out.”
His was a threat that would echo even louder across the years to come.
The unmerciful August sun stung Bass’s eyes with the burn of mud-dauber wasps as he stepped from the cool shelter of the cottonwoods along Ham’s Fork to watch the approach of those eighteen Frenchmen and half-breeds moseying unhurriedly behind Thomas McKay and Jarrell Thornbrugh. The seething orb had just emerged from the ridges to the east, but already the motionless air felt stifling.
“Not a good day for the trail!” Titus called out as the ragged column approached.
“We better get out while we still have some fat on our bones!” Thornbrugh roared, and brought his tall horse to a halt. He swiped a hand down his sweaty face. “Not one of us used to this bloody heat, Scratch.”
“Figure we can stay and sweat in the shade,” McKay declared, “or we can start back to our country—”
“Where it’s cooler,” Thornbrugh interrupted, “and green too!”
For a moment Bass regarded the austere beauty of the burnt-sienna bluffs that rimmed the valley, shoved up like massive, mighty shoulders against the pale summer-blue of the morning sky. “Green there all the time, ain’t it?”
“Winter or summer,” McKay agreed.
“You can keep it,” he told them. “I’ll stay on here where there’s real seasons. Much as I hate the summers—I’d rather have me my seasons.”
“The snows don’t get deep in Oregon country,” Thornbrugh chided as he started to rock out of the saddle. “And the snows don’t stay near as long as they do in your mountains.”
“You ain’t got me to worry about moving in with you, Jarrell!”
“If not, will we see you next rendezvous?”
He watched the Englishman step up before him. “’Less I’ve gone under—that’s for sartin.”
“You have all you’ll need for another year, my friend?”
“Believe I do.”
“Powder and lead—”
“Yep.”
“Blankets and beads?”
“Yes, Jarrell,” he answered with a smile. “Even got some girlews and geegaws off Wyeth in my trading.”
“That Yank’s sure to trouble the Company,” McKay snarled. “I just know it, Jarrell.”
Thornbrugh turned back to Bass. “You’ll watch what you got left for hair?”
“I got me others to watch over now,” Scratch replied.
“They’re beauties, let me tell you,” the tall man exclaimed with admiration. “Good thing the wee one takes after her mother—gorgeous as she is.”
“Wouldn’t do to have a sweet babe like that take after her mud-ugly ol’ man, would it?”
And then they stood there, motionless a long moment longer, staring at one another, growing in the unease of knowing the time had come once again.
“I said my fare-thees to you twice’t a’fore, Jarrell,” Bass stabbed the silence between them as the men sweated and the horses stamped in a semicircle around the two of them.
“What’s that you’re trying to say?”
“That this may be a fare-thee too, but it’s also a promise to cross your tracks again.”
Titus held out his hand between them, but Thornbrugh shoved it aside roughly and seized the American in both of his massive arms, pulling the smaller, thinner man into a ferocious embrace. At that very moment Scratch was grateful Jarrell nearly squeezed the breath out of his body. For that moment Thornbrugh choked off the sob that threatened to overwhelm Titus.
When the big Englishman pulled back, their arms outstretched between them, Bass blinked several times, squinting as if troubled with the intense light. But it was the fire of those sudden tears that stung his eyes now.
Thornbrugh inched back another step. “I’ll hold you to that promise, Titus Bass—true lord of this great wilderness! If God doesn’t take me, and the good Doctor so chooses, I’ll be back here to your rendezvous next year.”
“I’ll be here, friend. Lay your set to that.” And he studied the way the huge man moved as Thornbrugh turned and stepped back to his horse, taking his reins from McKay, then rose to the saddle.
“Give my respects to the Doctor.”
“I will do that,” Thornbrugh agreed as he urged his horse away slowly.
“He’s a good man … for an Englishman!”
Jarrell bawled with a crack of sudden laughter that split the hot air. “You aren’t a bad sort either—not for a wretched American!”
Then he called out, “Watch your backtrail, Jarrell!”
Thornbrugh turned and smiled hugely with those massive teeth of his like whitewashed pickets surrounding a settlement house. He waved one last time, then twisted back around in the saddle and was swallowed up by the rest of those bringing up the rear of that column.