Governor Coke had gotten himself elected as the savior of democracy, promising a certain and final end to Reconstruction and all that had come along with it since the War Between the States had ended in 1865. Funding the Rangers had been a major initiative, promising to rid the state of the constant threat of Indian attacks and do away with the underfunded and corrupt State Police force. But Coke had obviously found out that funding a full battalion of Rangers was an expensive proposition. It was too expensive to sustain his original vision. No wonder Pete Feders seemed so strained when he arrived in Comanche. This was one more strike against his company, when his leadership was already fragile. Josiah’s recent failures were surely just one more thing to make the company stand out as a bad example of Coke’s original vision of the Rangers.
Josiah wondered if Pete knew more about the cuts and how they were going to occur. If so, then he probably wasn’t able to say yet, adding to Feders’s frustration.
“I don’t think they’ll keep me on,” Scrap said. “There’s men with more experience than me.”
“You have a reputation as a great shot, and you’re right, you’ve got horse skills. An exceptional sense that I’ve hardly ever been witness to. That’ll go a long way. I wouldn’t worry too much about staying on if I were you.”
“You really think so?”
“I do. It’ll be me that’ll face the cut before you do. Feders isn’t too fond of me.”
“You know why?”
“I have an idea, even though I’ve tried real hard to stay out of his personal business, but I haven’t been able to.”
“Has to do with Captain Fikes’s daughter, don’t it?”
“It might. I don’t know.” Josiah sat back down in front of the fire and motioned for Scrap to follow suit. He did know, though—at least his gut did. Pete Feders blamed him for Pearl Fikes’s reluctance to be courted and ultimately to marry him, even though Josiah had stayed as far away from Pearl as was humanly possible. Early in the spring, Josiah had witnessed a full proposal, Pete on his knees in front of Pearl, and Pearl had turned him down flat. Josiah was hidden in the shadows, but he suspected Pete knew he’d been there. The man had treated him differently ever since.
“This whole trip turned ugly,” Josiah continued. “I’d take back every decision I made since leaving Austin if I could. Change a lot of things. But life doesn’t work that way. You know that as well as I do.”
“You can’t bring Overmeyer back.” Scrap was still standing, pushing the toe of his boot into the sandy loam.
“Sit down. You’re not going anywhere.”
“I know that, but I’m still sore at you.”
“Not anymore than I am at myself.”
“I suppose not.” Scrap sat down and picked his plate back up. The smoke snaked upward, leaving Scrap alone. The breeze died, as if it had never existed in the first place. “I suppose if there’s any consolation, Overmeyer didn’t suffer much.”
“You’re sure of that?”
“I couldn’t see clearly, I was on the other side of that big ole tree, but that damned Indian was a good shot.”
“I saw it. Thought surely you were next.”
Scrap looked down at the ground. “I nearly peed myself. I figured sure as there is a Hell and a Heaven that the Comanche was gonna jump off his horse and scalp Red Overmeyer, then come for me, too.”
Josiah was quietly surprised by Scrap’s declaration of faith. The boy had never mentioned much about his Christian beliefs, other than making note of his sister’s life with nuns.
“That does seem odd, doesn’t it?” Josiah asked.
“What?”
“That the Comanche didn’t scalp Red, that they left you there . . . alive?”
“I wondered about it, but I sure didn’t dwell on it. I was just glad to be free.”
“How’d you get loose? Did you wiggle out of those ropes?” Josiah asked. “They looked awful tight.” His tone was curious, and soft. He figured the memory was fresh, and being so close to Red in death, seeing and smelling his blood, had probably provoked a reaction from Scrap’s emotional past. There was no need to get the boy all riled up again.
Scrap shook his head no. “No way I could have got out of that binding.”
“Then how?”
“Feders. He rode up with the company right near dark. I thought I was dreamin’, havin’ a hallucination. But sure enough, it was our company that rescued me . . . and you, too,” Scrap said, a satisfied smile growing on his face.
Josiah caught his words before he said them out loud. He swallowed the question that nearly escaped his lips and let it settle deep inside him. But he couldn’t let it go, couldn’t keep from wondering why Pete Feders had been just a couple of hours behind them on the same day he had sent them out on a mission that Josiah thought was all his own.
CHAPTER 18
Austin came into view as Josiah and Scrap crested the rise of a hill. Josiah gently pulled in Lady Mead’s reins and brought the palomino to an easy stop after a long, hard ride. Scrap followed suit, looking at Josiah curiously, but remained silent and didn’t question the decision.
There was no joy in the homecoming for Josiah. Very simply, Austin still did not feel like home to him. The city was crowded, noisy, smelly, and the shadows were uncertain and mostly unknown. Josiah had yet to get his footing as a city dweller even though he had moved there on a permanent basis nearly six months earlier. The reasons, at least at the time, had seemed clear: He needed to move on with his life, and leaving his son on a small farm while he was away Rangering didn’t feel right—especially after the outlaws—Charlie Langdon and Liam O’Reilly—had taken the boy hostage and used him as bait. It had nearly ended in tragedy. Lyle was no longer safe in the piney woods of East Texas. But it was more than that. For a brief moment, Josiah had felt his heart stir alive, and he thought that being in the city and being close to those that stirred his heart—specifically Pearl Fikes—would help him step forward into a life worth living. Being a Ranger helped, but the recovery from the wound that had occurred in Lost Valley had set him back, and taken a lot longer than he’d thought it would. And Pearl Fikes was a grand catch, being pursued by Pete Feders . . . and Major John B. Jones. Josiah knew he could not compete with the stature of either man, so he had tried to avoid her as much as possible in the last few months. If there was one quality about the city that Josiah liked, it was the ability to get lost in it.
“What’s the matter, Wolfe?” Scrap finally asked.
Josiah shook his head. “Nothing.”
“It’s a purty sight, ain’t it?”
Josiah exhaled deeply. “I suppose so.”
From their vantage point, they could see nearly straight down Congress Avenue. The Old Stone Capitol stood at the end of the road, a three-storey Greek Revival building, set in the middle of Capitol Square. The avenue was lined with buildings butted up next to each other, mostly two-storey, but some, including the hotels, were three stories.
The capitol building had a slight feel to it, and there were some who were demanding that a grander building be erected—but again the economic collapse had quelled any real momentum to rebuild. As it was, the election in 1850 had only named Austin the capital for twenty years, so there was a temporary feel to the building and what it stood for. Another election, in 1872, had settled the matter, making Austin the permanent capital of Texas.
It seemed there were buildings as far as the eye could see—churches and dry goods stores: Sampson & Hendrik’s groceries and hardware, more than one mercantile, competing liveries, the Opera House, a few theaters, Republic Square and the county courthouse, nestled close to “Little Mexico,” an enclave favored mostly by Mexicans and very few Anglos. Little Mexico was a rough section of town, but no more so than the section that served to provide entertainment for cowboys hot off the trail and looking for a good time in the bagnios, whorehouses, and saloons. That area, the first ward, was west of Congress Avenue and ran to just north of the Colorado River. It didn’t really have an Anglo name, like Little Mexico, other than Hell’s Half Acre—but that was a Dallas name, and most Austinites refused to call it that—most cities had spots that were called that or something similar. It was one place Josiah rarely visited, but he could see it from where he sat on the ridge.