And, for whatever reasons, we were facing those cossacks in much the same situation.
The rest of the hands, at least counting me, had mixed emotions, but Shad looked quietly at the big cossack and spoke in a flat voice. “My men and me are moving out like I said, right after breakfast.”
The big cossack’s jaw went tight and Slim spoke quickly. “We thought you was here t’ give us a hard time along with them others. In a outta-the-way place like this, it’s nice t’ meet some friends.”
“We are not your friends.” The cossack’s hard, penetrating eyes briefly studied each of us, one after the other. “I am Captain Mikhail Ivanovitch Rostov of the Kuban-Siberian Cossacks. My men and I are here under orders. We’re to protect you and the cattle on your trip.”
This brought all of us up a little short, since nothing had ever been said about anything like that. Shad couldn’t believe what he’d heard. With mixed irritation and amusement he said, “To what?”
“You’re Northshield, I presume.” There was iron in his voice. “As I said, to protect you.”
And there was now iron times ten in Shad’s voice. “This outfit don’t hardly need any help, mister.”
As the two big men looked hard at each other, there was a grim, hollow stillness in the air, like the feeling in a thunderstorm just before lightning cracks.
Old Keats, God bless him, broke in and said quietly, “After all, Shad, they have their orders. And they know the country, and what to expect.”
Captain Rostov glanced briefly, piercingly at Old Keats. “Your man has common sense.”
“He ain’t my man,” Shad said flatly, meaning something stronger than what his words were saying. “Every man with me is his own man.”
“Well, what the hell”—Slim shrugged in a peaceful way—“these fellas oughtn’t t’ get in the way too goddamned much, Shad.”
His two top men had, in their own way, put in their votes, but Shad took another long, slow drag on his smoke, still hard put to agree with them.
“After all,” I added hesitantly, repeating the earlier point that had impressed me so much, “they sure did pull those soldiers off our backs awful fast.”
Shad took another thoughtful haul on his smoke. “We’ll see,” he said finally. Then he dropped the butt and slowly ground it out with his boot. “We’ll decide it after breakfast.”
By saying that, he’d backed off about half the width of a gray hair, and Rostov, in a low, hard voice, backed away roughly the same distance. “When there’s only one decision, that decision is always right.”
There was still the feeling of intense, swift trouble hovering deadly and invisible between the two men.
“Well!” Slim clapped his hands together, making a kind of a period in the conversation. “Now that’s settled, what’s for breakfast? You an’ them cossacks a’ yours like t’ try some cowboy beans?”
Rostov ignored Slim’s question. He turned curtly on his heel and walked back toward the cossack horses, his men following.
“Boy,” Slim said, frowning. “He sure is kind of an abrupt fella.”
Shad looked off toward the cattle. About half of them were up by now, others staggering to their feet and shaking their heads as if to clear them. Then he looked toward the hill where some of the curious Russians from the night before had begun to gather again. “Crab, you and Mushy cook up some bacon and beans. Natcho, you and Link and Chakko see t’ the horses. Keats, go and tell those people they can have their pots and stuff back. And pay ’em whatever you think is fair.”
As the others started away to their jobs, Keats said, “I think those people mostly just wanted t’ be helpful.”
“Pay ’em. I don’t care what, but pay ’em.”
“I’ll work somethin’ out.”
“The rest of you come with me. We may have t’ punch a few a’ those cows back t’ life.”
He was right. About forty head were lying down in a drunken or chilled stupor. We pounded on them to get their attention, and sometimes a few of us more or less hauled them up onto their feet.
All except one. A young coyote-dun bull had frozen to death, the poor darn animal’s four legs stretched out straight and stiff and hard as rocks. Christ, how you hate to lose an animal!
We’d lost two cows on the sea voyage, and now three head in one night, and it hit Shad pretty hard.
“More’n likely a heart attack,” Slim said, “and then he froze in the night.”
Keats came up to where we were standing around the frozen bull. “Those people won’t take anything at all,” he told Shad. “They loaned us those things last night just t’ be friendly, an’ so I thanked ’em.”
“You thanked ’em?” Shad looked at Keats with eyes still cold and grim from looking at the dead bull. “I told you t’ pay them!”
“Well how the hell can I pay them if they won’t take any pay?”
Shad’s hard words had the finality of a nail being driven strongly into an oak plank. “I don’t want t’ be beholden to any man in this country!”
“But there’s no way t’ pay those people! What they did for us was a free and open gift!”
Shad took a deep breath and looked down at the frozen bull for a long, frowning moment. “Then tell ’em we’re giving them a free and open gift back! Fourteen hundred pounds of beef!”
That was one hell of a decision. Every man there knew that meat would have seen our whole outfit through more than two good months of steaks and stew.
“That whole beef for half a night’s loan a’ some beaten-up pots?” Dixie asked.
But Old Keats, who somehow looked kind of pleased about what Shad had said, was already on his way. And it surely worked out.
Those Russians didn’t have much in the way of beef, according to Keats. And while they were too proud to take anything in terms of pay, they were really deeply moved about the gift they’d been given in return. While we were eating breakfast beans some of the white-shawled women got over their shyness enough to come down and get their pots and barrels, and they even nodded and smiled at us a little. In the meantime some of the men had started skinning and dressing the coyote-dun bull.
A short distance away, the cossacks were waiting, but it seemed like there was always an air of being ready to go, of impatience about them. Some of them were tending to their horses, while a few were eating something cold, for they hadn’t built a fire. We noticed one of them who had a thick funny-looking plate.
“What kind of plate’s he eatin’ off?” Purse Mayhew asked.
“That ain’t no real plate,” Slim said. “That there’s a hardened pumpkin rind. Indians used t’ use ’em. Works good.”
Chakko nodded and grunted in agreement, which was one of his normal sentences.
“Pumpkin rind?” Crab scraped his spoon over his tin plate for some final beans. “Sounds heathen t’ me. Ain’t they never invented metals?”
“Pumpkin rind’s kind a’ handy for eatin’,” Slim said. “If you’re low on water, ya’ just scrape off a thousandth of an inch from the top with your knife an’ you’ve washed your dishes.”
“They’ve damn well invented metals,” Mushy said to Crab. “Those swords a’ theirs prove that beyond a whole lot a’ question.”
“Do they have t’ cut themselves every time they take those things out?” Sammy the Kid asked. “That was kind of horrifyin’.”
“Either that or cut someone else a lot deeper,” Link said. We all knew he was guessing, but it sure sounded accurate.
“Forgettin’ them swords,” Slim muttered, “in case we ever get in an argument with ’em, I hope you fellas have took note a’ the large amount of artillery they’re packin’.” He chewed slowly, glancing off toward them. “Every man’s got some kind of a side arm and a rifle, along with that oversized Mexican toothpick.”