Tales of a homesteader moving out West to Utah after the Civil War to build a new life. |
Prelude: Dear readers, this is gathered from a series of short tales told to me by my grandmother about the life and times of my great, great grandparents. While I listened to her tales, I began to understand my familyās heritageā¦ itās a story I must tell. Although the Wild West is no longer of interest to modern day life, I felt it necessary to pass along these tidbits of my family history to future generations. In order to protect the privacy of persons living or dead and the actual events, I felt obligated to fictionalize my stories. Thus, the names, characters, and incidents are a creation of my imagination, and in no way represent actual persons or events. My story begins with the tales of a homesteader moving out West to Utah after the Civil War to build a new life. Southeastern Utah is a land situated beneath soaring walls of sandstone, rolling hills of grass and sage and deep blue sky. It begins during a time when the folks of the West settled their own difficultiesā¦ Part One Chapter 1: Newly married Jake Rudd and Sarah Rudd, along with three pregnant cows and a bull calf at the side joined a group of 25 wagons departing from Fort Fredrick Steele just east of Rawlins, Wyoming on route to Indian ceded land in southeastern Utah. On Monday, the morning of September 8, 1873 under the protection of one company of US 5th Cavalry from Fort D. A. Russell, we departed Fort Steele towards our claim for a homestead on the newly open land near Robbers Roost. It was a pretty picture with the two horses ahead of our wagon, the cows tied to the back of the wagon and Jake sitting on the seat beside me. He was not only a handsome man, but I discovered a very useful one. We were very much in love and I showed him that I would walk beside him, not behind him. I had shown him on the first day we were together; we were a team working towards our common end. It was what we both wanted. Our wagon train moved slowly through the high mountains, desert and sagebrush making 6 to 16 miles a day. This was a big country needing strong men and women to live in it. This land was not a place for the timid or frightened because it had a way to wear folks down to size. What mattered most back home, no longer amounted to anything out here. Most important was courage and spirit. About twenty days on the trail, we were attacked by a roving renegade band of Ute Indians, never appreciated the company of the 5th Cavalry until then. Mr. Burt Ward, who was the captain of our wagon train, was shot with an arrow through his lungs. Many of the families talked of turning back. Mr. Ward did know what to say, āYouāre in Indian country, turning back and leaving the wagon train is more dangerous than going on. We have protection from the 5th Cavalry, nobody should turn back.ā Two days later Mr. Ward died. We buried him on the side of a hill, so he could look down on the trail he had planned. That night there was a terrible, nasty argument, and the result was that all agreed to go on. They also selected Ty Richardson as the new wagon master. Come morning our wagon was the second one ready to take its place in line. The rest of the folks were scared and kept muttering about the great stretches of land before us. Jake and I knew the Ute Indians were trailing us, but we never did see them. There was an autumn coolness in the air and we made thirteen miles that day and fifteen the next. The grass was getting better, but there was thunder rumbling off in the canyons, promising rain. It turned out to be a brief shower. We continued day after day, moving over grassland sprinkled with sagebrush and an ever-changing landscape. Finally, we reached the sandstone walls of Utah on Saturday, October 20, 1873. Jake and I were both smitten the first time we saw the red rocks, the cottonwoods, the small spring creek and sparkling blue sky of southeastern Utah. We quickly negotiated with Samuel Maker the US government agent for Utah and Colorado to file a homestead claim to 160 acres west of the Sierra La Sal Mountains for $16 and a $2 filing fee. The filing also included permission to graze our cattle on any of the surrounding 100,000 acres of the governmentās canyon and grasslands. For more than ten years, Jake and I worked together and built up the ranch, constructing our main house out of the red sandstone, the corral, fencing and a one-room bunkhouse from the cottonwood trees, running cattle and raising one son. I like our ranch, it is charming and being remote from town is somehow irresistible to me. Then one day Jake went into the town of La Sal for supplies and did not come back. I was mad at myselfā¦ I loved himā¦trusted him, angry that I didnāt asked questionsā¦ why on horseback? Why didnāt he use the buckboard? What supplies are so essential? Why couldnāt all of us go? Frustrated, I sat and brooded, āWhat happened to Jake? ā We are isolated at the ranch. āWhat should we do? Weāll need to run the ranch, feed the cows, and protect ourselves from Ute Indians and cattle rustlers. I was a strong woman, but now that Jakeās gone... am I? I have to beā¦ā I decided to keep the ranch and promised myself to rough ride our future in the livelihood of cattle ranching. I'll be a solo woman rancher with my eight-year-old son and with very little money in my pocketbook. I believed in my heart that we would succeed, but weāll need help, hiring at least one ranch hand. Four months later, a Justice of the Peace Ralph Stewart rode to our ranch to let me know that Jake was killed by Tom Hart in a fair gunfight for cheating at cards in the Blue Goose Saloon in Monticello. He assured me that Jake was given a Christian burial in the Mormon Churchās cemetery. Justice Stewart also handed me $223 and Jakeās pocket watch. He sold Jakeās horse, saddle, rifle and pistol, paid for the coffin and burial. He put the watch and money aside until he could come this way. I invited him to stay for supper, but he declined as he was headed for Green River, Utah where Zed McCartney, a bank robber was in jail awaiting trial. I asked if he could go by the way of La Sal, because I needed to hire help to run the ranch. I know it is out of your way, adding about 16 miles more to Green River, however my son and myself would appreciate your help. āIs there anyone you have in mind to hire?ā Stewart asked. āYes,ā I replied, āMy husband usually went to the livery stable in town to hireā¦ both Ben Anderson and Riley Rawlins have helped us in the past with roundup and herdingā¦ theyād stay in the bunkhouse while helping.ā āAll right, Iāll see what I can do.ā The next morning Justice Stewart stopped by the livery stable in La Sal; two men were sitting around playing cards. He asked, āIf they knew Ben Anderson or Riley Rawlins.ā Both looked up, Ben said with a drawl, āMight know where theyāre atā¦ Why youāre looking for them?ā āThe Rudd ranch needs some help. Mrs. Rudd and the boy asked me to stop by to see if these fellows wanted work. Donāt know if she wanted one or both, but think it a good idea both should go out thereā¦ the spread is pretty big.ā Riley replied, āWell, weāre them, but afraid to fess up to youā¦ wondering why the Justice of the Peace Stewart was asking. Weād be glad to go out there, hasnāt been much work here in town.ā Ben voiced in, āWhatās wrong with Jakeā¦ He usually comes in to hire us.ā āShe needs helpā¦ I rode by the ranch to tell her that her husband was shot and died in Monticello. It took a while before I got out a chance to come out this way.ā āSorry about her husbandā¦ Weāll go out today.ā Ben uttered, āSheās probably going to sellā¦ lucky Mr. Hailey can buy up Ruddās ranch in his ever expanding cattle kingdom.ā Later that day, Ben and Riley rode out to the Rudd Ranch. They found Mrs. Rudd working in the nearby meadow. āSorry about your husband. Weāre here to help and pretty much know whatās to do.ā Sarah sighed, āThanks. Bunkhouse is ready for you and supper will ready in a few hours. Jake left us short on moneyā¦ but I think we can affordā¦twenty-five dollars a month including food and the bunkhouse.ā āWeāll first set in, then at supper talk about what needs to be doneā¦ itāll be a good if your son John could help usā¦ its best if he learns all thereās to do.ā Chapter 2: Five years later, Sarah watched as a newly branded calf burst out of the wooden chute and trot to the corral. Our ranch is a horseback outfit, run with a small ranch crew, John, myself and both Ben and Riley who became our permanent wranglers for the ranch. Feeling much older now, Iām a rugged woman with work-worn hands and steel gray eyes showing a lifetime of self-reliance. John, now thirteen and I run everything. In general, we usually let the wild life like cougars and coyotes alone, except when they take down one of our calves. Our ranch work never seems to end. In spring, we trail the 200-300 head cattle on horseback onto the cool mountain meadows waiting out the summer heat. In fall we would drive the cattle into a remote protected canyon surrounded by rock walls. This past winter of 1888 was particularly a hard one. Blizzards scattered the cattle and buried much of the forage needed to sustain our herd. In the spring, I had a bad case of pneumonia and remained alone at the ranch while my son and the ranch hands went out logging in hundreds of hours on horseback tracking down our surviving head of cattle. More than a month has passed and they are still out hunting down the cattle. Three times during the last week our ranch was attacked by a small band of Ute Indians, and three times I turned them back. I was worried I could not hold out much longer and was praying that my son and hired hands would return. The Utes came back a fourth time. I resolutely stood in the door of my home with a Winchester rifle in my hands, inside beside the door was a table with a double-barreled shotgun and an old 44 caliber Walker Colt revolver lying on it. Facing the cabin were about 100 Ute Indians on ragged, tired ponies. One of the Indians lifted his hand with the palm outward in a sign of greetings. I recognized him as the Ute medicine man, Corolla, a leader of these renegade Ute warriors. He sat on his pony in silence; his black scrawled eyes studied my home, my corral and me. His eyes strayed to a single cow in the corral and then to a small stack of hay farther up in the meadows. Overall, he lost three men, seven others had been wounded and six ponies had been killed. The braves reported that there was no man in the house, only a woman; and Corolla had come to see this woman. These are the same White River Ute warriors who had fought at the Maker Massacre and fought the US army at Mill Creek. Yet I, a woman fought them off, and was prepared to fight now. There was a glint of admiration in Corollaās eyes that appraised me. The Ute was a fighting man and respected all that fought for honor. āPut down your rifle,ā Corolla said in English I was surprised. Although frightened, I replied in a steady voice in Shoshone-Bannock, āIām not a fool, this rifle is pointed at you and I will pull its trigger.ā I knew if he wanted to capture or kill me it would be done. Until now I was able to fight off the random attacks, because the warriors were raiding the ranch out of monotony. Caught unaware by my response in the Shoshone language, he questioned in English, āHow do you speak our language? Are you part Shoshone... or Bannock?ā I shifted to English as Corolla stared at me, āI am not a Shoshone or Bannock, although I would not be ashamed if I were. I grew up among the Shoshone and Bannock children in Colorado. They were my playmates. I learned from them and of the many admirable qualities the Shoshone nation has.ā Corolla turned his pony and spoke to the others and they paid attention. Suddenly he rode up to me and directed a question, āWhereās your man?ā Corolla said. I hesitated before replying, āMy husband died five years ago. My son and hired hands are out tracking down our cattle.ā āHow long have they been gone?ā he asked. I decided not to lie, āthey have been gone for more than a month.ā Corolla considered and questioned, āWhy would they leave you, a woman alone?ā He waited for my reply. My heart was pounding in my chest and I could not answer. Finally Corolla continued, āYou fight well. You have killed my young men.ā āYour men attacked me.ā I said, adding, āThey stole two of my horses.ā He looked at me, āWhy do you not leave.ā I stared at him, āLeave? Why? This is my home. This land is mine. This creek is mine. I will not leave.ā āThis was once a Ute creek,ā he reminded me. āThe Utes live further north in the Utina Basin by Fort Duchesneā I replied. āYou do not need this creek. I do.ā āBut when the Ute Indians come this way, where shall they drink?ā Their throats are dry and you keep them from drinking the creekās water.ā He was talking directly to me, a good sign. āYou speak with forked tongue,ā I said bravely. āThere is water yonder.ā I gestured pointing towards the hills. āBut if people of the Utes come in peace they may drink water at my creek.ā Corolla smiled and said, āWhat you need is a good fighting man...together you could raise an army of warriors.ā āI have no wish to raise warriors,ā I said softly. āYour people have your ways, and I have mine. I live in peace.ā I boldly added, āI did not think the great medicine man Corolla made war on women!ā The Ute looked at me, and then turned his pony away. āMy people will trouble you no longer,ā he said. āWhat about my two horses?ā I called after him. āYour warriors took them from me.ā Corolla did not turn or look back, and the column of Ute warriors followed him away. I stepped back into the house and closed the door. The muscles in my legs trembled, my heart still pounded in my chest and my body soaked in sweat, I sank to the floor leaned my back against the door and closed my eyes. When morning came, I cautiously went out to the creek for water. My two horses were back in the corral. Chapter 3: It was near a month on the trail looking for surviving cattleā¦ and recovered less than one-third head of cattleā¦ from the terrible winter filled with heavy snowstorms. John Rudd stopped his buckskin, āMa told me that if weāre having trouble rounding up our cowsā¦ I should head to town and hire another man. Ben and Riley looked tiredā¦.Ben spoke up, āson, weāll hunker down here and rest.ā Fact was the two men were pushing past forty and looked grainy from being long on horseback. āJust as well, Iāll be back as soon as I can,ā as John prodded the buckskin with his spurs. As he rode towards La Sal, he crossed paths with a man he never saw before. The man wasnāt much to look at, his face was narrow and body was thin, didnāt look like he belong to the range, but something made John decide that he was the man he wanted. āMister,ā John said, āare you rustling for work?ā The man halted his pony, turned and studied me right careful. I was thirteen, and was the man of the house for nigh on five years, but it didnāt seem to make any difference to him that I was a boy. āNow I might be. Whatās the work you have?ā he asked āMa and me have a little cattle outfit by foothills of the Sierra La Sal Mountains. With the bad winter, we figured to roust the survivors out of a boxed canyon and bring them down to the meadow. Me, Ben and Riley been out for a monthā¦ only found about seventy-five headā¦ missing close to two hundred or more. Thereās maybe a monthās work. Weād pay twenty a month, maybe more.ā He looked at me with his brown eyes and asked me, āYou always hire strangers?ā āNo, sir. I was headed to town to hire one of the loafers, but I saw you and figured I save me a ride and hire you.ā The way he looked at me, I was beginning to worry. āWhy me?ā he asked. So I told him what Ma said, āPay no attention to the showy kindā¦ Pick āem toughā¦ savvy and to lastā¦ applies to both men and animals.ā He eyes warmed and his face crinkled up and smiled. āYour ma is a right smart woman. Iād be proud to work for you. Who runs your spread?ā āWellā¦Me, sort ofā¦. Ma and me. Only she leaves it to me, ācause she says a boy without a Pa has to learn to manage for himself.ā We rode for about ten minutes before he said anything, and then said, āBoy, Iām just out of prison, nameās Roy Kristinā¦ if you wantā¦ you can change your mind and go hire someone else. I donāt want to make trouble for you or your Ma.ā āIāll not hold that against you.ā I said, āI hired you and if you donāt stack up, Iāll fire you.ā After ten miles as we forded a creek, I showed him with a sweep of my hand. āOur land begins here and runs back into the canyons. This here is deeded land... Ma and Pa were homesteaders when the land opened up in ā73. It has plenty of good grass down here... we need to collect our remaining stock and bring them back to the meadows.ā When we rode into the camp, Ben spoke up, āBoy, this man is just out of prison, your Ma isnāt going to like you hiring him.ā āBen and Riley, Ma tells me to hire whom Iāve a mind to. I hired this man; he told me he was in prisonā¦ Iāll not fire him cause of that.ā Roy had sat real quiet up to now. āBen,ā he said, āyou just back up and leave the boy alone. He sizes up like pretty much of a man and it really looks like he needs outside help. Seems to me there must be a reason you want to keep me out.ā Ben was mad, as Iād ever seen him. āYou can get yourself right back in jail,ā he said, āIāve seen your wanted poster, youāre Matt Warmer, a train robber, run with Butch and the Kid.ā Roy was slow to rile. He looked right back at Ben and Riley with cold eyes and said, āYou donāt know who I am or why I was in prison. You think you recognize me, but youāre wrong. My name is Roy Kristin. Iām not a robber or gun fighter. I went to prison for a squabble with another man over a woman we both likedā¦ beat the manās head in with a scantling from a fence when he drew his pistol. I was a deputy sheriff at that timeā¦ I didnāt runā¦ stayed ātill Ralph Stewart, a Justice of the Peace cameā¦stood trialā¦ Iāve paid my time and learned a tough lesson.ā Ben always had an unfriendly way about him, but noticed a change in his tone, āBoy, youāve hired yourself a man. Now letās see if we can round up the rest and herd āem to the meadow.ā Roy put on a disarming smile, āBen donāt think weāll find many more cowsā¦ youāve been out collecting for a month and only got seventy-five headā¦either the severe winter got two hundred head or something else happenedā¦ might want to go look around the boxed canyon you wintered the cattle.ā John replied, āThatās a mighty fine idea. Thinking more about itā¦ maybe Ben and Riley could drive what we have to the corralā¦ make sure my Ma is okayā¦ weāve been gone a long timeā¦ the Ute Indians are still about.ā Roy looked at me as if I was a capable man and not a boy. He followed up, āThatās sensible, donāt you agree. ā Everyone shook their head yes. Uninterrupted he continued, āItās late, we might stay here and campā¦tomorrow morning... we can head out. I noted the brand on your cows are Bar Rā¦is that the Rudd brand? Any other similar brands around these parts?ā Startled by the questions, replied, āYeah, Bar R is our brand. Thereās a large cattle ranchā¦. Mr. Haileyās Double Bar outfit is near Green River, Utah. What are you suggesting?ā Calmly he said, āNothing, just want to look aroundā¦ you and me can look for more survivors. ā Come peek of daylight, Ben and Riley started herding the cows towards the ranch. It was warm and still morning when Roy and I rode out to the boxed canyon. First time Roy saw the canyon; he looked around at the walls of the canyon as if he was expecting to see something. He got down off his horse and looked most careful at the trees and rocks. I just looked at him, wondering what he was doing. Finally it got the better of me and I asked him, āRoy what you looking for? Roy replied, āJust try to see what happened here in the canyonā¦ that winter caused the loss of two hundred cowsā¦ donāt see thatā¦ I do see lots of horse tracksā¦ couldāve been you, but one horse is lame from a broken horseshoeā¦ suspect someone else was looking for some cows.ā Just then, two riders were coming down draw, both of them armed, didnāt think about it at the time, neither of us were armed. George McCartney and his brother Bill looked like they wanted to start trouble, āYou still around. Figured you be off to your ranch by now.ā I asked, āWhy are you here? Canyonās long way for wranglers from the Double Bar ranch.ā āWe like it here,ā both replied. Roy then spoke up, āYeah! Pretty country... Nice folks... Not as many cows as expected.ā āWhat dā you mean by that?ā George scowled, āNot as many cows as you expected?ā āMaybe I should have said calves, but in time weāll find out what happened to the others.ā George looked over at Bill. āWhat about the kid?ā Bill shrugged. āSo whatā¦do what Mr. Hailey wants?ā The way they talked made no sense to me, but it made sense to Roy. āWas I you,ā Roy said, āIād be mighty sure your boss wants it this way. With the kid and all...ā āWhatād mean by that?ā Bill asked. āWhy it just wonāt workā¦no way to make it look rightā¦ the kid doesnāt even carry a gun. You boys sure donāt know your business.ā āMaybe you know it better?ā Bill sounded mean. āWhy, I do, at that.ā Better tell Oscar what I saidā¦ names Roy Kristin.ā āWhoās Oscar?ā George asked suspiciously. āWhy, Oscar Hailey. Thatās what they used to call him in the old days. He ever tells you how he happened to leave Abilene, Kansas? Itās quite a story.ā Something about the easy way Roy talked was bothering them. Now they werenāt sure of themselves. āAnd while youāre at it,ā Roy adds, āyou get him to tell you about me.ā Neither of them seemed to know what to doā¦ fact that he knew Mr. Hailey bothered them. George was uneasy and he kept looking at me. āYou boys tell Oscar that. You should also tell him not to send boys to do a manās job.ā āWhatās that mean?ā George was soreā¦thought he was a tough manā¦ Somehow when they came up against Roy they didnāt seem big or tough. āNow ride out of here and donāt stop riding until you get to the Double Bar. You tell Oscar Hailey if he wants a job done heād better come and do it himself.ā Well they didnāt know which way was upā¦ they came to cause troubleā¦ but their actions didnāt faze Roy. āHeāll do it.ā George said angrily. āMr. Hailey will want to do it himself. Youāll see.ā As they rode out of the canyon, Roy commented, āWeād best get back to your ranch, John. Itās early, but weād better be in when Oscar comes.ā I firmly spoke, āHe wonāt come, Roy. Mr. Hailey never goes anywhere unless he feels like it himself.ā āHeāll come,ā Roy said, āalthough he may first send Tom Hart, a bounty hunter for a group of Utah and Wyoming cattle barons.ā When he said that name I stared right at him, thinking, āThat was the name of the man who killed my Pa in a gunfight at Monticello.ā Chapter 4: Slowly, several days drew on at the ranch. Sarah busted a small piece of the meadow for planting vegetables. Alone, she cut hay in the meadow and built another stack. She saw Ute Indians several times, but they did not bother her. One morning, she opened her door, and saw Ben and Riley putting the cows into the corral, but John was not in sight. Sarah walked to the corral, āWhereās John?ā Ben spoke up, āJohn hired another man and they went out to the boxed canyon to look for more cows. We only found seventy-five survivors and brought them to the corral as John wanted.ā āYou think they be out much longer?ā Riley interrupted, āBet they be back soonā¦ werenāt no more cows to findā¦ donāt know what the new man wanted to seeā¦ John seemed to think it was a good idea.ā That same afternoon Roy and John rode into the ranch yard, Sarah came to the door, wiping her hands on her apron. She looked at the new rider. The newly hired man got down from his saddle and removed his hat. āThe boy hired me, maāam, but if you rather Iād not stay Iāll ride back to town. You see, Iāve been to prison.ā Sarah looked at him, but all she said was, āJohn does the hiring, I feel itās his responsibility.ā āAnd rightly so, maāam,ā He hesitated. āMy name is Roy Kristin.ā āSuper is āmost ready. Thereās a kettle of hot water for washing.ā We washed our hands in the basin and while he was drying his hands, Roy said, āYour Ma is a decent woman.ā Supper was a quiet meal, especially with a stranger at the tableā¦ and one thatās been to jail. Talk was mainly small talk about the ranch and weather. When weād finished, Roy said, āMind if I smoke?ā Reckon that was the first time in a while anybody asked Ma a question like that. Pa and other men who came around took it for granted and just lit up. Ma acted like it was asked every day and said, āPlease do.ā āYou have been getting good returns on your cattle?ā Roy asked her. āThe calves have been poor the last two or three years, but Ben and Riley said it was due to the cougars and coyotesā¦ you have to expect to lose some. āGood range,ā Roy said, āand plenty of water. Iād say you should make out.ā When the all hired hands had gone to the bunkhouse Ma started, āHow did you happen to hire him, John?ā I reminded her about what she told me about men and animals, and she smiled. āI think you learned your lesson well. Heās a good man. He may have been in prison, but he has good upbringing.ā Coming from Ma there wasnāt anything better. After a while I told her about the talk with George and Bill McCartney, and when I came to the part about Roy telling them to tell Mr. Hailey to come see him, I could see the worried look on her face. Hailey had tough ranch hands working for him and we didnāt want them around. Some even tried to court Ma after Pa was killed, but she put them off. Come daylight of the next day just as I was putting on my boots I heard an ax, and when I looked out I saw Roy with an ax working the woodpile. This surprised me as most cowhands resent any work other than riding. The day was filled with surprises, Roy and I went to the corral to haze down the seventy-five head that was very shy of young ones, and he showed he was good with a cutting horse and rope. We worked harder than all get-out for the next three days, mending fences, digging postholes. I couldnāt let him best me, but by now we shared and helped each other. Time to time heād stop and study the country, ask questions, but mostly just looked. On the fourth day we built a fire for coffee and took the wrappings off the lunches Ma fixed. Roy asked, you said your Pa was killedā¦Howād it happen?ā āMa and me didnāt see it. Pa went into La Sal for supplies; somehow he got to Monticello in a card game and was called out in a gun fight for cheating at cards.ā āYour Pa wearing a gun?ā Roy asked. āYes sir. Pa always wore a gun, but not to use on a man.ā āYou hear the name of who was in the gunfight?ā āYes sir. His name was Tom Hart; one in the same you said may come for you instead of Mr. Hailey.ā āI hope it wonāt come to that. I suspect that Oscar will try something legal first.ā We came in early from the range, so Roy put in the last hours tightening a gate on the corral. He was a man that always had to be busy. That evening we had a quiet supper. At supper Roy said to Ma, āThank you, maāam. I am proud to work for you.ā Ma blushed. Next morning as Ma was making breakfast, she said, āRemember that your Pa taught you to stand up for what you believe is right, and stand by your people.ā It was still early morning when a stranger rode into our ranch yard, hesitated his horse, shifting in the saddle, looking around. Ma went to the kitchen and came out on the porch and stood in the shadows with a double-barreled shotgun. I didnāt like ma doing that, but there was nothing I could say. The stranger got down off his horse and waited until I stepped down from the porch. I asked, "What'd you looking for mister?" A moment later I saw Roy walking up from the corral and yell, āTom, turn around and donāt reach for your gun.ā Tom turned around, pulling out a cigar out of his vest to put it in his mouth. He was about to strike a match, dropped it without lighting the cigar. He stood there starring at Roy. āSlim!ā Tom almost choked on the name. āI didnāt know it was you.ā āYou remember what I told you and Oscar when I ran you out of Abilene?ā Tom wasnāt seeing anybody else but Roy, the man he had called Slim. He wasnāt aware of anything else. And I was staring at him, because he was the man that shot my Pa, and he looked scared. āI told you if Oscar or you ever crossed my trail again Iād kill you.ā āDonāt do it, Slim. Both Oscar and Iāve have family. Oscar has two boys and a large ranch. Weāve done well.ā āThis boy had a father.ā āSlim, donāt do it.ā āThis boyās Pa has been dead for five years. I figure youāve been stealing his cows for at least two to three years. Iād say at least four hundred head.ā Tom never took his eyes of him. āYou write out a bill of sale for four hundred head and Iāll sign it for the boyās Ma. Then you go back to report to Oscar, have him write out a check for four thousand dollars. In three days weāll meet both of you in La Sal to cash the check together.ā āAll right,ā A frightened Tom replied. āAnd when the time comes youāll testify to Justice of the Peace Ralph Stewart that you were told to kill this boyās Pa.ā āI canāt do that, I wonāt do it.ā āTom,ā Roy said patiently, āyou might beat a court hearing, but you know you aināt going to beat me. Now my gun is on my saddle. Donāt make me go get it.ā Tom looked like he was going to be sickā¦as a kid caught stealing. I figured whatever he knew about Roy scared him bad enough not to argue. And the talk about the gun on the saddle might be just talk, as I thought I could see that Roy was packing something in his waistband. āRoy, I have Tom coveredā¦ he wonāt dare to draw his gun,ā It was Maās voice. She was on the porch pointing the shotgun at Tom Hart. āAll right,ā Tom said. His voice was so low you could hardly hear it. After Tom Hart left, I asked Roy, āTom called you Slim.ā āMy nickname was Slim, probably still is.ā āAnd you really didnāt even have a gun!ā āA man has to learn to live without a gun, and against most cowards you donāt need a gun. Tom knew I meant what I said.ā āBut, but youād been in prison for killing a man.ā He leaned against the house and looked off in the distance. āThat was past. Ten years ago, thatās what I did, only thing it was anger that drove me. There are laws to handle cases like mine, I forgot and I had to learn it the hard way.ā Ma put the shotgun away and came back to the door. āRoyā¦Johnā¦ get the othersā¦ breakfast is getting cold." After breakfast, we got up from the table and Roy said, āJohn, I think weāll work the south range today.ā āYes, sir,ā I said. Chapter 5: Three days later Roy, John and I were in La Sal and there was quite a crowd in town. Word somehow got around and folks were in town waiting for the fireworks to begin. We left our wagon with Old Man Baker. Mr. Baker was a man noted for staying out of trouble, and yet he was nervous, he hesitated, shifting his feet, and whispered, āTom Hartās in town, Mr. Haileyās hired bounty hunter.ā Ma responded, āMr. Baker, I believe you were a friend of my husband and I hope youāre a friend of me. Tell me if Mr. Haileyās in town.ā āWell, maāam, I figured to be a friend of yours, too.ā He continued, āNo, Mr. Haileyās not here yet. But Justice Ralph Stewart came in last night. Heās waiting at Mrs. Lopezās Tia Maria Cantina.ā It was warm, near noon. We walked down to the Dark Canyon Hotel, where Roy and I waited. Ma went out to buy some womenās things and sure didnāt want a man along. Nobody was on the street. Most people were inside the stores pretending to shop, but could not help talking in hushed tones while watching the street for the excitement to begin. A dog wandered across the street, looking for some shade to lie down. Nobody figured to finish their business until it was all over. A buggy clattered along the street and stopped in front of the hotel. When the dust settled, Mr. Hailey got down off the buggy and stepped up on the walk. The three McCartney brothers rode alongside the buggy and stopped to hitch up their horses. Folks began to amble out of the stores forming a crowd on the street waiting in anticipation for the fighting to begin. āAll right, Slimā Hailey said. āIām here and have the check for Mrs. Rudd. I donāt want any trouble thatās why I have Tom and the McCartneyās here with meā¦ for my protectionā¦ from you. I have a familyā¦ am legitā¦ tryingā to make things right.ā The McCartney brothers acted as if they wanted to start a fight and couldnāt believe Mr. Haileyās words and meek actions. Zed McCartney grabbed Mr. Haleyās arm and said, āThereās five of us, we can take Slim.ā Roy spoke right up, āWhereās Tom, get him out here on the street. Iām not looking to get shot in the back.ā āHe wonāt have to.ā It was Maās voice. The crowd moved back and Tom Hart came through with Ma behind thrusting a 44 caliber Walker Colt revolver in his back.ā Mr. Hailey shouted, āStop! Youāre all fools! Shut up, I say! I came here to settle a bill of sale for four hundred head of cattle. I have the check already made out for four thousand dollars we agreed on. Now letās go across the street to the bank and cash the check together. As we stepped out onto the street, the Justice of the Peace Ralph Stewart came out of Tia Maria Cantina and shouted, āHaltā¦Stop!ā He slowly walked up to us. He looked different in the five years since weād seen him. He had cold blues eyes and brusque way about him, but I noticed he seemed to cotton up to Mr. Hailey. Justice Stewart didnāt very much like what he saw with Ma holding a gun on Tom Hart. There was nothing he could do, but take Tom Hart as prisoner. He said, āIām holding him to stop another shootingā¦ about the gun fight with Jake Rudd in Monticello, Utah. As I was there in town, the gunfight was fair. Whether or not the reason for the gunfight was cheating at cards or for something else, I donāt know. Weāll have a little hearing at three oāclock later today to settle the matter. You are all duly served and must appear at the hearing in Tia Maria Cantina. If any of you town folks want to see how justice and the law work, youāre all welcomed to come and watch quiet like. ā After the Bank, we all went to Tia Maria Cantina. Justice Ralph Stewart called the hearing to order, āPlease be quiet, this is only a hearing about the death of Jake Rudd in Monticello, Utah. There are only two people in this cantina that were in Monticello witnesses to the gunfight: Tom Hart and myself. Although there may be questions concerning the reason for the gun fight, I can attest to the fact that it was fair.ā As the folks settled down, Justice Stewart continued, āIām going to give a statement of the facts as I know them. Then I will call Tom Hart to give his statement concerning the death of Jake Rudd. I will allow Mrs. Rudd to question Tom Hart. Remember, this is not a trial, but a hearing. I want Mrs. Rudd to understand why her husband was killed in a gun fight, and why there is no controversy about the shooting.ā Roy Kristin spoke up, āExcuse me for interrupting Justice Stewart, just to let you know that Mrs. Rudd asked me to be her representative, acting as her lawyer. Is that going to be okay?ā āYes, Roy thatāll be fine, now donāt interrupt and let me continue,ā as Justice Stewart looked over the crowd. His statement continued, āAfter the gun fight, I questioned Tom Hart. His declaration to the facts of Jake Ruddās cheating was backed up by others in the card game in the Blue Goose Saloon. I cleared Tom Hart of any guilt for the death of Jake Rudd. Then, I kind of appointed myself as administrator of Jake Ruddās property and took care of his burial. It took me several months before I could get by the Ruddās ranch to tell Mrs. Rudd. Iām really sorry for that delay.ā Tia Mariaās Cantina was jammed packed with town folks, but hardly a mutter was heard as Justice Stewart called Tom Hart forward to give his statement. Tom Hart began his statement, āTruth is that I was in Monticello for some fun. Iād just finished work for Mr. Haley to recover some cattle that was pushed off his Double Bar Ranch. I didnāt plan to stay as long as I did, but was having luck in the Blue Goose Saloon. Past noon, Jake Rudd came by the saloon and sat down to join the game. I knew him as owner of the Bar R Ranchā¦Had no thought as to whyā¦ he just followed my playā¦.when I folded, he foldedā¦ when I stayed, he stayedā¦ believe all thought that strange, but donāt matterā¦. He was dealingā¦ ahead by $100 and the pot was for $250ā¦ we caught him taking a card from the bottom of the deck, thatās when I called him out. He said thatās about time youād figure it outā¦ seemed to have a vendetta against me. The gunfight was his ideaā¦ why I let him anger me I donāt knowā¦ I knew he couldnāt beat meā¦. Next day at high noon, we faced downā¦ tried to talk him out of it, but was no useā¦ he went for leather and I drew and shot himā¦ he died in a few minutes. Thought of going to Mrs. Rudd ābout her husband, but since I done itā¦. Figured better if someone else said... maybe she knew all ābout what her husband was doing. Donāt know.ā The town folkās whispers became louder with protests. Justice Stewart banged the table with gavel, āQuiet, quiet now or of you will be removed from this hearing. Ok, Tom is that it.ā āYes. Thatās the truth and my statement.ā Roy Kristin spoke, āJustice Stewart, I like to ask Tom a few questions before he steps down?ā āGo ahead Roy, but remember Tom was exonerated in Monticello. If you have questions to clarify his statement, then go ahead.ā Roy began, āWhen Jake Rudd came into the saloon, and he went right over to the card game, sat down and began copying your play. He didnāt say why he was in town? Didnāt mention that he and some other ranchers discovered some of their cattle missingā¦ maybe even hire you like Mr. Hailey does to find out what happened.ā Tom scowled replying, āNo he didnāt talk much. It was a quiet game.ā Roy smiled, āThe Blue Goose Saloon was quiet... Donāt ever remember it that way. But if you say so, I guess it was. Iād never been in a silent card game, most have arguments, especially if there was drinkingā¦ maybe even players were drunkā¦ things might be left out of your statement. You want to change anything?ā Justice Stewart said, āBoth of you be careful now, I donāt want a gun fight to settle this.ā Roy had a wide smile on his face, āDonāt worry Justice, Tom and I go way back, doubt if he ever wants to face me againā¦ besides all weāre doing is to clarify for Mrs. Rudd what happened to her husband. Now isnāt that so Tom? You were about to summon up more information about the death and cattle rustling, Right?ā Tom looked in the direction of Mr. Hailey and the McCartney brothers, before continuing. āWell I guess youāre right about arguments and drinkingā¦thatās naturalā¦anyways we did discuss missing cattle from other ranchesā¦ Jake said that Ty Richardson played detective following cattle tracks from his ranch to the Double Bar Ranchā¦ reported it to Heck Patton, Double Barās foremanā¦ later Ty was found shot dead at homeā¦ Mr. Hailey helped Tyās family out by buying their ranch. I think Jake was accusing me, but it wasnāt me, I was up in Wyoming about 200 miles away working for Jim McKnightās Cross Bar Ranch. Jake was sloppily cheating at cards to draw me out. Threw caution to the wind to challenge me to a gunfight. Guess it didnāt work out like he thought. Later, was surprised that I learned that Mrs. Rudd didnāt sell the ranchā¦ think Mr. Hailey was expecting it to be available.ā Roy turned and looked straight at Mr. Hailey, āJustice Stewart, think it possible I could get Oscar, Mr. Hailey to come up and answer a few questions?ā Justice Stewart coldly replied, āNo! This is not a trial, itās a hearing for Mrs. Rudd to learn about her husbandās deathā¦ and Mr. Hailey is not involved or on trial.ā Roy then summed up his conclusion, āI guess we discovered the gun fight was not really about cheating at cardsā¦. More or less it was about rustling cattle. Shame it had to end with Jake Ruddās deathā¦weāll never know the truth about what he foundā¦ letās just say all the facts seems strangely out of placeā¦ I believe in putting oneās faith in the lawā¦. Yet the justice regarding Jakeās death seems missing.ā Justice Stewart banged the gavel and with a disarming smile proclaimed, āThe hearing is over, cause of death was by a fair gun fight. Tom Hart is not guilty of killing Jake Rudd. Justice is done.ā Ma and me were shocked, couldnāt believe what was learned. I was mad and kept thinking, āPa was dead and our cows were being stolen. Roy or Slim dug out the truth, only because all were afraid of him. Thatās how he got Mr. Hailey to pay Ma for the 400 head of cattle. It certainly felt good to have hired himā¦. Otherwise we would never have known the truth. Maybe now that the two sides of Mr. Hailey were shown, the town folks and ranchers will stop being pushed around by him and his wranglers.ā Chapter 6: The following day after shopping for extra supplies, as our financials had improved, we headed back to the ranch. It was a very silent ride with three of us in thought about what just happened in La Sal. Once back at the ranch, everything returned to normal. Neither Ben nor Riley asked about what had happened in La Sal, although Iām sure they wanted to know. Maybe Roy filled them. The routine of ranching filled the next couple of weeks, cutting hay in the meadows, mending fences, checking health of the cows with calves, branding the few calves and moving the cows to better grazing land. Every Sunday, Ma put some time aside for me and her to sit on the porch beneath the old Cottonwood tree to read the Bible. This Sunday as she opened the Bible, she looked up; instantly she saw a war party of Ute Indians at the back of the ranch yard. With a start of relief she saw Corolla as their eyes met, he spoke in Ute, āIāve come back with a worthy man for you.ā She felt a distinct shock, answering in Shoshone, āThis is my son, John. He is strongā¦ is the man of the ranch. I want no man.ā I was alarmed. My Ma knew the leader of the Ute Indians and spoke directly to him in their language. Where are Ben, Riley and Roy? We need them. Recognizing her sonās shock, she spoke to Corolla in English, āCorolla my son does not understand your language, and we need to speak in English. I want him to understand why you are here?ā Corolla fixed his eyes on me, āI am Corolla, Ute medicine man and leader of these warriors. Not here for warā¦ only to provide your mother with a good, strong manā¦ she has lost hers.ā A unarmed Roy stepped out of the bunkhouseā¦ told Ben and Riley to stay put as we are out-numbered ā¦ would be killed if we attempted to fight. Roy shouted towards Corolla, āI also am a good, strong manā¦ maybe she wants me.ā A flushed Sarah at Royās response exclaimed, āWhat?ā Corolla spoke with a faint glint of humor in his eyes, āYou need a good fighting man to raise warriors. I brought you a good Ute warriorā¦ you have a white man warriorā¦ maybe good or maybe notā¦ They fightā¦ stronger warrior winsā¦ you take that warrior.ā Before Sarah could reply, a lean Ute Indian with black hair and strong clean-cut features stepped out from behind Corolla. He stared at Roy, his face revealed nothing as to what he was thinking. Corolla then spoke something and then threw a knife at Royās feet and another knife to the warriorās feet. Roy took off his boots, gripped the knife in his hands holding the cutting edge up. As Roy looked up, Corolla said to both, āI promise you nothing, but an honorable death.ā The big Ute came at him on cat like feet. Cautiously Roy circled the warrior, he had to defeat him. The Ute closed quickly thrusting wickedly with his knife, but Roy twisted sharply as the blade slid past him. Roy struck out at the warrior only to have his blade deflected. However, as the knife swept up between the warriorās body and arm, it cut a gash in his armpit. The Ute sprung up with blood streaming down his body clawing cat-like with the blade. Roy tried to move aside, but the knife nicked him and he felt the bite of the blade. Turning he paused as salty sweat stung his eyes. The warrior lunged and both grabbed the otherās knife hand at the wrist. They stood chest to chest, power to power, neither giving an inch. In desperation, Roy buckled at the knees, fell backward and threw the warrior over his head. Both lay on the ground, only the Ute lost his knife. The Ute starring with hatred in his eyes at Royā¦ coolly Roy picked up the Uteās Knife and tossed it back to him. There as a grunt of approval from the watching Ute warriors. The loss of blood weakened the Ute warrior; Roy stepped in swiftly and stuck his knife into the Uteās belly. The Uteās black eyes glared at Roy, but did not yield. Roy could have disemboweled the Uteās belly, but instead stepped back. āHeās a strong man, āRoy said to Corolla, āItās enough that I have won.ā Deliberately Roy walked back to the porch and to Sarah. Roy looked around and saw all starring at him, Corolla and the Ute warriors, Sarah and John, and Ben and Riley who left the safety of the bunkhouse to see the fight. Corolla chuckled; then led out a whoop; he swung up on his pony and galloped off followed by the Ute warriors. Sarah smooth down her dress, wondering what Roy was thinking of her? She turned away from Roy and hastily said āI get you some hot waterā¦ then Iāll go make Sunday dinner.ā Sarah walked into the house; stopped at the stoveā¦her mind was blank. She looked around as if she suddenly woke up from a dream. When all were at dinner, Sarah could not remember the last time she felt like this. She was awkwardly conscious of her hands that never seemed to be in the right place or doing the right things. She scarcely tasted her food. The rest had no such inhibitions, they were all hungry. Sarah spent the most of the dinner explaining to her son and the others the cause for the afternoon fight and most importantly how she was able to speak Ute. All had their eyes wide opened listening to her relate the story, āShe grew up with Shoshone and Bannock Indian children in Coloradoā¦ her mother was a school teacherā¦ the Ute warriors attacked the ranch while you were away rounding up the cowsā¦ Corolla came to ranch to see the lone woman who fought his warriorsā¦ reaching a peace agreement with Corolla and then before he left promised me a strong warrior.ā Gradually Roy looked up and saw the Sarah was staring at himā¦ he was embarrassed. Later he walked out to the porch, sat down on the lower stepā¦. The sun was down, a Mexican spotted owl sat in the cottonwood tree, and the sounds of twilight on the range were mellow. Sarah walked out to Roy and said, āYou neednāt worry about Corolla; heāll leave me alone now that he has found me a man.ā āWasnāt thinking about Corolla,ā Roy decreedā That left her nothing to say. They both watch a lone bright star in the night sky. āA man could get to like it here,ā Roy said quietly. Part Two The story continues the tales of Sarah Ruddās life in Southeastern Utah, during the times when the folks of the West sacrificed and settled their own difficultiesā¦ Chapter 7 It was near the middle of August, John knew his Maās birthday was at the end of the month and wanted to get her a special surprise. John and Roy decided to get up very early one morning before Sarah arose to make breakfast; they left her a note saying they were going to the far end of the northeast range to look over another canyon for wintering the cattle. Adding to the note that they might camp overnight, took some grub in case that happened, so donāt worry about us. Weāll be careful. As they left the ranch, Roy said, āThink we can get some breakfast at the stage station at La Sal Junctionā¦ heard food was good there.ā In the backroom of the stage station at La Sal Junction, Chuck Sanger lay on his back with a broken hip and three broken ribs. It was hot in the small bedroom and he gasped painfully with every breath. Jody Balkan was in the main room of the station and kept going to the front door and staring up at the empty road that curved out of sight around a small hill. The road was empty and silentā¦ nothing moved outside. Jody had just rolled in on the stage two days before heading out to Green River, Utah. He found Chuck dragging himself towards the station door and was in bad shape. Jody volunteered to remain until a relief man could come and care for Chuck. Jody peaked into the small bedroom. Chuck asked Jody, āCan you handle a gun.ā āIām not a gun fighter, if thatās what youāre asking,ā Jody replied, ābut can handle a pistol and rifle. Why you asking...ā āYou might have toā¦ the next stage due in a day or less is carrying goldā¦ if youāre thinking does anyone knowā¦ the answer is yesā¦ too many robbers in these parts. The East Colorado Mining Company decided it would be safe to ship to bank in Green River, because it was coming through this here stage junctionā¦plus they knew a company of the US 5th Cavalry would be near here if trouble arose. They donāt know Iām injured. Thatās why Iām worried.ā Jody rushed to the front door, looked out, and said, āTwo riders coming up the road.ā āBe careful what you say to them, āChuck shouted in pain from the bedroom. When John and Roy rode up, they were hungry and tired from being up so early this morning. āWeāve heard you could get some breakfast hereā¦need to get to La Sal before by noon.ā āI reckon,ā Jody said, āget down and come on in.ā Roy took the horses to the stable; John went in and sat down at one of the two tables. Johnās eyes strayed towards the closed bedroom door, wondering if Mr. Sanger was in thereā¦. Also sensed that there was coldnessā¦ their presence was unwelcomed. Roy entered the long barn putting the two horses into the empty stalls at the back of the stable, removed the saddles and gave them some hay. As he was walking back he noticed a pistol hidden by some hay on the barn floorā¦ he picked up the worn Remington that was oiled and definitely well keptā¦ whom ever owned it wouldnāt have left it carelessly on the dirt floor. Looking around the floor noted that hay was stirred up and looked like boot marks were on the floor and walls of the stallā¦ something was wrong. Roy went back to his saddlebag, remove a small 38-caliber Colt lightning revolver, and put it under his vest. Walking back to the house, he saw six horses in the corral, several haystacks and a couple of poles with two coats hanging from themā¦ a stretcher. Someone was hurt. As he walked into the house, John looked at Roy, āItās strange that Mr. Sanger the manager of the Stage Station was not around.ā Roy asked, āMr. Sanger a friend of yours?ā āWell, I guess so, we talk friendly, donāt know him the best, but Pa and me stopped here more than a few times.ā āDoesnāt make sense,ā Roy glanced around also noting the bedroom door closed; āI found this Remington in the barn,ā as he put it on the table, āever see this before?ā āSure looks like Mr. Sangerās gunā¦ not positive though.ā Jody heard their talk and reacted, āChuckās hurtā¦ thatās his gun, but he has another. Thought you be off after breakfast.ā Roy smiled at Jody, āYou wouldnāt be trying to get rid of us, would you? I think with Chuck laid up youāre going to need help when the coach comes, especially if it has a payroll or gold shipment.ā Astonished, Jody turned to reply, but heard a rush of horses in the yard. He rushed to the door and looking out saw three men. The three men walked through the open door pushing Jody aside. Zed McCartney was leading his brothers, stopped at seeing Roy and John and his expression hardened. He told George and Bill, āGet the guns from Slim and John, donāt want them messing up our plan.ā George replied, āTheyāre not wearing any guns, some tough guy this Slim isā¦ wonder why Mr. Hailey is afraid of him?ā Zed replied, āNever mindā¦The stage is due in a few hours, so youāll all be our guests for a while, be calm and donāt do anything stupid.ā Looking in the bedroom, Zed saw Chuck was laid up and he wouldnāt cause any trouble. Roy looked at Jody saying, āIs our food readyā¦ we sure are hungryā¦ Is that okay with you Zed?ā Zed grinned, āYeah! Now thatās all rightā¦ get your breakfastā¦ eat your food and drink your coffee like a good boy. Maybe Iāll let you and John liveā¦ special if you cause no troubleā¦never know.ā The next hour went by slowly, neither Roy or John moved. Jody was allowed to work the kitchen and barā¦. he was trembling every time he poured drinks for the McCartneyās. George and Bill carefully watched their hostages, while Zed watched the road. Roy slowly rolled a smoke, touching the cigarette paper to his lips and then put it in his mouth. George watched him intentlyā¦seeing Roy reach for the matchbox on the table, took out a match, struck it on the table, and lit his smoke. George chuckled, āThink youāre so bigā¦ but youāre just yellow.ā āIf you boys are smart, best you just get the moneyā¦.leave well enough alone or youāll be killed,ā was Royās reply. āWhat?ā Zed turned and walked up to Roy, āYouāll kill me? Get on your feet Slimā¦ Iāll cut you down now.ā However, Roy did not move. At that moment Bill yelled, āHere she comes! Theyāre bringing the gold right to us.ā Zed walked to the door and looked outā¦The stage was rolling into the yard. āAll rightā he gestured to George and Billā¦ they put Jody and John in the bedroom with Chuck and put a table in front of the door. Then Zed gestured to Roy, āSlim, you walk out there ahead of us and donāt say anything or make a wrong move.ā Roy walked outside with Zed beside him, George and Bill moved up from behind. Roy angled toward the stagecoach, knowing the men would spread out. If the shotgun guard or driver started shooting, Roy would be the first man to be killed. The stage came to an abrupt stop in a cloud of dust. The shotgun guard stared at the waiting men; he did not see Chuck and noted the lead man did not have a gun. āHold Up,ā Roy yelled, the Colt lightning hidden under his vest slid to his hand. Zed swore and swung his gun and fired his gun at Roy, but he missed. Royās did not miss and the bullet caught Zed in the stomach compelling him to buckle over and fall. Roy turned quickly and fired again shooting George in the head. Bill was falling down as the guard shot him with the shotgun. Roy walked over to Zed and kicked the gun from his hand, but he was dying. John and Jody were able to push the table away from the bedroom door and came running out of the house. John looked inquisitively at Royā¦ Roy shrugged his shoulders, āI carry a spare small Colt pistol in my saddle bagsā¦ I thought something was wrong, so I hid it under my vestā¦ you know they would have killed usā¦ sometimes when your life is on the line, you naturally wait until the time is right to actā¦ thatās all I didā¦ fortunately the shotgun guard recognized that I was not part of the hold up. The McCartney brothers are now deadā¦ wondering what Oscar is going to do when he finds out he lost three of his wranglers.ā John looked at Jody, āYou think youāll need any more help? We could stay to help change the horses for the stagecoachā¦ Chuck is still laid up and does need help. Or are you staying Jody.ā Jody replied, āThink Iāll stay and help out until a replacement shows up. Sure lot of excitement for stage station in the middle of nowhere?ā As Roy was walking towards the barn, he declared, āJohn letās get going. Things are settled here. Itās still a long way to La Sal if weāre going to get your Ma a birthday present.ā Chapter 8 Sarah got up lateā¦ last few nights kept thinking how close her 30th birthday wasā¦ never really thought about age, but now as it was creeping up on herā¦.she worried ā¦ but didnāt know why? She rushed into the kitchen to begin breakfast. She noticed a note on the tableā¦itās from John explaining that they be gone a day or two looking for new winter canyon for the cows. āJust like men,ā she thought, āCouldāve said something last nightā¦they sure left early ā¦had to know theyāre going to go. I thought John knew better after what happened to his Paā¦ and whatās wrong with Roy? Heās usually thoughtful and polite. Oh well I guess itās just menā¦ I donāt understand them.ā She proceeded to make breakfast, Ben and Riley poked their heads in the back doorā¦ exclaiming, āFood ready? You know where Roy isā¦ havenāt seen him this morning.ā Sarah was now very angry and said, āBen, Riley they didnāt even tell youā¦ whatās wrong with them?ā Riley looked confused for a moment and then spilled the beans, āOh, they probably left early to go to town to pick up a birthday present for youā¦we all chipped in.ā Ben whacked Riley on the arm. Riley yelled, āNow why did you do thatā¦Sorry me and my big mouthā¦ It was to be a surprise.ā Sarah said, āNever have you mindā¦ I can handle surprisesā¦ even ones I know about. Breakfast is almost readyā¦ you both wash up and come sit at the table.ā After breakfast, Sarah thought, āWhat she should doā¦ ride after them and then what?ā She called after Ben, āPlease saddle my horse, and I think I need to go for a rideā¦ but do it around noon as Iāve a lot of cleaning up to do in the kitchen. Thanks.ā Ben brought her bay horse saddled and ready to the house; yelled, āMrs. Ruddā¦Jeremy is ready for your rideā¦ wants Riley or me along for company?ā Sarah came out to the porch wearing menās jeans, a bright red blouse and ranch boots, āThanks and thanks for the offer Ben. Think Iāll ride aloneā¦donāt plan to go farā¦ just need to get out of the house.ā Sarah walked up to Jeremy, put her hand on the pommel of the saddle, stood there for a moment and silently cursed herself for being a fool, āā¦I wasnāt a little girlā¦why was I madā¦ John was trying to do something nice for me.ā All the anger of the morning left and she put her left boot into the stirrup and pulled herself up and onto the saddle. As she rode out of the yard, she turned in the saddle and said, āBenā¦Riley take care of thingsā¦should be back in time to make supper.ā Sarah rode about six miles and then turned off the trail to La Sal Junction and stopped at the creekā¦while the bay drank the cool water, she slide down from the saddle and tried to drink water with her cupped handsā¦ but all she succeeded in doing was getting her face and blouse wet. The common sense move was to return to the ranch and forget about the ride. When she got to her feet, there before her was Tom Hart, standing at the edge of a bush, thinking how long had he been thereā¦ she had no ideaā¦. her only weapon was a the 44 Colt pistol in her saddlebag. He did not speak, merely stared at her and waited. āI was going to La Sal Junction,ā she spoke calmlyā¦ something other than fear was driving her. He could sense her bitterness to him and her hurt. He jerked his head to the north, saying, āLa Sal Junction is up aheadā¦ there was some trouble up thereā¦ the McCartney brothers tried to rob the stage coach. Unfortunate for them they ran into Slim and your son.ā Sarahās heart went to her throat, āis my son okay?ā Tomās reply, āYeah...Your sonās okay was locked in a bedroom with Chuck Sanger and another fellowā¦. Roy was used as cover, but he was able to stop the robberyā¦ he killed Zed and Georgeā¦ the guard or driver killed Bill. Never understood why Mr. Hailey hired those three as wranglersā¦ its rough country, but they were no good.ā Sarah recovering her voice said, āMy son and Roy still at the junction?ā āNope, before the 5th cavalry arrived at the stage station, they rode off headed for La Salā¦ donāt know whyā¦ but it was a good thing that they stopped at the junctionā¦saved a payroll and peopleās lives.ā She didnāt know why, but she listened to himā¦ was this the man that killed her husband? He asked, āWere you heading to La Sal Junction?ā Then not waiting for an answer continued, āI was coming to see youā¦ want to explain thingsā¦ Iām sorry, I am really sorry, I know itās late and Iām responsible for your lossā¦ but after the hearing in La Sal, I felt I needed to talk to youā¦ specially since Slim, I mean Roy made it sound like I was lying. I want you to understand and not judge me, until I can explain. If you are heading back to your ranch, Iād ride along and you could listen to my side.ā Sarah wanted to scream and ride away, but she stopped herself, āIād rather you notā¦ but I know youāll just follow meā¦ so guess itās all rightā¦ keep in mind I hate liars and you come across as one.ā Tom began, āYouāll need to know a little history of me and Roy, so Iām beginning in Abilene where Oscar Hailey and me were run out of town and threatened with death. At that time Roy was a deputy sheriffā¦ caught Oscar and me cheating to make a living. We hired a couple of wranglers, head out of town to meet and buy the herds long before the drovers could get them to town. Weād offer cashā¦buy at a $10 a head for the whole herdā¦ didnāt matter how many they lost on the trail or how bony they appearedā¦ paid for every cow that they began withā¦ mostly 1000 headā¦ that was a lot of cashā¦. most took it before they knew what they could getā¦. Been on the trail so longā¦.just wanted a day or two to clean up and head homeā¦. not wanting to argue with the buyers in town.ā Sarah just felt angryā¦ what does this story have to do with killing my husbandā¦. She just listened as he kept talking. āTruth was even if they lost half the herd, weād sell them in town for $25 to $35 a pieceā¦making a handsome profit. Roy got wind of our dealingsā¦especially after some folks complained of being cheated. Roy threatened us to stopā¦of course we didnātā¦finally, he ran us out of town with the threat of death if heād ever see us again. Probably the best thing that couldāve happenedā¦ heād gave us a second chance and we took it. Strange thing, I thought that both Oscar and me decided that weād go straightā¦ well, at least straight to Green River, Utah.ā They were getting closer to the ranch and Sarah wondered if heād ever stop talking. No, he just continued. āOscar settled downā¦ bought a small ranch from our profits from Abilene ā¦got married and now has two fine boysā¦ and his spread has been growing larger and larger. I also got marriedā¦bought a house on the skirts of townā¦ my wife Ruthann could not have childrenā¦ doesnāt matter nowā¦ that caused us some problems. I started out working for large cattle or sheep ranchersā¦ and for Oscar tooā¦ hired myself out as a bounty hunter looking for rustlers. I usually drifted from ranch to ranch hiring myself out as a ranch handā¦ worked until I learned whether or not they were involved in rustlingā¦. got pretty good at itā¦ built a good reputationā¦. being a gun fighter worked in my favorā¦ though I canāt really say I killed peopleā¦ mainly I brought them in for justiceā¦ Paid pretty wellā¦ and Ruthann and me settled in to me being gone for a month or soā¦ actually helped our life together.ā Sarah turned slightly and looked at himā¦he was very sad and depressed... She wanted to say she understood and needed to say something to himā¦ no words came out. āI did not know about Oscarā¦ thought of him as a friend. Knew he hired tough wranglers, this is a rough countryā¦ actually thought he was giving them a second chance as Roy gave us. Sometimes you see what you want to seeā¦ Oscar and I are still friends. After the hearing in La Sal, I got to thinking I missed what Jake was saying to meā¦ Iām sorryā¦ Iām responsible for his death... by my reputation I couldāve shot his gun handā¦ I know you hate me ātill Iām deadā¦ but I want you to grasp that Roy again showed me I was mistaken. Iām pleased he got Oscar to help make things right about his stealing your cowsā¦. Iāll make sure that rustling your calves will never happen againā¦ ā With a pang, Sarah remembered Jakeās face and she began to cry. She looked up and straight into Tom Hartās eyes, seeing his repentance and shame, said, āYou frightened meā¦ I canāt forgive youā¦ nowā¦ and yet you have a good wife who trusts and loves youā¦ my feelings are mixed and confusedā¦ I want to believe youā¦ā Just then, they heard gunshots coming from the ranchā¦ Both spurred their horses and raced towards the ranch not knowing what they would find. They stopped short of the front yardā¦ seeing Mr. Hailey and nine wranglers spread out among the cottonwood trees shooting at the bunkhouse. Tom looked at Sarah and said, āStay back here, hide and be quiet, they donāt know youāre with meā¦let me find out whatās going onā¦ donāt know why Oscarās here.ā Tom rode up to the house, pulled out his rifle, held it across his saddle, so it was ready to hand; a sudden stillness came to his face, āOscar whatās going on?ā The gunfire stopped. Tom slowly got off his horse, turned deliberately towards Oscar, stood with his feet wide apart, pointing the rifle at Oscar and spoke, āAll right, you can stop right now.ā āNever know you for a turn coat Tom,ā Mr. Hailey carefully said. āIāve just come for my 400 head of cattle that Iād boughtā¦ seems like they only have a 100 headā¦ those two scrawny old ranch hands are trying to stop us.ā āYou know that bill of sale was for the rustling your hired hands did?ā Tom spoke calmly, āI told you plain and simple after Slim made me fill it out.ā āThereās two things about that,ā Oscar replied, āFirst thing is you wrote it out, not meā¦ second is thereās no dateā¦ not datedā¦ no one believes that Iām a rustlerā¦ Iām just here to pick up my cows.ā Tomās voice was harsh, āIāve never switched sides Oscarā¦ since Abilene, Iāve been always for justice and the lawsā¦ guess you never changedā¦ you and your hired hands are like a pack of coyotes in grabbing up the ranches around hereā¦ā Tom stood there with his rifle and holstered six-gun, āNow you want this ladyās ranchā¦ youāre not getting itā¦ got to go through me.ā Mr. Hailey angered voice shouted, āIāll not take that talk from you Tom, wished you wouldnāt try. Iāll still give you a chance to ride away.ā At that moment, a shot rang out from behind Tom and struck him in the spine; his legs lost feeling and he fell forward on to his face. Oscar walked over to him, āSorry Tom, you were very usefulā¦ā Then he pulled out his revolver and shot Tom in the head. Sarah watched horrified, her eyes flared, she screamed. She reached in her saddlebag, removed her 44 caliber Colt, and fully discharged her pistol as she rode at towards Mr. Hailey. She missed. Her buckskin pulled up in front of Mr. Hailey and he pulled her down off the saddle. As she got up, Hailey had her pistol in his hand. He said, āDonāt worry, Tom Hart is deadā¦ Iām going to let everyone know you shot him in the backā¦ think most folks will believe thatā¦. This is working out better than I planned. Thanks for your helpā¦ weāll leave your cowsā¦ going take Tomās body to La Sal and report the shooting. Iām sure a U.S. Marshall will be out with a warrant to arrest youā¦ If I was you, Iād leave before that happensā¦ think about itā¦ā Sarah felt sick to her stomach, but brushed herself off and retorted, āIām slicker than a black-headed snake on wet clay, the last thing you wanted to do is rile me. You have. If you think Iāll run, youād better think again.ā āYou might be right,ā he admitted, āIāll take my chancesā¦ if you didnāt notice in La Sal, I have a Justice of the Peace in my pocket. āWeāll see,ā was Sarahās reply. āCome on boys, saddle up, throw Tom over his horse and lash him to the saddleā¦weāre done here.ā Off in the distance a small war party of Utes closely watched the Rudd ranch, as long as Mrs. Rudd was okay they did not help. They followed Mr. Hailey and his wranglers until they were off the Rudd ranch. Then the warriors rode to report to Corolla. Chapter 9 It was dusk by the time John and Roy rode into La Sal, stopping just outside the town at the livery stable. Old Man Baker was surprised to see them and asked, āitās late and whereās you ma?ā John replied, āMa didnāt come alongā¦ just came in to pick up a few thingsā¦but were held up at La Sal Junction for a whileā¦ need to put up our horses for the night.ā āNo problem, got plenty of space tonight,ā said Mr. Baker. Roy said, āGoodā¦ John why donāt you run to the general store and see if you can pick up the items tonightā¦ Iāll finish up with Mr. Bakerā¦ and then see if I can get us a room at the Dark Canyon Hotelā¦ if not Iāll head to Tia Maria Cantina to see if Mrs. Lopez can put us up for the nightā¦ Iāll meet you at the store.ā As John creaked open the door, walked in to the store and looked around, he stoppedā¦she stood inside the store and lifted her handā¦his mind was distracted from looking for present for Ma. He felt so dusty and dirty from the trail and the events at the stage coach stationā¦ his mouth had a sour taste and he needed a bathā¦his clothes needed washing. The store keeper Mr. Handler looked up and wondered why his niece, Mary did not go over to Johnā¦She just stood still, straight and tall, and stared at him. John walked up to her and said, āYou donāt know me and what Iām about to say is crazy, but tomorrow morning Iām returning to my ranchā¦.I would hope youāll ride with meā¦you can tell Iām poor at courting. Only when I saw you, I knew in my heart that my life will begin and end with youā¦ I know there would be no happiness until you are by my side.ā She put her hands on the counter, looked at her uncle with embarrassment, and then looked John straight in the eye and said, āMy Uncle is Aaron Handler, the store keeperā¦I donāt think he favors your talk.ā āMy name is John Rudd,ā glancing his eyes towards Mr. Handler, āyour uncle knows me and my Maā¦I wish to call upon later tonight and the choice of whether you come out or not is yours.ā āMy name is Mary Gouldā¦ Iām only here for the summer to help at my uncleās storeā¦ after Iāll be going back to Logansport, Indianaā¦where my parents liveā¦ they would be heartbroken if I didnāt returnā¦ my dad works for the Pennsylvania Road, he would be on connecting trains to haul me back homeā¦. Isnāt that right Uncle Aaronā¦?ā Mr. Handler retorted, āYup thatās rightā¦ I would be in trouble with my sister if you didnāt go homeā¦ yet, Johnās a good boyā¦ heās about your age Maryā¦ āCept youāre both too young for marryingā¦ but thereās no trouble in seeing him tonightā¦. he knows our house is at the streetās far endā¦ John, come by if you will.ā āSir, you can expect me.ā John turned around to leaveā¦he saw Roy... and asked, āDid you get us a room at the hotelā¦ Iāll need to clean up for later.ā āYep, we got a roomā¦I take it you didnāt get around to pick up your Maās birthday presentsā¦seeing as how you were distracted. Iāll get āem if they come inā¦you just go to the hotel.ā As John went out the door, he heard Mr. Handler say, āThe dress pattern and material came in a few weeks agoā¦ thereās also a bonnet that my wife says would be fittinā with the dress pattern Sarah picked outā¦ donāt knowā¦ordered it anyway. Just in case... What do you think?ā āI think itās goodā¦your wife is clever ā¦ never would have thought of thatā¦ please wrap them upā¦ thanks for all your help... Iām sure Sarah will love the gifts.ā When Roy returned to the hotel room with the birthday presents, he found John cleaned upā¦ ready to goā¦ and posed, ā I take you like the girlā¦Maryā¦ canāt say I blame youā¦ but what were you thinkingā¦ were in La Sal for your Maā¦and weāll be heading out tomorrowā¦ā āOh, I donāt knowā¦ Sheās about my age, maybe a year younger or olderā¦doesnāt matterā¦she is a girl born with beautyā¦slim, perfectly shaped and when she moved it was to unheard musicā¦ when she smilesā¦it was for me alone, intimate and personal. Iām happy that she is visiting her uncle and working in her uncleās store for the summer. Iām afraid to ask her if she would like to stay in La Salā¦all I know is I want her for my wife.ā āNot sure thatās what your Ma is supposing ā¦ us bringing home the news that you found a wife in La Salā¦ or us finding a new canyon to winter the cattle. Itās your decisionā¦ please think before you mention Maryā¦kind ofā¦ waitā¦ letās first confess weād snuck off to get her a birthday presentā¦ Yeah, she already knows, Ben and Riley let it slip as to what weāre doingā¦ā āSorry Roy, Iād believe she wants the new canyonā¦ even though Iād hope sheād want both. I need to go now.ā John walked to the end of town and rapped on Mr. Handlerās front door. The door opened and Mary stood there in a pale blue dress, even lovelier than I imagined. āWhy itās you, but I thought Uncle Aaron?ā āMay I come in?ā I asked. Startled she stepped back, let me in and closed the door behind me. Hat in my hand, I bowed to Mrs. Anne Handler, who was behind her. The room was cluttered and lacking comfort. There was too much stuff and not a place where I could really sit. She looked at me carefully and seemed to withdraw, a change I could not grasp. She flushed, āI certainly didnāt believeā¦you werenāt serious? I thought it was fun in the general storeā¦but I canāt imagine me going out with you...weāre both so young.ā She stared at me, astonished. Something went out of me then, I stood there feeling like a foolā¦undoubtedly I was. The flame of my love flickeredā¦then caught by a gust of wind was snuffed outā¦I guess I grew up a little that day...ā āGood night,ā I said, āIām sorry that I intruded.ā As I opened the door, about to leave, Aaron Handler pushed past me, āSorry Johnā¦youāre goingā¦ I heard about you and Roy stopping the McCartney brothers from robbing gold shipment at La Sal Junctionā¦ had to kill all three, huhā¦ also heard to night that Tom Hart is deadā¦brought into town strapped across his horseā¦Oscar Hailey claims your Ma shot him in the backā¦ I donāt believe thatā¦anyway he is contacting the Justice Stewart about getting a warrant for your Maās arrestā¦ Mr. Hailey is fuming and bullyingā¦ angry that his wranglers and his friend Tom got killedā¦ I think it best if you and Roy stay out of his wayā¦leave early morning and head for home... give my best to your Maā¦.ā Next morning, Roy and John ate an early breakfast at Tia Maria Cantina, picked up there horses from Old Man Baker before setting out for home. As usual Mr. Baker acted very nervous and anxiousā¦wanting them to vamoose before Mr. Hailey showed up. He didnāt want any trouble at his stable. The rising sun would soon parch the trail on their long ride home ā¦ their ride was peaceful and uneventful as Roy and John kept their thoughts to them self. Arriving late afternoon at the Rudd Ranchā¦ Sarah saw them and stepped out of the porch of the ranch house, āAbout time you returnedā¦. Find what you were looking forā¦ I sure hope soā¦ ācause we couldāve used at the ranchā¦ had trouble with Mr. Hailey wanting to take our cattleā¦ Tom Hart was hereā¦tried to help me and was shot in the back by one of Haileyās men. He and his men took Tom and headed to La Salā¦ going to blame me for killinā Tom. I suppose you already know thatā¦ seeing as how you were very busy stopping a stage coach robbery at La Sal Junction and then headed to La Sal to get me a birthday presentā¦ā Roy answered, āYes Mam. Weāre sorryā¦ we didnāt know what the McCartneyās were planningā¦ just got caught in the middleā¦ didnāt know what Oscar was planning ābout the ranchā¦ but weāre glad you, Ben and Riley are okayā¦ you sure do have a way of speaking your mindā¦ā āWell youād better take care of your horsesā¦ get washed upā¦and weāll talk later about this at supper.ā As Sarah turn to go back into the house, she muttered, āMen! Two sides of a coinā¦ hard for us women to understandā¦ā She went back into the house to get supper ready. Later that evening when all were at supper, eating quietly and if they talked it was mainly about the coming winter. Sarah having had just about enough of this silence, turned towards her son and said, āYou know I was angry that morning you leftā¦ the note just made me madderā¦ you couldāve told me the night beforeā¦fortunate for you Riley slipped up and said what the two of you were really doingā¦ otherwise Iād been on your trail to drag both of you backā¦ā John opened his mouth, but before he could utter a word. Sarah continued, āNow donāt even think of interrupting meā¦ Iām going to say my pieceā¦ I was still upset, but had a lot of work to doā¦ around noon I took Jeremy out for a ride to help settle me downā¦ I came across Tom Hartā¦he was coming by the ranch to apologizeā¦ I just wanted to get away from him and headed back to the ranch ā¦couldnāt stop him from riding along with meā¦ he began telling me all about what happened at La Sal Junctionā¦ and then telling of his pastā¦ I was getting more upset by the minuteā¦ as we neared the ranch we heard gunfire... both spurred our horsesā¦. Oscar Hailey and his men had Ben and Riley pinned down at the bunkhouseā¦ Tom told me to stay back, let him find out whatās going onā¦ he rode into the ranch yard and confronted Oscarā¦ one of Haileyās boys shot Tom in the backā¦ then Oscar took his pistol and shot Tom in the headā¦I grabbed my pistol and raced in wildly shooting. Jeremy stopped abruptly in front of Oscarā¦ Hailey pulled me down from my saddleā¦ gloated that this was working out better than heād planā¦. strapping Tom to his horse he gathered his men and claimed weāre going to bring Tom into La Sal and have a warrant for your arrest for killing himā¦ so now you know what happened here.ā Roy spoke up, āIn La Sal we heard that Tom Hart was deadā¦ Oscar Hailey claimed you did it and he and his men were witnessesā¦ we knew we had better get back homeā¦ thereās nothing else to tell.ā Ben and Riley started to get up, Ben began, āweād best off to the bunkhouse.ā Sarah said, āBen and Riley you just sit back downā¦youāre not going anywhereā¦. Weāre familyā¦even if we arenāt all relatedā¦. Just the five of usā¦ this is our homeā¦ youāre apart of us whether you want to be or not... You need to hear the rest...ā Then Sarah looked at her son and said, āJohn, I want to know what else happened in La Sal, I can see by your face you are hiding something.ā āMa thatās not fairā¦nothing happened.ā āJohn!ā āOkayā¦ itās still not fairā¦when I went to the General Store I saw Mr. Handlerās nieceā¦ Mary Gouldā¦ she was helping out at the store for the summerā¦she lives in Indiana with her parentsā¦she is young as me and very beautifulā¦ I kind of like her a lotā¦ I made a fool of myselfā¦asked her to come home with meā¦ she thought I was jokingā¦ I wasnātā¦ how you do go about courtingā¦ I really believe I saw my future wifeā¦ I wanted her by my sideā¦ I got carried awayā¦ anyway.ā Sarah looked at her son and sighed, āYou are good son Johnā¦be patientā¦Mary is your dream... your offer wasnāt her dreamā¦You should marry someone with a love of the landā¦willing to spend her honeymoon at the ranchā¦you should not have to force herā¦ or force you to give it up. Son love your dreamā¦ donāt expect too much, for there will be other timesā¦other dreamsā¦ each time you love you grow a little and lose a littleā¦ and maybe, just maybe you planted this idea in her mindā¦and she too is thinking about your offerā¦. And wondering if she could enjoy the cottonwoods, the creek, the meadows and the sandstone canyonsā¦ and ranch lifeā¦. And eventually it may also be her dream.ā Roy smiled and added, āSarah, your son managed himself proper on our ride to La Sal ride ā¦. Youād be proud of himā¦youād taught him wellā¦ even at his first chance at courtingā¦ as for Mary, she is a right pretty girlā¦ had good common senseā¦ you might be dead-onā¦ when sheās had time to ponderā¦ change her mindā¦ wouldnāt be surprised.ā āI know my son and trust his reckoning ā¦ Iām proud of him.ā āNow letās get back to Oscar Hailey,ā Roy urged, āHow do we plan to handle Tom Hartās shooting?ā āIām not worriedā¦ā Sarah spoke as she relaxed at the table, āYou seeā¦ Mr. Hailey has his witnesses and Iāve mineā¦ donāt know if the undertaker looked at Tomās bodyā¦ bet heād know that Tom was shot in the back by a rifleā¦ didnāt have my Winchester with meā¦ Ben and Riley could swear to thatā¦. Also know that rifle shot was fired to the far left of meā¦ away from the main shooting at the bunkhouseā¦ thatās where Oscar Haileyās two sons wereā¦ stayed away from all the shootingā¦ just watching with rifles in their handā¦. Guessing he didnāt want them hurtā¦ so if Justice Ralph Stewart wants to summon me about the killingā¦ I will testify that Mr. Haileyās son shot Tom Hart in the back and killed himā¦ donāt know which oneā¦ but one of the two did itā¦ As for the pistol shot to the headā¦ that was Oscar Haileyās doingā¦. if he claimed it was meā¦ Iād say he was lyingā¦ just to protect his sonā¦ my Colt pistol was emptied trying to shoot Oscar as I rode towards Tomās bodyā¦ Iām sorry I missed.ā Ben, Riley, Roy and John stared at herā¦ before them sat a woman of characterā¦ one being articulate and culturedā¦ the other a hardened and tough pioneer womanā¦ extremely capable and independent. Roy spoke up and said seriously, āSarah, youāve given Oscar Hailey a declaration of warā¦ once he learns that you will charge his son with Tomās murderā¦ his wife will intervene to protect her sonsā¦ I doubt he will follow up his threatā¦ I think your tactics can foil Oscar Haileyās plan to steal away your ranch ā¦ā Chapter 10: On a brightly moonlit night, Corolla and his band of 100 Utes looked at the Double Bar Ranch from the northern ridge of the high groundā¦ the ranch was on an upland meadowā¦ a herd of cattle grazing on grass under the shade of a fringe of willow trees near a small streamā¦ a barn with a corralā¦ horses in the corralā¦ a large bunkhouse on the other side of the barn with a cook shack angling off itā¦ two outhouses, a big one near the bunkhouse and a smaller one near the low rambling ranch house. Corolla saw that there was no coverā¦maybe a little by the treesā¦ adjusting his tactical warfare plan to the terrain. .. Tactics he learned from his fatherās fatherā¦ adapted from the Spanish ā¦ splitting his band, he sent 50 Utes to the southern ridge while the other half remained with him on the northern ridge. The Utes lied down with their repeating Winchester rifles in their handsā¦ not more than four yards of space between each Indian extending the line for 200 yards. The ambush was ready with the Utes occupying the high ground to the north and south of the east facing ranch house... Corolla knew he not only had the advantage of surprise attack but also the 5th cavalry patrol would not return to this area until the next full moon. Dawn was just starting to streak in the Eastern skyā¦ smoke began to rise up out of the cook shack. A couple of ranch hands stumbled down to the big outhouseā¦somebody lit a lamp in the main house. The Utes waited patiently for their attack to begin Oscar Hailey came out of his bedroom shirtless with his pants on. He sat down to breakfast at one end of the long table in his ranch house. He smiled, but felt restless, all things considered ā¦ a month has gone by, since he and his boys dropped off Tom Hartās body in La Salā¦ his plans for taking over Rudd Ranch now rested in the hands of Justice of the Peace, Ralph Stewartā¦ surely he will find Sarah Rudd guilty of killing Tom Hart. The trial is coming up soonā¦ wonder how many witnesses I needā¦ take a few ranch hands and my sonsā¦ itāll be good for my sons to see how powerful their dad is. Up early in the morning, Mrs. Jane Hailey and her friend Mrs. Ruthann Hart stepped outside of the ranch house to stretch and breathe fresh air, both noticed grass was burning along the bottom land of the ranchā¦ they shrieked and pointed their arms towards the fire. Oscar ran outside quicklyā¦ seeing fire along his bottom land ā¦ he looked to the south and saw three Indians disappear over the ridgelineā¦ turning his eyes to the northern ridge he caught the glint of several metallic refection lying on the ground several yards of space between each... seems to extend forever. He shouted to Jane and Ruthann to get back into house and hide in their bedroom. As Oscar turned to go back into the house, he was met with a hail of bullets that cut down one of his ranch hands coming out of the bunkhouse. Rifle fire erupted from both sidesā¦ the Utes occupying the higher ground and using their repeating Winchester rifles kept steady pressure on the ranch with their constant sniping. Oscar and his men were forced to retreat into the house; barn and bunkhouseā¦ some of his wranglers pushed a wagon along with sacks of grain to form temporary shelter for access to the well for water. The ranch was besieged day and nightā¦ Any time someone tried to leave their shelter, shots rang out from both ridges forcing the person to return to safety. Oscar said to his family and Ruthann, āI donāt understand why they are attacking my ranchā¦ but were safe insideā¦ we neednāt go outsideā¦ theyāll probably leave when they tire of this amusement.ā Jane was angry at her husband, āIāmā¦ weāre scaredā¦ how you know weāre safe in the houseā¦ whyā¦ a gameā¦ for their amusementā¦. how long do you think theyāll keep this up?ā Heatedly Oscar retorted, āI donāt knowā¦ but the grass fires have stopped at the stream... I hate Utesā¦ theyāre lazy and uselessā¦ the only good ones are dead ones.ā On edge Ruthann asked, āWhy doesnāt the government do something about the Utesā¦ send them somewhere else away from us settlers.ā āThatās a good questionā¦ they should be pushed further into the desertā¦thatās where they belong.ā As the raid continued for the third day, Oscar recognized several problemsā¦ their lack of waterā¦any attempt to access the well usually resulted in death and no waterā¦ those attempts created another problemā¦ ammunition was running lowā¦ the demandā¦ the need of their return rifle fire to protect anyone attempting to get water. By the sixth day, everything turned for the worseā¦ Oscar truly worried for his familyā¦ told his wife Jane and Ruthann to hide in the storm cellar at the back of the houseā¦ his sons to remain in the house ā¦until all is clear. He walked out the doorā¦pretended to surrender by waving a white flagā¦ he and his wranglers walked out into the middle of the ranch yardā¦ put down their rifles and pistolsā¦ Oscar then stepped out in front of his men with the white flag and put his other hand in the air. Corolla saw the white flagā¦ understood its meaning from previous battles with the U.S. cavalry and soldiers, but wary of Oscarās reasonā¦ if it concerned the two womenā¦ he would offer the women safety... allowing two ranch hands to escort them from the ranch. Corolla selected five warriorsā¦ they rode their ponies from the northern ridge towards Oscar and his men. Corolla saw two ranch hands creep behind the over-turned wagonā¦ he wasnāt sure whyā¦ maybe to get water ā¦ or is a trapā¦retrieving the rifles and pistols from the dead menā¦ Corolla told three warriors to return to the northern ridge while he and his two warriors rode into the ranchās yard. Corolla stopped his pony and raised his right hand in greetingā¦Oscar and his men dove for their weapons on the ground. Corolla and his braves quickly turned their ponies and raced back for safety. A wild orgy of violence occurredā¦ the Utes from both ridges showered the yard with bullets from their Winchester riflesā¦ wounding or killing the ranch hands. Corolla was grazed by a bullet... his two braves were killedā¦ when the shooting stoppedā¦Corolla returned to the ranchās yard with twelve Ute warriorsā¦ the Utes then murdered the remaining wounded ranch hands. Oscar Hailey wasnāt among the deadā¦ he had run back into the ranch house and hid with his family and Ruthann... Corolla sent five warriors into the houseā¦ telling them to look for a cellar at the back of the houseā¦ a trapdoor on the floor or low on a back wallā¦ the warriors found the survivors huddled together in the cellarā¦ there was no resistance ā¦ and were brought before Corolla. Corolla spoke in English addressing the five of them, pointing at Oscar Hailey he said, āYou are responsible for Sarah Ruddās husband deathā¦ you have stolen her cattleā¦you have attacked her ranchā¦ your sons shot a man in the back and you blamed her for his deathā¦ you wanted to own her ranchā¦ you are like a hunterā¦ you shoot the buffaloā¦ then waits until it lies down and dies. I cannot let this beā¦ for Sarah Rudd treats the land wellā¦ she sees the beauty in the wild flowers, the trees, the grasses, the wheat, the cattle, the horses and everything ā¦ she understands she is a custodianā¦ the land is borrowedā¦ and is to be given to our children.ā Corolla took a deep breath and continued, āYour cattle and horses will be releasedā¦ we will burn down your ranch. You will watchā¦ we will take your women as hostagesā¦ for they cannot remain here aloneā¦ they would not surviveā¦ we will protect them from winter aheadā¦they are not prisonersā¦ when Spring arrives, if they wish to go back, we will bring them to the Fort Steeleā¦ that is our promise to you.ā Jane and Ruthann were sobbing... they were terrified and confused. Corolla said to them, āYou are going with usā¦ you should give-inā¦ You will be brought to our winter camp on the Grand Mesa.ā The Ute warrior Ursine took Jane Hailey and another warrior Piah took Ruthann Hart ā¦ and the band of Utes began the slow trek to their winter quarters on the Grand Mesa. Jane and Ruthann realized their futilityā¦ each walked alongside her warriorās horseā¦ a long rope loosely tied to their hands forced them to keep up with the pace. Corolla and twelve warriors remained behindā¦ six of Utes went off to set fire to all of the structures and buildings on the ranch. As this was happening, Corolla spoke to the three remaining captors, āyou will be shot and killed.ā He made Oscar kneel down on the ground and his two sons kneel down facing Oscar. Corolla said, āMake your peace with your Great Spirit.ā Oscar and his sons belligerently turned towards Corolla and spit on the ground. Corolla eyes flashed hatred, six rifle shots rang outā¦killing all three captorsā¦ then Oscarās body was turned over ā¦ his opened eyes appeared to stare at the skyā¦ a barrel stave was driven through his mouth and skullā¦ a symbol of untruths. Corolla and his warriors rode to catch up with the rest of the band of Utes on the way to their winter quarters. By late afternoon the women had fallen numerous times as the path was rough, rocky and was steeped with ridges covered with pine, oak brush and sage brushā¦ their dress and footwear was not made for walking in this terrain. Both Ursine and Piah realized the women could not continue this wayā¦ halting their poniesā¦ they slide downā¦ approached the womenā¦ taking out a long knifeā¦ Jane and Ruthann stopped, frozen in terror as they watched the skirt of their dress slit front and backā¦ the warriors removed the rope binding their handsā¦. lifted them onto his ponyā¦ gripped the reins and climbed on behind themā¦ mixed feeling overcame Janeā¦ she couldnāt help thinking of the conditions she and Ruthann had fallen intoā¦but no tears fell. Her thoughts churned in her mind and sourness churned in her stomachā¦ were Corolla accounts truthfulā¦ was my husband a thiefā¦ did my husband try to steal Sarah Ruddās ranchā¦ and who is Sarah Ruddā¦ why would my son shoot Tom Hart in the back... Ruthann must be furious with my familyā¦ I hate Corolla and the Utes for thisā¦ Iām afraidā¦ for my lifeā¦ all these thoughts came and went meaninglessly as they rode onā¦. After five more days, stopping only for food and rest, Corolla and the Utes reached the Grand Mesa winter camp. Jane Hailey and Ruthann Hart felt utter hopelessness upon reaching the campā¦ no cavalry came to rescue themā¦ hence no one knows about the Ute attack on the Double Bar Ranch or about their captureā¦their lives are now in the hands of Corolla. Their Ute guards Ursine and Piah helped them off the ponies and stood by themā¦ as Jane and Ruthann looked out over the camp they saw a village of sheltersā¦. Some were round, others in the shape of a coneā¦ most of the frames were covered with brushā¦ but some of the taller cone shaped frames were covered with skins of animalsā¦ it looked very much like the beginning of a small townā¦. Soon their worry heightened as Corolla approached them. He stopped before them and said, āYou will begin to learn the way of the Utesā¦ our customsā¦ each woman needs a good manā¦ā Corolla pointed to Ursine and then to Jane, āyou are his wifeāā¦ he then pointed to Piah and then to Ruthann; āyou are Piahās wifeā He said something in Ute language to the men. Then continued in English, āthey will take you to their home to live with their other wife and childrenā¦ you have the same freedom as all Ute womanā¦ I give you one more special rightā¦ not normally given to our captivesā¦ you are not required to have sex or children with your new husband.ā Corolla turned and walked away. Piahās wife, Magena helped Ruthannā¦ Ursineās wife, Taimi helped Janeā¦to adapt to their roles as new members of the tribeā¦ the first thingā¦ they changed their clothingā¦ each was given a long dress made from a woolen blanket fringed and decorated with beads and shells to wear and given moccasins for their feet. Since both Janeās and Ruthannās hair was long, Magena and Taimi helped them braided their hair into two braidsā¦ since none of the Ute wives spoke Englishā¦ Magena and Taimi began lessons in Ute languageā¦ just like an infantā¦ pointing to objects and saying the Ute word or words for the objectā¦ Jane and Ruthann tried to repeat itā¦ slowly they began to acquire the words needed for survival in the Ute family. Ruthann and Jane learned that life as a Ute was not very different from that of the settlersā¦ women did the gathering of roots, pine nut, seed and fruitsā¦ all the domestic tasks such as child care, cooking, cleaning, making clothing and household tools. Ute children had many chores to do and less time to playā¦ but they did have dolls and games such as footraces and a ball game called shinny. Ute men were the warriors and the hunters of deer, elk, buffalo and small gameā¦ the men were not farmers, nor wanted to be farmersā¦ their responsibility was for feeding and defending their families. Slowly Ruthannās fears lessened as she began realizing all the freedoms they receivedā¦ both she and Jane were becoming a part of the Uteās communityā¦ Magena has really helped me to adapt to their way of lifeā¦ as I learned the Ute languageā¦ she learned Englishā¦ surprisingly we began to talk about family and our livesā¦ she asked about my family, childrenā¦ it was difficult to explainā¦ told her I had no children, that I could not have childrenā¦ she asked if I wanted childrenā¦ truthfully I told her yesā¦ she said that Corolla was a great Medicine Manā¦ he could help meā¦ replying that my husband was deadā¦ she offered Piahā¦ heās good warrior... good manā¦ good husbandā¦ she wept when I rejected Piahā¦. Nonetheless the next day she dragged me to Corollaā¦ explaining what I neededā¦he said in English that he could help meā¦ I had no replyā¦ later that day Corolla brought me a leather pouch with mixture of dried leaves, seeds and stems ā¦ he said that when I want a childā¦ put hand full of medicine in a water bowl pottery, add water to topā¦ then next day drink some waterā¦ each day fill pottery with water to topā¦ do this for one full moon cycleā¦ then after 10 sunsetsā¦ sleep with husband for three nightsā¦ and you will have a child. He turned and left me. Oh, I wished that Tom was still aliveā¦ we both wanted to have childrenā¦ do I believe in Corollaās medicineā¦ not really, but I surely would have tried itā¦ As the days passed by, Janeās and Ruthannās roles in their new family grewā¦ they were helping to make clothing out of blankets and animal hidesā¦ learning to cook the Ute wayā¦ and doing the unskilled cleaning chores along with the Ute Children ... by nightfall they were always tiredā¦their new life was primitive, they ate with unwashed handsā¦their rations were usually meager consisting of either dried meat or stews made from whatever animal was shot that dayā¦ they had to huddle under animal hides at night to keep warmā¦ over time, their weeping lessenedā¦ their hope rested in Corollaās promise of going home after the winter. Jane and Ruthann remained friendsā¦ bound together by necessityā¦ but their views of the Ute Indians began to diverge Janeās hatred of Corolla and the Utes simmeredā¦ what they did to her husband, to her sonsā¦ judgment was not theirsā¦ why should she believe themā¦ her husband was a respected rancher, not a thiefā¦ he gave a few crooks a second chanceā¦ yesā¦ but most of the men were tough wranglersā¦ nothing elseā¦ and her beloved sons would never shoot anyone in the backā¦especially Tom Hartā¦ Iām sure Ruthann doesnāt believe thatā¦ if Corolla does take us to Fort Steele in the springā¦ Iām going to make sure the army investigates the massacre at the ranchā¦and Iāll testify to the fact that Corolla and all the Ute Indians were responsible for the massacreā¦ payback will be sweet. Part 3 Chapter 11 Justice of the Peace Ralph Stewart left Green River, Wyoming on Saturday morning in late September on his judicial circuit ride to La Sal, Utahā¦ planning to first stop by the Double Bar ranch to see Oscar Haileyā¦ then to the Bar R ranch to serve a warrant to Sarah Rudd and escort her to La Sal for trial for the murder of Tom Hart. As he crossed into Utah, heavy clouds began to gather in the western sky, a faint stir of the wind sent a chill through his bodyā¦ he thoughtā¦ this is the beginning of a blizzard... better head to the Vernal, itās the nearest townā¦just as they say Utah has three seasons winter, July and August. Pulling his hat down low over his eyes, wrapping his bandana to mask his face from the snow and wind, buttoning his woolen coat, he followed the lone trail towards town. It may have been an hour or so when he glanced back up at the skyā¦ the clouds were blowing off to the north and the sun began peeking throughā¦another thing you can say for Utah, it didnāt take long to clear up. Yet, he was glad when he got to the town. That evening he was sitting at a table in the Spring Creek Saloon, when a barmaid came forward and said, āJustice you look very tiredā¦ I have a small room in back with a bedā¦ if you donāt mind rufflesā¦ I got to work ātil morningā¦ my Pa says I should offer it to you.ā āNow thatās right nice ā¦ whatās your name?ā āAnnieā¦ Annette Trudeau ā¦my Paās the ownerā¦ he says we should always treat the law kindly ā¦ā āWell Annieā¦if you donāt mindā¦ point me to your roomā¦ I have a lot of riding to do in the next few daysā¦ be nice to get into a bedā¦ I should be thanking your Paā¦ Whatās his name?ā āHis name is Richard Trudeau, but everyone calls him Rickā¦ if you want to thank him personalā¦heās at the barā¦ bartending. My room is to the left of the bar ā¦ following the hallwayā¦ itās the last door on the right.ā Justice Stewart strode to the bar and found Rick talking to an army captainā¦ not wanting to interrupt their discussionā¦ he listened inā¦ until he heard the captain say that he had a small detachment of men that are on a reconnaissance missionā¦ there were settler reports of a small band of Ute Indians roving the area between Green River and Moabā¦ all Utes should already be at the Uncompahgre reservation for winter. Justice Stewart spoke up, āCaptain, Iām Justice of the Peace Ralph Stewartā¦ just over heard what you saidā¦ Iām heading your wayā¦ need to go to the Double Bar Ranch, then Southeast to Bar R Ranch and finally at La Sal for a trialā¦. Mind if I tag along.ā āNoā¦ nameās Captain Joseph Wesley from D.A. Fort Russell ā¦ I donāt expect troubleā¦ just a peaceful missionā¦ making sure the roving band of Utes heads for the reservation. I have one scout Charlie Houston and 35 men of D Company 5th Cavalry and two pack mules.ā āWell the Double Bar Ranch is just south of Green Riverā¦ thinking you could start looking there?ā āWeāre heading out at sunriseā¦ towards Green Riverā¦ Charlie will scout ahead and report back on which way weāre to goā¦. youāre welcome to come alongā¦ā āThanks.ā Changing the subject, Stewart said, āMr. Trudeau your daughter said there was a bed I could use for the nightā¦Iād certainly appreciate itā¦ its very decent of you.ā āRickās my nameā¦ no problemā¦ take a right and the end of the barā¦ head to the end of the hallwayā¦ rooms on the rightā¦ my wife will have breakfast ready a little before sunriseā¦ youāre welcome to some.ā āThanks to both of youā¦ goodnight.ā Chapter 12: Early next morning Captain Wesley entered the saloon looking for the Justice Stewartā¦ saw him at a table finishing his breakfast and asked, āYou ready to goā¦ weāll be waiting outsideā¦ā āIām readyā¦ my horse is saddled out frontā¦ just pay my respects to Rick and family before I leaveā¦ hope the winter weather holds offā¦ once it starts it seems to go on forever.ā āSunās not up yetā¦the clouds are blocking the starsā¦ a cold wind is blowingā¦ but it doesnāt matterā¦ Charlie left a half hour ago to scout aheadā¦ weāll go towards Green Riverā¦ needs to get going.ā āOkay, Iām comingā¦ donāt want to be the one to hold you up.ā As the cavalry rode towards Green River, the sun began poking its head through the clouds and the wind died downā¦ the day was clearing up. Just before noon, Charlie Houston returned and reported, ā A band of Utes ā¦ about fifteenā¦ weāre seen heading towards the Double Bar Ranchā¦ think thatās the way we should headā¦ theyāre not going to the Reservationā¦ feel something is up and itās not good.ā Captain Wesley agreed, āCharlie stay back with usā¦Justice, weāre heading towards the Double Bar Ranch ā¦ youāre in luck.ā They quicken their pace, riding towards the Double Bar Ranchā¦ reaching the top of the northern ridge overlooking the Double Bar Ranch, just before sunsetā¦what they saw was a smoldering ruinā¦ riding in they found bodies lying on the ground. Justice Stewart found Oscar Haileyā¦ his head smashed in and a stave driven through his mouthā¦ his two boys were dead and lying next to himā¦ he searched, but did not find Oscarās wife. What happened hereā¦ it was a massacreā¦ but why? Captain Wesley and his men made camp on the northern ridgeā¦ next morning they proceeded to begin burying all the bodies. Charlie Houston search the grounds and estimated that over 100 Utes attacked the ranchā¦ looks like they then headed towards Grand Mesa mountainā¦ also looks like they had two captives, possibly women or children by their footprintsā¦forced to walk behind the horses. Wesley reasoned that he might be able to overtake the Utes, but unless he had reinforcements he probably could not rescue the two captives. Instead he decided to remain ā¦ he sent two riders to Fort Russell to report their status and request reinforcementsā¦ deciding he would wait ā¦ finish burying all the bodies before he began his pursuit of the Utes ā¦ with reinforcements heād have a chance in rescuing the hostages, hopefully before the Utes reached the Grand Mesa mountains. Justice Stewart grasped that this massacre had something to do with Sarah Rudd, but what was her connection to the Utesā¦ why would the Utes attack the Double Bar Ranchā¦ are they going to attack other ranches on their way to Grand Mesa mountains? What was the meaning of the Uteās message ā¦the stave through the mouth of Oscar Haileyā¦ the only thing that came to mind was that Oscar was a liar. Should he pull Captain Wesley aside and briefly explained his thoughtsā¦ or should he just forget it. Nine and half days later both riders returned catching up with Captain Wesley and the patrol. A short cryptic written order stated, āDo not engage the Utes in battleā¦ and continue your reconnaissance missionā¦ confirm where the Utes took their hostagesā¦. Your orders are to wait for springā¦. US Congress will plan the attack of Corollaās camp from all sides.ā Captain Wesley understood that if the Utes reached the Grand Mesa mountain, it would be impossible to rescue the hostages in winterā¦ the rugged terrain provides little protection for the assault on Grand Mesa... logistically he would require more troops, maybe two or three companies and the necessary support to maintain the attack would be too greatā¦the army is right, wait for the end of winter or at least when the snow begins to meltā¦ yes, thatās when theyāll mount a campaign to rescue the hostages. Justice Stewart approached Captain Wesley and said, āIāll be leaving tomorrow for the Bar R Ranchā¦ its south of hereā¦ I would appreciate it if you and your men will come with meā¦Iād like the company and the safetyā¦ if your orders allow you to go further southā¦ itās possible that other ranches have also been attackā¦ we might even learn something about the Utes attack on the Double Bar Ranch. āHow soā¦?ā āI canāt really say now, I have a hunch and if Iām right, I think it will become important.ā āOkay, weāll head that wayā¦ Charlie will scouts ahead of us.ā āI think that would be very wise.ā Chapter13 Sarah Rudd was in her kitchen making breakfast for herself, she was alone, thinkingā¦ āher son and the boys, ha, not boys theyāre menā¦ anyway they were out putting the cattle up for wintering in a protected canyonā¦ theyāll be back later today. The last few days have been peacefulā¦ even the weather today wasnāt bad for Octoberā¦.winter rose its head in late September , but today it was a beautiful, clear, crisp October dayā¦ need to enjoy this day, because there wonāt be many more like it. She sat at the table and sipped her hot coffeeā¦ reflecting, āWhere was Justice of the Peace Stewartā¦ I was expecting him to be coming by and escort me to my trial for the shooting of Tom Hartā¦ Iām not worried about it, but Iād rather itās overā¦. Later that morning, John, Roy, Ben and Riley returnedā¦ they looked tiredā¦ Sarah came out; wiping her hands on her apron and said, āGuess youāll want supper earlyā¦ Iāll get it startedā¦ John come inā¦ get the hot water from the kettle for washing upā¦ and all of you get some restā¦ Iāll call when supper is ready. Supper was ready around four in the afternoon, everyone sat around the table and just ateā¦ there was no talking accept for āpass the biscuitsā¦ pass the gravyā¦ pass the chickenāā¦ when supper was over, Ben and Riley went back to the bunkhouse to restā¦John and Roy helped Sarah cleanup after supperā¦ then they all went outside and sat on the porch in the crisp clean air of the of October. As John looked at the yard, he began to speak, āMa, we found a new canyon for the herdā¦ itās has nice grass and even a little waterfall on the west canyon wallā¦ it looks perfectā¦ sure hope winter will be kindly ā¦better than last year.ā āHope so too sonā¦ we need some luck ā¦ we need to build up our herd if weāre going to continue ranchingā¦ successful ranching that is.ā Roy agreed, āYeah, thatās right Sarahā¦ you also need to think about getting a least one new bullā¦ for the herdā¦ā āRoy, where am I going to get the money for a new bullā¦?ā āMaybe trade one of your bulls for a younger bullā¦ there are a few ranches around hereā¦ Iām sure one of ranchers would be willingā¦ your bulls are already proven breedersā¦ that may help you get one.ā āMaybe your rightā¦ but itās not going to help us this year.ā āNo itās notā¦ but John and I will go out to the canyon in late December to bring the herd some salt lick and cattle feedā¦ that should helpā¦ it all depends on how bad this winter will beā¦ā It was late afternoon when Justice of the Peace Ralph Stewart rode into the ranch yard along with Captain Joseph Wesley and his patrol of D Company 5th Cavalry. Sarah stood up and said , āJustice Stewart, you needed the cavalry to help you bring me La Sal for the trialā¦ you think Iād fight youā¦ and not go quietlyā¦ I know that Iām innocent.ā Captain Wesley spoke up, āNo Mam, we didnāt expect trouble from youā¦ my patrol is looking for a reported band of roving Utesā¦ weād needed to make sure we pointed them back towards the reservation for winter.ā āYou think they were heading this way?ā Justice Stewart broke in, āSarah, I need to explainā¦ Captain Wesley and I met up in Vernalā¦we rode out togetherā¦ as the band of Utes were heading towards the Double Bar Ranchā¦ we joined forces so to speak ā¦ I was on my way there to tell Mr. Hailey about the trial next weekend in La Salā¦ and then head out to the Bar R Ranch to tell you ā¦ Iād thought we could ride into La Sal together.ā¦however the trial wonāt beā¦. We found a smoldering Double Bar Ranchā¦ there was a massacreā¦ bodies were all overā¦ Oscar, his sons and all his ranch hands were killedā¦ cattle and horses were goneā¦scatteredā¦ we stayed there eight days burying all the bodiesā¦ it appears the Utes are headed towards Grand Mesa mountainsā¦ they also seemed to have taken two hostagesā¦ maybe Oscarās wifeā¦ and another woman or childā¦ Iām suspecting it maybe Tom Hartās wife. Donāt knowā¦ but we rode to warn all the ranches in this area of the Utesā¦ you happen to be the last of the ranches.ā Roy spoke up, āDid any other ranches get attacked or have trouble with the Ute band?ā Captain Wesley said, āNo other ranches reported any problem with the Utesā¦ it could be that the Double Bar Ranch somehow angered the Utesā¦ it appears that the ranch was attacked by far more Utes than the reported roving bandā¦ I donāt have any idea why the Utes attacked the ranchā¦ but I have no doubt the Double Bar Ranch owner, Oscar Hailey was the trigger for the massacreā¦.his head was smashed in and a barrel stave driven through his mouth. None of the others were treated as Mr. Haileyā¦ plus the Utes didnāt take any scalps.ā āOh myā¦how horrible,ā exclaimed Sarah, āYou do know Captain Wesley that Ute Indians never take scalps.ā Her thoughts then drifted in her mind, remembering that Corolla told her that his people will no longer trouble herā¦ he even brought her a warrior to be her husbandā¦ luckily Roy saved me from that peril ā¦ was Corolla looking out for meā¦ did he attack and kill Oscar Hailey for my sake?ā āSo are you going after the Utes?ā asked Roy. āNoā¦ We think theyāre headed to join Corolla, the Medicine Man and his renegade band of Ute warriors in Grand Mesa Mountains for winterā¦ our patrol will confirm thatās where the Utes took their hostagesā¦. Our orders are continue our reconnaissance missionā¦ then in springā¦ then US Congress will plan the attack of Corollaās camp from all sidesā¦ probably using the 3rd Infantry troops and the 5th Cavalry from Fort Steele, Rawlins, Wyoming, the 9th Cavalry from Sulfur Springs, Colorado and maybe even the 4th Cavalry from Fort Garland, Coloradoā¦ itāll be an all-out war to stamp out the Ute renegades. āWhat about the two hostages,ā Sarah asked, āwouldnāt they most likely be killed in that plan?ā Captain Wesley explained, āItās unfortunate, itās war, sometimes civilians get caught up and are sacrificed for the greater goodā¦ it canāt be helped.ā āIām sorry captainā¦ I donāt see it that wayā¦ maybe you should first asked Corolla to release the hostagesā¦ tell him if he surrenders to you for punishment, youāll allow his followers and their families to return to the Ute Uncompahgre Reservationā¦ Iām sure with his camp surrounded by all of those soldiersā¦ he would not only consider it, but would agree to itā¦ at least before fighting broke out.ā¦ however once the fighting startedā¦ the Utes would fight the soldiers until deathā¦ it would be another massacre only this time itāll be by our soldiers.ā āMrs. Ruddā¦ Iām only a captainā¦ I follow ordersā¦ I donāt have the authority to do thatā¦ besides there will be a general commanding the troopsā¦ he will be following the orders of the US Congressā¦ to stamp-out the renegade Utesā¦ā āCaptain, this war is to begin in springā¦ what if someone would go to Corolla and plead for the release of the hostages and plead for Corolla and his Utes to surrender to your patrol and all return to the Ute Reservation before winter is overā¦would it stop the war.ā āI donāt know Mrs. Ruddā¦ it mayā¦ but who would even tryā¦ we have no idea where his camp isā¦the Grand Mesa Mountains is a large remote area and itās been snowing on the top of the mountains for the last month.ā āWell I have had a run in with Corolla and his warriors about the time my husband was killed... I stood up to him about stealing two of my horsesā¦we came to an understanding about my landā¦ I allowed the Utes to travel it and take water from my streamā¦ I know he could have easily killed meā¦ he didnātā¦ I believed we had an agreement when he returned my two horses. If I can find him in Grand Mesa, I think I can convince him to release the two hostagesā¦ not sure of anything elseā¦ but will try to get him to return to the Ute Reservation and surrender to you Captain Wesleyā¦ that is, if you will be patrolling in this area later this winter.ā āYes Mrs. Ruddā¦ the patrols will be continued throughout the winterā¦ but I do not think you should goā¦ it is too dangerous.ā āSarah, you shouldnāt do this,ā remarked Justice Stewart, āBut if you do, Iāll need to get your version of what happened here when Tom Hart was killedā¦ there will be no trialā¦ itāll be a hearingā¦ I have Oscar Haleyās versionā¦ Iāll need yoursā¦ then Iāll decide on what I put in the legal summaryā¦ I know most folks believe that my decisions are swayed by moneyā¦ but that is not soā¦ I really do try to exercise the law correctlyā¦ problem is, facts are muddy and a personās actions are unclearā¦ my judgment is try to identify the truth among all that is presentedā¦ not an easy task, but necessaryā¦ sometimes I make the wrong decisionā¦ but it settles the problem.ā āOkay Justice, Iāll do that laterā¦ I know that I canāt put all of you up for the nightā¦ but the bunkhouse has two more bedsā¦ Iāll get the linens for you and the captainā¦. Iām afraid that the rest of the troops need to make campā¦ you can put your horses in the coral and weāll feed and water themā¦ as for supperā¦ we ate earlyā¦ but I can get something together for you and the captainā¦ Iāll also make Johnny cakes and extra Texas white gravy for the troopsā¦ although thatāll be for their breakfastā¦ sorry didnāt plan ahead for companyā¦. Coda Adopted and Modified American Indian Proverbs: Treat the earth well, as we do not inherit the Earth from our Ancestors, but borrow it from our Children. |