Refuge Robledo Mountain 2 Chapter 15
- 2 years ago
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We slept in a little later than usual the next morning. While late, we could have joined everyone for breakfast, but Anna had other ideas. She remembered my warning that we’d be missing both soft beds and hot water for the next month or longer.
Rolling over on top of me, she said she wanted one more memory of a nice soft bed before we showered. Eventually we made it to the shower and enjoyed the hot water.
After a good breakfast, we loaded up the horses and mules, and double checked our weapons. Mounting up, we rode down the slope, waving as we passed the mason’s camp. We broke into a canter as we crossed the Rio Grande, and turned north on the Camino Real, eager to begin the trip.
Riding side by side, we rode up the Camino Real for three miles before leaving the road for the countryside, keeping a wary eye on our surroundings as we rode. We had talked about the road being like a magnet, drawing Indian raids and bandits. Anna knew that this was an accurate description based on her grandfather’s and uncle’s freighting experience, our El Paso trip, as well the other incidents we had described to her over the years. She also knew the desert held its own dangers, which we had to be watchful for.
We finally reached my little bowl of grass in the Caballo Mountains, near Union Gulch, late the afternoon of the third day. We set up a long-term camp, complete with a canvas fly at my normal spot next to the boulders, before taking the animals up to the tanks for watering. Anna was enchanted with the watering holes and wondered if there were any more nearby. I hadn’t explored that much beyond this spot and couldn’t answer her question, so we decided to take one morning or afternoon a week, and just explore the surrounding area to see what we found.
The next morning, we followed our normal routine of Tai Chi, katas, and breakfast. After taking care of the mules, we loaded up the horses with the metal detector, two shovels, and a couple of burlap bags and mounted up for the short ride.
Riding into Union Gulch a short time later, we dismounted, and I showed Anna where I’d started digging the gold, and how far I had gotten.
“As best as I can tell, there’s enough gold here to buy three estancias the size of ours. But, I can’t be completely certain,” I replied to Anna’s question about how much gold was here.
Going back to the horses, I took the metal detector from behind my saddle and showed her how to use it, letting her get a feel for it. Anna heard the first real beeps from the machine as she swept it over the edge of the field. Her eyes were twinkling, and a broad smile lit her face as she listened to the almost steady tone while walking the width of the gulch and back.
She stopped next to me, took off the earphones, and said in wonderment, “It’s almost one long continuous beep.”
“Yep. And it continues that way, as far down the gulch as I’ve gone,” I replied with a smile of my own.
Putting the detector down, she asked, “What happens now?”
Taking one of the shovels, I unfolded it halfway out before tightening the locking nut and handing it to her. “Now,” I said with a grin, “The hard work starts.”
Taking out the other shovel, I unfolded and locked it before walking out into the gulch. Bending over, I gave it a good swing into the sand to loosen it up. As I worked I explained what I was doing. When I had a rough four-foot rectangle of loose sand and gravel, I lifted a shovel full of sand and gravel and slowly sifted it with a gentle back and forth tipping action until it was all off the shovel. Bending down I picked up five large nuggets and a handful of smaller nuggets from the shovel and showed them to Anna.
Taking the nuggets, she looked at them, and then looked up at me. “That doesn’t seem too hard.”
With a laugh I said, “I’ll remind you of that tonight, and we can reexamine that thought over supper.”
We spent the rest of the day digging and gathering nuggets. By the time we were riding back to camp with our haul, Anna was ready to admit it was more work than she’d thought.
“Our work day isn’t done yet, my love,” I said giving her a grin. “We still have a few hours of work to do after we eat.
Barely an hour later, done with our meal, I said, “And now my love, the fun starts.”
I got everything we’d need out of the panniers before filling the molds with nuggets and showing her, step by step, how to melt and scrape the impurities off of the gold. When the first batch was done, I sat back and said, “We need to wait a few minutes for the gold to cool and then we’ll have our first twelve bars.” After a moment’s pause, I gave her an evil grin. “We only have another five thousand one hundred and eight more bars to go, before we head to Santa Fe.”
Her jaw dropped open at that. She groaned, finally realizing what had taken so much of my time over the last three years.
I laughed at her antics. “It’s not that bad. We’re together, after all, and that will make it much easier and much more fun than when I was doing this by myself.”
Our routine for the next three and a half weeks was pretty much the same. We never were able to melt everything we mined in a day during our nightly melting party, so the sacks of nuggets continued to grow at a slightly greater pace every day.
Every third day we’d spend a few hours hunting. I took that opportunity to have Anna practice long shots with her A700. She would never be as good as Yolanda or me, but by the time we left for Santa Fe she was doing well on anything out to 800 yards.
The evening I tied off the sixty-third bag of eighty gold bars, I said, “Anna we can leave any time from tomorrow on. We have sixty-three bags of eighty bars and over one hundred and fifty pounds of nuggets that still needed to be melted so anything else we mine is well over what we planned.”
She thought for a minute before replying. “I’d like to spend two more mornings mining and then relax during the afternoons. I like our little camp, and I’m not looking forward to almost three weeks in the saddle before getting to Santa Fe.”
She beamed one of her big super megawatt Anna smiles, and told me that while we were here she had some more possibilities she wanted to explore. What could I say? That damn smile of hers took all thoughts other than pleasing her, straight out of my head.
Late in the morning before we planned on leaving, Anna found a nice pocket of nuggets that had washed up against something. They had piled up into a lode of nuggets seven inches deep, two feet wide, and six feet long. We spent more than the morning we’d originally given ourselves and, skipping lunch, finally cleared out the pocket by midafternoon. We returned to camp with roughly one hundred and fifty pounds of gold nuggets over the plan we’d made.
After a short talk, we decided to spend the next three days doing nothing but melting nuggets. When we were done, we had a total 1,750 pounds of gold in 70 bags weighing 25 pounds each.
I handed one of the extra bars we had to Anna. “Hold on to that. When we get to El Paso we’ll have Mr. Greenburg make you a nice gold necklace with matching ear rings. Something special to remember your first visit to the gold fields.”
Bam! One huge super megawatt Anna smile! That quickly led to exploring some more possibilities.
We set out for Santa Fe mid-morning the next day, well exercised after exploring even more possibilities that Anna had come up with. Yet we both felt well rested. The mules were loaded a little heavier than I’d wanted, but not excessively so. We rode about a mile off to one side of the road every day, keeping out of sight and to ourselves. We both hoped to get to Santa Fe without incident and carefully watched for any indications of raiding parties or bandits as we rode.
Our luck held for the first eight days, and we thoroughly enjoyed the time together. Mid-morning of the ninth day Murphy struck with a vengeance.
We were riding side by side talking in low voices, so they wouldn’t carry when we heard faint shots coming from the west near the road. Anna looked at me with concern in her eyes and I could tell there was no way she was just going to ignore it. Turning, we rode toward the sound of the gunfire.
When we got close, I found a nice hill and we both dismounted leaving all the animals at the bottom of the hill. Scrambling up the side of the hill with our rifles, we laid down near the crest. Roughly three hundred yards away was a wagon train of fifteen wagons in a partial defensive circle. The last two wagons hadn’t been able to close the circle and had been left about twenty yards short of the others.
A raiding party of close to fifty warriors was circling the wagons focusing on the opening where three soldiers were trying to keep the gap filled with gun fire. One of the soldiers was standing calmly in the middle of the gap, methodically aiming and firing his revolver. Scattered inside the circle, we could see five of the defenders were down and not moving.
I asked Anna to go back and get my A700 and three magazines, while I tried to find the raid leaders. She scuttled backward a few feet and quickly disappeared as I took out my monocular and scanned the area around the wagons, looking for the raid chiefs. I finally found them on a small rise on the other side of the wagons, sitting on their horses next to a large mesquite.
I was just beginning to wonder what was keeping Anna when Dream Laura’s voice called out, “Anna’s in trouble, Paul. She needs your help!”
Looking over my shoulder, I saw Anna struggling with a Navajo warrior while a second Navajo was running up the hill toward me. My two immediate thoughts as I pulled my pistol and killed the warrior coming up the hill were, first, where the hell did they come from; and, second, why didn’t Dream Laura give me a little more warning?
I was trying to line up a shot on the warrior still grappling with Anna when she unexpectedly got the position she wanted. She dropped to her back and threw him over her head with her legs. No sooner had she let go of the warrior than she drew her pistol, rolled over onto her stomach, and shot him in the back of head just as he landed. Damn she was quick!
Running down the hill and over to her, I bent to lift her up, when I saw the blood on her left arm and on her side, near her waist. I’d never felt fear like the fear that gripped me at that moment. Going to my knees beside her I asked her how bad she was hurt. She looked up at me with a question in her eyes and it was clear she hadn’t felt the wounds yet.
Finding a slit in her clothes near her ribs I ripped it open to see how deep the wound was. Thankfully it was only about a quarter inch deep but on someone of Anna’s size that was pretty deep. I could tell it was from a knife cut, not a stab, so that helped alleviate my fear somewhat.
Turning to her arm, I ripped her sleeve off to find another knife cut. This one wasn’t as deep or as wide. “Well, you’re going to have a couple of nice scars. I guess that suits a hellcat like you, my love, but please try to be more careful.”
“Quit babying me, and go help the people in the wagon train,” she said with a grimace as she held her side.
Smiling gently at her, I said, “You are now, and will always be, my first concern.” Through the pain she was just beginning to feel, she smiled back at me with that twinkle in her eyes that told she was going to be alright.
Getting my medical kit, I gave Anna a couple of Ibuprofen, and quickly bandaged the two wounds, telling her we’d have to clean and stitch them up later.
The scene from the crest of the hill hadn’t changed much since we’d last seen it. The raid leaders were still on a small rise 200 hundred yards on the other side of the wagon train. A few more horses and warriors were down, as well as two of the three soldiers who’d been filling the gap.
The last soldier, in the middle, was still calmly standing in the open gap, methodically firing at any warrior foolish enough to come within revolver range. That was either one brave man, or an idiot. I couldn’t decide which and I had other things to concern myself with.
With a quick reminder to Anna to shoot the horses instead of the warriors, I settled into a better position, found the raid leaders in the scope, and fired at the one holding a lance. I found him in the scope again just as he started to slide off his horse, and then sighted in and fired on the second leader.
With both leaders dead, I shifted my gaze back to the wagons and saw the last soldier changing the cylinder on his weapon by feel, as he calmly watched four warriors racing at him on horseback.
I took two quick shots, aiming at the horses of the two lead raiders and was rewarded with both horses collapsing almost immediately, throwing the warriors riding them over their heads. I had the scope on the third horse when I heard Anna’s rifle go off and the warrior I’d been aiming at flew off the side of his saddle. Before I could say anything to Anna she fired again, and the fourth warrior fairly flew off the side of his horse.
The soldier had finished reloading and was bringing his pistol up but there were no targets at the moment. He looked around to find out who he had to thank and didn’t see anyone looking at him. The direction the horses and warriors had fallen must have finally clicked, as he suddenly looked in our direction.
Anna had returned to firing at the ends of the circle, and I started firing at targets farther away making sure the wagons weren’t in the line of fire. A few moments later the remaining warriors finally realized they were taking heavy casualties, and then noticed that their leaders weren’t sitting on their horses. As they raced over to where the leaders were, I took the opportunity to kill the two in the lead as they pulled up where the leaders had fallen. That did the trick! The rest of the warriors just kept going as they passed the bodies.
Looking over at Anna, I couldn’t tell if she was so pale from the wounds or all the deaths she’d had a hand in causing.
“How are you doing, my love?” I asked gently.
“Feeling a little weak, but otherwise alright,” she replied with a quick glance over at me.
“Good. Stay down just a little longer while I get the attention of the wagon train. Hopefully, they won’t start shooting before figuring out we’re friendly.”
Standing up slowly, I waved my hat over my head hoping these people weren’t like the last group of idiots I’d helped. The soldier was looking back in our direction, saw me, and immediately waved back to me.
Reaching down, I helped Anna up, and we walked back down to our animals, where we put our rifles and my medical kit away, before mounting up and riding around the hill to the wagon train.
The soldier was waiting for us just outside the circle of wagons. As we got closer, I could see he sported a mustache and goatee that seemed to be popular among military officers. When we pulled up in front of him he bowed, gallantly sweeping his hat in front of him while introducing himself.
“Lieutenant George Pickett at your service, sir. I am most thankful for your timely and fortuitous intervention on my behalf in an unfortunate time of difficulty,” he said in a soft southern drawl.
“Well met, Lieutenant Pickett. I am Paul McAllister and this lovely young lady is my wife, Anna McAllister,” I replied. I couldn’t help myself and smiling, said, “It was Anna’s shooting on your behalf that was fortuitous.”
His jaw about dropped, before he quickly recovered and bowed to her with a second sweep of his hat.
Anna gave a little giggle and said, “I was glad to be of assistance in your time of need, Lieutenant. However,” pointing to me, “he was the one making the long shots which ended your difficulty much earlier than rightfully could have been expected.”
With a puzzled look, he asked, “What do you mean by long shots?”
“If you walk over to a small rise about 200 yards on the other side of the wagons you’ll see what I meant,” was Anna’s somber reply.
Turning to me in confusion, he asked, “I mean no disrespect, sir, but what were you shooting at that distance that was so important?”
With a snort, Anna interjected. “The raid leaders were watching the battle from there. With them dead the rest of the warriors would stop a fight to elect a new leader. To stop them from reforming for another attack he not only killed the two leaders, but a few more when they rode up to the bodies. The ones that were left decided it was better to fight somewhere else.”
I interrupted whatever the Lieutenant was going to say. “Sir, is there somewhere I can attend my wife’s wounds? She’s really beginning to look pale, and I’m starting to get a little worried.” As I was asking this I dismounted and helped Anna down. Then I retrieved my medical kit.
“Certainly, please come with me,” he said, leading us over to a wagon. “You’re welcome to stay here for as long as we’re here.”
He pulled a mattress from the wagon for Anna to sit on and rummaged around for some rope and a horse blanket to rig up a privacy line. I started looking closer at Anna’s wounds. I gave Anna a Vicodin, telling her it would make her sleepy, but she really didn’t want to be awake for this part anyway. Once the privacy line was up, I thanked the Lieutenant for his courtesy and assistance. He then left to help with cleaning up the dead bodies and horses.
I cleaned both wounds out with alcohol making sure all the sand and grit was out of them before sewing them closed. Anna was out of it long before I finished. When I was finally done, I covered Anna up with a blanket giving her a kiss on the forehead.
I went over to where we’d left the horses and mules and led them off to one side, where I picketed them and relieved them of their loads of saddles, panniers, and frames. Digging around I finally found the bag with her clean cammies and added her hair brush and a washcloth to the bag before taking it over to where she was sleeping.
When I stood up, I found one of the ladies from the wagon train had come over and handed me a cup of coffee. Smiling, I thanked her and took a sip. She pointed her chin at Anna and asked if she was going to be okay.
“She should be fine in a day or two. I gave her something to make her sleep, and with luck she’ll sleep through the night and wake up in the morning starved for meat.”
“Well, it certainly looks like you know what you’re doing so I’ll get back to getting things straightened up,” she said as she turned away. “There’s coffee at the central fire all night. If you need more, just help yourself,” she said over her shoulder.
Eventually George came over. “Well, we finally finished burying our dead and pulling the dead horses and Indians further away from camp. How’s she doing?”
“She should be fine. The wounds aren’t major, but she’s lost a lot of blood and needs the rest.”
“That’s good to hear. If you feel comfortable enough to be away from her for a little while, you’re welcome at the central fire for supper.”
I rapidly accepted the invitation, suddenly realizing how hungry I was. One of the ladies handed us each a plate of food and, finding seats near the fire, we ate without conversation.
Over coffee, the Lieutenant asked what all the others were clearly thinking. “How did Anna come to be hurt, Paul?”
“It was our own damn fault. We were so focused on what was going on down here that we forgot to pay attention to what was happening around us. We both know better. We got jumped by two Navajo warriors,” I said disgustedly.
That startled those around the fire and one said he thought they were fighting Apaches. With a laugh, Lieutenant Pickett corrected him. “No, the ones we were fighting were most definitely Comanche! I spent a few years down in Texas fighting them so there’s no doubt in my mind about what tribe they were from.”
I nodded in agreement. “Yep, it was definitely Comanches that attacked you all. The Navajo’s that attacked Anna and I just happened to be in the right place at the right time to see us as targets of opportunity.”
One of the men snorted and asked me in a belligerent tone what a wet behind the ears youngster like me would know about Indians.
Glaring at the stranger, I responded with a hard edge to my voice. “Mister, I may be young, but I was adopted by the Apache when I was eight, after my parents were killed. The Apache have been fighting the Navajo and Comanches since the dawn of time. So yes, I know what I’m talking about. Just as importantly Anna’s grandfather is the shaman for a family group of Apaches, so she knows Apaches, Navajos, and Comanches as well.”
George picked that moment to try and diffuse the situation. “Say, Paul, is there any chance you’re related to the Connecticut McAllisters?”
Smiling now, I said, “I’m the last of that line as far as I can tell. Ever since you introduced yourself, cousin, I’ve been wondering if your family ever let out the deep dark secret that one of your aunts married a Yankee.”
He let out a deep rumbling laugh. “Well, I certainly didn’t expect to meet kin out here, that’s for sure. In answer to your question, that’s always a subject of conversations at family gatherings. What do you know?”
I shrugged. “We have a great great grandmother in common who had twin daughters named Elizabeth and Mary. Elizabeth, the smart one, married a McAllister while Mary chose to marry a Pickett.”
He laughed and said that was the same thing he was always told. As I knew it would that led to him asking how I ended up out here. I sighed to myself hoping this was the last time I would have to tell the story but knowing deep down that it probably wasn’t. I told them the story, or as much as I felt they needed to know. When I was done, I asked George how he came to be here.
“I’ve been stationed at Fort Fillmore for the last eight months. A couple of months ago a sergeant and I were sent up to Santa Fe to pick up a replacement platoon. Two of the replacements were too sick to travel so I sent the sergeant ahead with the rest of the platoon. I hung around Santa Fe for a couple of weeks and when the two soldiers were well enough to travel we fell in with this wagon train.” He gave a shake of his head. “It’s a damn shame to go through all that, only to die fighting a raiding party when they were less than a week from the fort.”
He’d been in Mesilla for eight months? I wasn’t expecting him to even arrive for another four or five months. Had I done something that resulted in his early arrival? Well, other than my even being here. I’d expected in the long run that the longer I was in this timeline the less things that I remembered as history would apply simply because I was here. I also expected anything I did would hasten the speed of change; but, other than just being here, I hadn’t really done anything affecting any piece of historical importance yet. I made a mental note to talk this over with Dream Laura the next time she visited.
I told him Anna and I had a place just north of Las Cruces on the Rio Grande. When we got back from Santa Fe, we’d invite him over for a week or two. He liked that idea saying he looked forward to it. We drank coffee and talked for another forty-five minutes before calling it a night.
I was up early the next morning, checking Anna’s wounds in the half light of dawn, and a newly blazing fire. Both looked fine and, while a little angry looking around the cuts themselves, there was no fever, additional bleeding, or puss.
Sunday morning, we finally rolled out of bed at eight. I convinced Anna to try the shower with me. We talked about last night, laughing as we soaped each other up. All that shower fun really tired me out. I was very tempted to just go back to bed, but Anna insisted that we have breakfast and get ready for church. Anna got dressed, opened the curtains and French doors, and cleaned up the room. I unsuccessfully tempted her the entire time, trying to change her mind and enjoy the day in bed with...
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I was up at first light, ate another MRE, and was on my way back to the RV shortly after 7AM. Although I was paying attention to possible threats, both animal and human along the way, I was replaying yesterday over and over in my mind. Finally, just before arriving at the little plateau and my RV, I decided that I had more information than my pea brain could handle, and I needed to let my subconscious work on it for a while. For now, I would act as though I was in fact in the Robledo...
“Wake up, Paul! Raiders are attacking the camp!” This was no whisper. Dream Laura was fairly screaming in my ear. It was just after daybreak, and Laura’s voice woke me to the screams, rifle fire, and shotgun blasts coming from the camp. I slipped on my boots, holstered the pistol, and grabbed my rifle. Once outside I ran to the edge of the plateau. With a quick glance I saw ten or eleven bodies around the outside of the mason’s camp, and a handful of men running away from the camp. Tom was...
As I’d warned during the meeting, 1858 and 1859 proved to be busy years for everyone associated with the Estancia and the various business enterprises. The Estancia got back to work after the holidays on January 3rd, the same day our guests left for their return trip home. The normal Estancia wintertime repair work continued on, although at a reduced pace, while ten teams were assigned to Tom and Giuseppe to quarry a hole at the southern end of the Robledo Mountains. That hole, measuring 200...
I was two days out from Trujillo Gulch and had just saddled up for the days ride, when the faint sounds of gun shots came from the east. Without thinking, I mounted up and rode towards the sound of the gunfire. I was two miles west of the Camino Real, and figured that was where the gun fire was coming from. As I rode, I realized what I’d done, and debated with myself whether this was really the smartest course of action. I may be a defender, but was I to be everyone’s defender? The thought...
Taking down the adobe bricks from the cave entrance, I thought about the next step that I dreaded so much. A heavy door of wood and adobe bricks was going to need sturdy support from the wood door jamb it was going to be hung on, which meant burying the jamb a minimum of nine inches. Digging down into nine inches of rock was not going to be easy. I started digging the hole for the left support jamb using the largest cold chisel and the heaviest hammer I had. The floor here didn’t seem to be...
The trip from the Hacienda to the meeting site was thankfully uneventful, although I must admit to having a sense of unease until we’d passed the area of the last mountain lion attack. The weather had moderated and become warmer, but we weren’t fooled. The seasonal spring winds were nearing their end, but we had to expect to have to deal with them, and dust storms, for the next couple of weeks. We arrived in the clearing mid-afternoon of the day before the meeting. Miguel, using hand...
I fell into a deep sleep, while watching a kaleidoscope of shadows dance around the room. Flashes of lightning backlit the curtains on the window. For the third time in as many years, and the second time in as many weeks, Dream Laura visited my dreams that night. She was getting stronger, as tonight’s visit had us sitting across from each other at the picnic table on the covered patio of our old house, the patio we had built together just after we’d bought the house. Everything seemed...
I made my way back through the courtyard and into the house heading for the dining room intent on having another cup of coffee. Before I could sit down, however, Mr. Greenburg saw me. “Paul, if you have time this morning, and you’re feeling up to it, Rachael and I would like to talk with you for a little while regarding our discussions before you were hurt.” A quick glance at Anna and with her small nod of approval, I replied, “Certainly, Sir. I’m at your disposal. How about we get a coffee...
At my insistence, we pushed hard on the way back home, knocking two days off the return trip. The dull ache in my shoulder hadn’t returned at all since we left the Hacienda, so I felt comfortable pushing a little harder. As we dismounted in front of the courtyard gate, I asked the cousin who took my horse to send a message asking Nantan and Miguel to dinner this evening. Saddlebags over our shoulders and carrying our bedrolls, we entered the Hacienda looking forward to seeing our wives and...
After the Monday morning staff meeting, I holed up in the study with Tom and Yolanda. I’d been wrong in El Paso. It didn’t take two days to give them the background and go over the tentative plans Anna and I had been working on. It took all week, and even then I’d just scratched the surface of the background. The major problem, as always, was trying to figure out how to answer their questions in terms they could understand. I tried to stay away from things they didn’t need to know about....
I was sitting in the restaurant the next morning, finishing up breakfast and thinking about how Anna’s smile seemed to make my day. I’d just taken my last bite when Anna came over with fresh coffee and sat down, giving me another one of my Anna smiles, and asking me what I had planned for the day. Swallowing my last bite and taking a sip of coffee I said, “I was hoping to talk my fiancée into spending the morning riding with me, and perhaps start learning to shoot. Do you think she would...
I woke up the next morning feeling more refreshed than I had since the mountain lion attack. Stretching my arms out to my side, I looked at my right hand, flexed my fingers, and laughed at the thought that I could play the guitar again. I hadn’t realized until yesterday afternoon how much I missed it. Jumping out of bed, I ran through my tai chi exercises and the katas, before cleaning up with a basin of water, and getting dressed. I was whistling as I walked in the back door of the...
Tom and I were relaxing after breakfast, enjoying our umpteenth cup of fresh hot coffee when the ladies had decided we’d had enough time. “So, Pablo, you’ve had your breakfast and coffee, now tell us about the trip,” she demanded in an almost imperial voice. Looking around the table, I realized for the first time that Tom and I were the only men in the room. “As you command, my Lady,” I replied giving her a sitting bow. “But first, where is everyone?” “Well, it is harvest time, Paul. Tomas...
Early the next morning I awoke and stretched out on the queen size bed, luxuriating in the feel of crisp cool cotton sheets and thinking about how good I felt. All those minor joint aches and pains I’d learned to live with over the years simply weren’t there. And those dreams! I rarely remembered my dreams after waking, but somehow, I knew that I remembered every one of last night’s dreams. The dreams of my past, both good and bad. With a yawn and a final stretch, I got up and started my...
Although they were always on our minds, we put the unsettling spirit visits behind us and got on with our lives. I spent as much time as I could in the RV cave melting gold, but it was only a couple of hours most days, and the small mountain of gold seemed to defy my attempts to reduce its size. Giuseppe returned from his short trip to the base of the Doña Ana Mountains late Wednesday afternoon in a jubilant mood. Over supper he informed us that he’d found the rock we needed to build the...
I was up before first light the next morning. I found two of the ladies already up and quietly preparing to make breakfast for the camp. I walked down to the river and soaked my head in the water to wake me up, as well as help tame my hair. When I lifted my head from the river, I found Giuseppe and Hector had joined me. After relieving ourselves we walked back up to the campfire where the ladies handed us each a cup of coffee. We sat drinking our coffee and enjoying the quiet of the...
Standing at the opening of the cave, they stared inside in stunned disbelief. I cleared my throat, regaining their attention. “No one else besides you three know about this. I expect it to remain that way. The cave and what’s in it are never discussed outside this room, and then only if the door is closed and barred.” Handing Mr. Mendoza the lantern, I watched from the doorway as they wandered around exploring. All I could see was the soft glow of the light when they were in the smaller cave...
Six weeks later I was again lying in Mr. Mendoza’s hayloft. Tom’s even breathing and soft snores provided background accompaniment, as I marveled at everything that had happened in such a short time. With the exception of the six days Tom and I spent on a trip to El Paso, and a two-day trip to the Hacienda, the four of us had spent virtually all of our time together. The first morning of our two-week visit at the Hacienda they’d seen me practicing Tai Chi on the plateau in the early dawn....
“Good morning Maco,” I said, walking into the dining room for breakfast. “We missed you at breakfast yesterday and again at dinner last night.” “Good morning Paul, or rather, good night for me,” Maco answered wearily. “I just stopped by to have breakfast with Beth since I haven’t seen her for a couple of days.” “What have you been doing to be so tired?” “I was the Scout hidden behind you yesterday. All of us were in our hides at three yesterday morning and we stayed in place until three...
I was up early the next morning after a restless night, dreading the conversation Anna wanted to have. Walking into the restaurant I was surprised to get my normal Anna smile, hug, and kiss. Maybe this wasn’t going to be so bad after all. She pointed me back to my usual table and brought over two cups of coffee. Sitting down, she said that breakfast would be out in a few minutes and asked how I’d slept. “Not well. It was a restless sleep that had me tossing and turning all night,” I...
“¡Juan! ¡El hombre malo!” I yelled as Tom and I walked into his office the next morning. “¡Dios Mio!” he exclaimed. “You startled me,” he said shaking his finger at us before reaching for a towel to clean up the small amount of ink he’d spilled on the countertop. “It’s good to see both of you again. Let me put these books up and we can talk.” Tom and I busied ourselves getting coffee before sitting down at the small table. Juan grabbed his coffee off the counter and joined us. “So, my...
Before going to bed, Tom and I worked on the mortar shells in the den. “Paul are you sure this is going to work?” Tom asked skeptically, as he applied hide glue around the brass sides at the bottom of the 12-gauge shotgun shell. “It should work just fine, at least for the shotgun shells, Tom. The tricky part of all this is the caps in the top of the shells.” Squinting, I focused my mind on dabbing just a little hide glue on the percussion cap before sticking it inside the plunger cap and...
We were up early, and after breakfast, we rounded up the deputy and the stage coach manager before walking over to the bank. The four of us walked into the banker’s office over his objections. I closed the door and told him to shut up and listen, as Anna looked away to hide her smile. I asked the banker if the ‘Mayor’ had been up to date on his rental payments for the stable and house. When he said that he was current, I turned to the Deputy. “I want a complete inventory of the stables to...
The next morning, bright and early, Tom and I loaded up the wagon and drove it over to the back door of the bank, where Levi was waiting for us. I signed the withdrawal receipt and accepted a deposit receipt of $35,000 for the sale of 4,000 head of cattle to Richard King. We loaded the bags of money into the steel wagon box, locked it up, and drove it back over to the hotel. In the hotel restaurant, we found the ladies waiting for us, along with Richard King, a total of twenty vaqueros, and...
“Damn Paul! None of this was here two years ago! How many people live in this village?” The questions were coming rapid fire from Steve, as we sat on our horses looking out over the village from the hills. We’d insisted that Steve spend his first day on the Estancia recovering from his trip. The only thing remotely resembling a discussion of our plans, was getting him to accept that he would need to ride a horse to Austin and back. Well, that and convincing him that his chances of surviving...
Tom, Giuseppe and I were relaxing after lunch while we waited for the ladies to arrive. A little after one o’clock, one of the cousins came into the camp telling us that wagons from Las Cruces were on their way. I thanked him, and the three of us went up to the slope, where we used our monoculars to watch the wagons. There were ten heavily laden wagons about a mile away moving slowly up the road. With a groan I said, “My back is already starting to hurt, just thinking about unloading those...
I shared my dream with Anna the next morning before we got out of bed. She agreed with Dream Laura’s thoughts on both JT and ‘the Boss’, which didn’t really surprise me as I’d noticed before how alike their thought processes were. While Anna showered, dressed, and left to check on JJ, I sat cross-legged in the middle of the bed, and tried to meditate, something I’d never really been all that good at. Maybe I was trying too hard or perhaps I was just too rusty, but a half-hour later, I gave...
In one way I was right. It was an interesting few weeks. In another way, I was wrong. It was not just a few weeks; it was fifteen weeks. It started shortly after breakfast that first morning. As soon as Steve, the Judge, and Hiram finished bringing me up to date on their activities, I asked Juan, Jorge, George, Heinrich, and Giuseppe to join us in the den. I had the territorial map spread out on the desk, watching as Steve finished up tracing all the new land purchases he’d made, when the...
“All right, Paul, it’s been two hours since we said goodbye to Frank and Lee and watched them ride southeast towards the Estancia. My curiosity is killing me, now tell me about Cisco and Frank like you said you would.” I had to smile. It had been almost twenty-four hours since I’d told Tom I’d tell him how I knew about Cisco and Frank. I knew his curiosity was about to burst. We’d left Tucson less than twenty minutes later, riding hard with Frank and Lee. With a full moon, we’d hadn’t...
My head was pounding! Somehow, around the pain, I thought, ‘After seventy some years, you’d think I’d remember never to mix distilled and fermented alcohol!’ I may have looked twenty years old, but I was well over seventy. Getting sent back over 160 year’s in time was bad enough. Throw in losing everyone and everything I knew, and it was even tougher. Losing fifty years off my apparent age paled in comparison, but it was rough, too. Well, losing the years, both in time and age, had its good...
Tom and I were becoming bored. The Segundos were all doing their jobs well. Cattle were being delivered on time, and the herd continued to grow. The land along the river was being cleared and prepared for planting, while early harvesting in the greenhouses had already started for some of the crops, like tomatoes. Building activities were continuing at a furious pace, with the fences, roads, water retention buildings, and School/Community Center all in different stages. We spent quite a bit...
I was on the terrace on a fine bright sunny afternoon, staring in horror at the list of things I’d come up with for Steve to do when he got back from Austin. No matter how I looked at it, I just couldn’t see how he would ever get everything on the list done in the time-frame we wanted. I was seriously starting to think that maybe we’d over extended ourselves this time, and we would have to push the time-frame out another year, when something in my brain sparked. I suddenly remembered a...
“What do you mean something funny is going on in the land office, Paul?” Steve asked. Tom, Steve, and I were in the family dining room going over our land plans one last time, after finishing a large breakfast. Anna, Yolanda, and the boys were with Mrs. Mendoza over in the house writing up the invitations after she agreed to host the meeting tomorrow. “I’m not sure what, but something just wasn’t right about the map in the land office when we were there the other day. In all the excitement...
Our final day in Santa Fe was hectic as Tom and I, with the ready assistance of the escort teams, gathered supplies for the trip home in the morning, and picked up the trunks, booze, and books that afternoon. With little fanfare, we departed Santa Fe the next morning after a good breakfast with the Judge, Hiram, Helen, and Steve. We assured all of them but most especially Helen that we’d be back the first week in November with the ladies and babies. Pushing the animals hard we travelled...
The mules didn’t seem to be laboring with the load, so I figured to make good time going back to the cave. By this time, I didn’t feel threatened between Las Cruces and the cave, but I stopped just out of sight of Las Cruces. I pulled my rifle out of the panier and put it in the seat box with me, just in case. I also made sure I could get to the pistol at my waist easily, before driving on. The trip was a little longer with the mule pulling the wagon but not overly so. As I drove and watched...
As I drove along the Camino Real, I sang “Fever” to the mules. They didn’t seem to mind. Then I opened up my mind to them on the various situations I found myself in. I talked about waking up 160 years in the past as a fifteen-year-old who few people took all that seriously, but with the experience and attitude of a sixty-six-year-old. I talked about my unsuccessful efforts to determine if this was all real or if it was just a psychotic episodic loop I was stuck in. I talked about the strange...
My goal was to reach Santa Fe in fifteen days. Unlike the last time I’d made the trip I stayed on the road pushing hard. I knew the route this time and wasn’t quite so concerned over threats. The first six days I averaged almost thirty miles a day, but the mules were starting to get tired, so I backed off to a steady twenty. This gave me enough time in the mornings to do my Tai Chi as well as the Aikido and Krav Maga katas. Except for the mornings I was in town, and the first six days of this...
We’d been sent to Saudi Arabia as part of a special operations unit, formed specifically to find and retrieve downed airmen from all branches of service, and all coalition countries. It was a mix of special operations forces from the Army, Navy and Air Force. The Air Force contingent, except for twelve Combat Controllers and six snipers including JT and me, were all Pararescue, otherwise known in the Air Force as PJs or Rescue Rangers. Pararescue is a unique group of special operators. When...