Railroad (Robledo Mountain #4)Chapter 10 free porn video

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“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 stopped until two hours after dark. We were up early this morning and riding hard until just before noon when we stopped for a quick bite to eat. I’d told Frank and Lee how to find the Estancia, to ask for Anna, and let her know we’d sent them as two new Deputies. Lunch over, we mounted and went our separate way, Tom and I stopping on a nearby rise for fifteen minutes to watch Frank and Lee ride east.

“Okay, okay, Tom,” I replied laughingly. “There really isn’t all that much to tell. I know about Francisco Baca from reading about him. He’s not really famous in his own right, so you won’t find him in the encyclopedia. Look up his son though, and you’ll find his name as the father. His son, Elfego, is a folk hero, although he’s little remembered outside New Mexico in my time. You remember the Walt Disney movies we watched?”

“Sure, those were some movies, especially for kids. That Disney fellow was a genius!”

“I agree, he was something special. In his later years, he decided to create a weekly one-hour television show. The first episode of that weekly show was called ‘The Nine Lives of Elfego Baca’ and was all about Elfego’s shootout with over eighty cowboys. During that shootout, he killed somewhere between four and eight of the cowboys. The cowboys fired four thousand rounds at the flimsy building he was firing from.” I heard a gasp of surprise from Tom. “Two days later, the Sheriff from Socorro shows up, Elfego surrenders and comes out of the shack without a scratch. He’s tried, twice, and found innocent both times. He later goes on to become Sheriff of Socorro, a lawyer, and a minor politician. Don’t think that he’s a saint though because he’s not. Far from it. One of my favorite stories about him is that he received a telegraph in Socorro from a client in El Paso. The telegraph read, ‘Need you at once. Have just been charged with murder’. Elfego sends in reply, ‘Leaving at once with three eyewitnesses’.

“Wow,” Tom exclaimed. “And, we’ll have a chance to watch him grow up?” I nodded that we would. “I can see why you were interested in his son, but what about Cisco? Why did you decide he’d make a good Deputy?”

“Simple. He’s a future Town Marshall of Belen. I figure that if he has what it takes to become a Town Marshal and raise a son like Elfego, then I couldn’t go wrong trying him out as a US Deputy Marshal.”

“I can see that,” Tom said, nodding his head. “Okay, what about Frank?”

“You know that organization I had the old ones set up for the kids on the Estancia?” I asked Tom.

“Sure. That’s done a lot of good. The kids really like it, the old ones have been kept busy with something useful, and the testing they’ve come up with to make that last rank is really tough. Any of the young men who pass that test deserve to be called a warrior.”

“That last test is really something, isn’t it? But the whole program is based on an organization in my time, called the Boy Scouts of America. It was adopted from a program set up in England by Lord Baden-Powell called Scouting for Boys. The man who will teach Lord Baden-Powell about desert craft, or woodcraft as the army will call it, or scoutcraft as Baden-Powell will end up calling it, is none other than Francis Russell Burnham.”

“I’ve said this more in the last few minutes than I have in my life, but ... Wow!” Tom said.

“Yeah, wow, is right. Frank will eventually move to Africa, be hired as a British scout, and become close friends with Lord Baden-Powell, who will be a junior officer in the British Army at the time. They will spend over two years together, fighting an enemy that is just as capable as the Apache. Anyway, Lord Baden-Powell will be the founder of an international scouting movement. Frank Burnham will be called the father of that movement. That is both how I knew about him and how I know he will make a good US Deputy Marshal.”

“You know Paul if there are any more folks in the Territory you think would be of help, now is a good time to get them involved.”

“There may be a few others, Tom, and I’ve been wracking my brain, but I haven’t remembered them yet. We’ll just have to wait for now. The men I do remember right now are on the wrong side of the law. Much of what we’ll be doing over the next three years should counter their negative influence.”

“All I can say to that is, let’s ride,” Tom said grinning. “We’ve got a ways to go before we catch up with the wagons.”

Kicking our horses into a ground eating canter we rode the rest of the day without catching the wagons. We did catch up with them midmorning the next day. We actually heard them fifteen minutes before we saw them. To be more accurate we heard the sound of rifle fire.

We left the road, circling to the north cautiously working our way toward the sound of gunfire. We eventually found a small hill between us and the sounds of a gunfight which had grown louder. Dismounting, we climbed the hill, crawling the last few feet to the crest. Peering over the crest, we saw our wagons drawn up in two parallel lines abut one hundred and fifty yards away. Mr. Mendoza, George, Kit, and Martin were hunkered down in the driver’s well, firing outward, at what looked to be ten or so Navajo warriors. The Navajo were on both sides of the wagons, moving through the scrub, and periodically feigning an attack or actually attacking singly or in small groups of two or three.

Gathering a small pile of sand into a mound in front of me, I placed the barrel of my rifle in the middle of it and settled the stock into my left shoulder. Tom followed suit fifteen feet off to my right side with the exception he was firing right-handed.

“You take the ones nearest to us and I’ll take the far side,” I said softly.

Tom simply nodded and began tracking targets through his sights.

I did the same, immediately settling on a target. Crossing my fingers mentally, I slowly squeezed the trigger. My first round was on its way before I knew it. My worry about damaging my right shoulder from the rifle’s kick was unfounded. I’d felt a small twinge but that was it. I’d probably never fire a sniper rifle again, true, but I was no longer worried about using my personal rifle.

In moments, five of the ten Navajo we knew about were down. I rolled over, looking around me, worried that there were more Navajos around that we hadn’t seen. Seeing nothing behind us to worry about, I rolled back over and peered over the crest. The dead Navajos lay were they’d fallen, but the other Navajo had disappeared.

“Where’d they go, Tom?” I asked.

“I’m not sure. They just kind of melted away. One moment I was firing at my last target and the next moment I couldn’t find any of them.”

We lay there, unmoving for the next ten minutes. Tom was searching forward for the Navajos and I was searching behind us. Finally, we both stood up, yelled towards the wagons, and Mr. Mendoza waved us in.

“I was wondering when you were going to show up,” Mr. Mendoza said as Tom and I rode up.

“How did you know we were close by?” Tom asked.

“I didn’t know, but Paul always seems to be nearby when I get attacked,” he replied smiling.

The four of them, along with Tom, quickly rearranged the wagons to five tandem teams, and in less than thirty minutes we were back on our way west.

Twelve long days later, we were pulling off the road with Tom in the lead. While the others drove their wagons behind Tom, I dismounted, tied my horse behind Kit’s wagon, and started doing my best to wipe out any indication we’d turned off the road and then erasing the wagon tracks leading to the arroyo system the goldfield was in. We’d only passed two men going the other direction since we left the area near Arizona City, but as I’d told George, better safe than sorry.

By the time I got to the goldfield, all the wagons were up the ramp, the mules unhitched and hobbled in the tall grassy area, and the men were unloading all the empty boxes from the wagons. The wagons had been set up in two parallel lines with enough room between the two lines for us to make our camp. Using long poles brought expressly for this purpose, we set up the canvas that had been covering the wagon loads, to give most of the camp cooling shade, protecting us from the brutally hot sun. This arrangement left a three-foot gap between the tops of the wagons and the shade canvas so any breeze could flow through cooling us further.

When we were done setting up camp, everyone but George and I were looking around. It was clear they were trying to figure out where the gold was. Although it was late in the day, it was clear they needed to know the secret of the goldfield before they’d settle down and relax.

“Okay everyone, grab a burlap bag and a shovel and follow me,” I said, receiving grins all around.

I lead them back down into the arroyo, stopping in the center. “Tom and I aren’t exactly sure of the extent of the goldfield, but you were driving on it for at least the last five hundred yards. If you would all stand next to me.” I waited for the others to join me then waved to Tom. “If you’ll do the honors?”

Smiling, Tom strode out twenty feet down the arroyo, looked around a few moments, bent over, and dug out a shovel full of sand, dirt, and gold. He went through the familiar sifting motion, showing us all the glittering gold dust falling from the shovel, with the sand and dirt in the process. As expected, Mr. Mendoza, Martin, Kit, and George stood entranced by the show. When he was done, Tom walked back over to us and showed them all the nuggets that remained on the shovel.

“Tom made it look easy, but you’ll soon learn it’s a lot more work than it looks like,” I explained. “There’s no need to dig deeper than one shovel full of dirt. There’s more gold here than we can mine on this trip. We may have to dig a little deeper on future trips, but for now, let’s stick to one shovel deep and then moving on to the next row.

“It’s almost time for dinner, so we’re not going to get much done today. To satisfy your curiosity though, go ahead and dig while I fix our meal. I’ll call you when it’s ready. I’d recommend two of you join Tom where he got that first shovel load of nuggets and the other two go one hundred yards to the east and start digging there.”

Mr. Mendoza stopped me as I turned to leave. “Paul, you’re not planning on making coffee, are you?”

“Et tu, Jose?” I asked mournfully, to the laughter echoing off the walls of the arroyo. “No, Tom is going to make it before he starts digging. Come on Tom.”

“So, what are you going to be doing while we’re digging?” Tom asked as he was filling the coffee pot.

“I’m going to spend my days processing the nuggets. I’ll also do some hunting, so we have fresh meat every few days, and while I’m at it, I’ll scout the surrounding area to make sure no one else is around.”

As it turned out, I only held to that schedule the first week we were there. The second week I switched to hunting and scouting every afternoon, just to get away from the stale sweltering air underneath the canvas.

It was during that second week that George came back to camp carrying two full bags of nuggets. After the first week, the guys decided to take turns emptying partially full bags of nuggets from everyone every hour and carrying full bags up to the camp where I was working on melting them down into bars. This was George’s day and the first time he’d seen me melt and scape the gold.

“What is that?” he asked, watching over my shoulder as I ran the butane bottle over the molds.

“It’s a steel bottle of gas I picked up back east,” I replied absentmindedly. “The gas burns hot enough to melt the gold without having to build a furnace. It works well, is easy to carry, and means we don’t have to constantly stop digging to gather more fuel.”

“Where did you get it?” he asked curiously.

Damn. Another one of those Oops moments. I never thought about having to explain the butane bottles.

“I picked them up back east,” I answered, consoling myself that it wasn’t an outright lie. I’d bought them at a hardware store in Las Cruces which was in fact east of us. Of course, that was in 2016, not the 1850s.

George absorbed my answer and was silent for a few moments. “What’s gas?”

I finished melting the nuggets, turned off the gas, scraping off the impurities floating at the top of each puddle of gold, and set the mold down to cool before turning to George.

“You’ve never done any mining or been around mines have you, George?” I asked, already knowing the answer.

“No, I think we studied mining for a few days at the Point, but I didn’t really have much interest in the subject.”

I was happy to take a break, so we spent the next fifteen minutes talking about what a ‘gas’ is. I gave him the scientific explanation of the different states of matter. I think he left being more confused than when he asked the question, but his curiosity had been satisfied.

That was also the week we were almost discovered. I was leaning back against one of the mesquite and creosote covered hills that ringed the camp, waiting for the last batch of gold bars to cool in their molds. I was enjoying the peace and quiet of a late spring day in the desert. Everyone else was down in the arroyo digging gold and even their quiet voices didn’t make it to where I was sitting.

Suddenly, the mules and horses looked up where they’d been grazing. A few moments later I heard the sound of horses coming from beyond the ring of hills. Listening carefully for a few more moments I heard multiple voices.

Scrambling, I went over to the arroyo and got Tom’s attention by waving my arms. Once I had his attention, I gave him a series of hand signals letting him know multiple men were near the camp. He nodded and started to tell each of the others what was going on in a low voice.

Moving as quietly as I could, I went back over to the camp, scooped up my rifle, and went back to where I’d been sitting. The stamp of horse’s hooves, their impatient snorts, the jangle of their tack, and creaking as men shifted their weight in the saddle, quickly gave away the fact that the men were stopped just on the other side of the hill I was standing behind.

I heard the sound of someone spitting followed by a moment of silence. “Damnit, Pete, are you sure they’re out here? We been riding this area for days and found nothing,” came a tired and irritated voice.

“I’m positive they’re out here somewhere,” came another voice, sounding just as tired and irritated as the first. “We passed them wagons less than five miles from Arizona City and they were the only people we saw the whole trip. You said they never came past you and the rest of the gang or you would have stopped them then.

“We know they didn’t turn around for some reason and head back to Arizona City, or we’d have seen them. We know they couldn’t have forded or floated the wagons across the river, it’s too high and fast for either of those. So, somewhere between where we passed them and where you had the ambush set up, they turned east.

“What I can’t figure out is what happened to the wagon tracks. Them freight wagons are heavy even when they’re empty and these weren’t empty. No, they’re here somewhere we just have to find them. Once we do, they’ll be easy pickings. After all, if the six of us can’t handle five freight drivers we don’t deserve to get rich by being bandits.”

“What you say makes sense, Pete, but after today I’m not going to spend any more time looking for these phantom wagons. Who knows how much we’re losing being out here instead of in our ambush spot.”

“All right, all right, don’t get testy,” came Pete’s voice in response, sounding put off by the apparent leader’s decision. “Let’s get moving then. Maybe we’ll find them just beyond these little hills.”

The horses started moving and I followed them on my side of the hills. Reaching a point directly opposite of where they’d stopped to talk, they kept moving east. Peeking over the crest of the nearest hill, I watched their backs disappear to the east before turning and running back over to the arroyo. Tom and the others were standing next to the bottom of the earthen ramp, rifles in their hands, waiting for me to come back.

“There’s six of them. Bandits from the way they were talking. Two of the men were the ones we passed coming out of Arizona City. They know we’re out here somewhere and want to take our freight. They’ve moved their search east of us.

“You all go ahead and keep digging. I’m going to follow them on foot and make sure they don’t find us accidentally.” Tom stopped me before I could even turn to go.

“You’re not going alone, Paul,” he said running up the ramp to stand in front of me. “Remember your promise to Anna. I’ll go with you.”

I couldn’t do anything but nod my head. I could get away with hunting and scouting by myself as long as I wasn’t more than a couple of hours from camp but going after well-armed men who were hunting me was something entirely different. I’d learned my lesson about promises with Laura. I wasn’t going to break this one, especially as long as I had Tom around to keep reminding me. The others went back to their digging and Tom and I went back to the camp, picked up a full water pack, and headed after the gang of bandits.

Chewing jerky we had in our pockets, we followed the gang for the next five hours. Often times we were within twenty or thirty yards of them and still, they never saw us. Not long after we started following them, I noticed that they had started drifting north of their original search line. In the late afternoon, they finally gave up, turned the horse and rode northwest at a canter. Tom and I followed them another hour to make sure they didn’t turn back. We finally stopped to take a rest and watched all six riders fade into the distance.

It was well past dark by the time we approached the camp. Neither one of us had run like this in the desert for any length of time in a very long time. I was almost exhausted, and it was Tom who let the others know we were coming in.

While Tom gave the others a rundown of what happened, I lay down on my bedroll and promptly fell asleep. The next morning, as I scarfed down my breakfast, I endured the good-natured kidding from the others about being the first one in bed and the last one to get up.

We returned to our normal routine and while the others were digging gold, I was turning gold nuggets into gold bars. The whole time though I was also thinking about the bandits.

I never had been able to come up with a good reason for why there was even a road out here. It wasn’t much of road, true, but it was the usual rutted wagon trail that folks called a road. I’d never seen anything out here and the road dead-ended less than two days ride north of where we were, where the mountains met the river.

Regardless, the ruts in the road seemed to indicate that it was traveled. The gang of bandits seemed to believe that there were enough travelers to make it worth their while to select it as a place to do hold-ups. The more I thought about it, the more certain I became that I couldn’t just leave the bandits out there. I had accepted the badge and the responsibility that went with it. I knew what I had to do.

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Robledo MountainChapter 27

“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...

4 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 12

We both woke up in the middle of the night to a crashing, raging, howling storm blowing outside. The rainy season had begun with a vengeance. We’d fallen asleep without closing the French doors, which were still standing wide open. Gusts of wind came blowing through periodically, causing the curtains to billow up and swirl around the doors. I got up to close the doors and Anna asked me to leave one of them open, so we could hear the rain and watch the lightening. I returned to bed to find...

2 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 15

As the day of Tom and Yolanda’s wedding approached, activity around the Hacienda exploded. We were expecting fifty people from Las Cruces to begin arriving three days before the wedding, all expecting accommodation at the Hacienda. Luckily most of those people were Yolanda’s extended family, so putting as many as five or six into a single room wasn’t going to cause much concern. Regardless, for the very first time, every room in the Hacienda was going to be used. Every room was assigned to a...

1 year ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 5

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...

1 year ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 14

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...

2 years ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 15

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...

3 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 3

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...

3 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 9

Anna and I were both up earlier than normal; either from a good night of rest, excitement over the trip to Taos or, more likely, a combination of both. We did our standard Tai Chi and then an extended session of practice with me teaching Anna the next kata in her progression. At the rate she was going she would soon be ready to start learning Krav Maga. When we were finished I gave Anna a big smile, pulled her into a hug before giving her a big kiss, and telling her she was doing extremely...

3 years ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 10

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....

3 years ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 26

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...

4 years ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 2

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...

2 years ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 7

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...

2 years ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 24

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...

4 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 5

The next week seemed to fly by as we instituted the various classes, continued settling into the hacienda, worked to turn the Estancia into a farm, and prepared for new arrivals; all while Anna and I prepared to leave on our honeymoon. The days always started with our early morning Tai Chi and ended with talking and singing in what was becoming known as the music room before Anna and I went off to explore whatever new possibilities she had thought up. As I expected, training the cousins to...

2 years ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 23

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...

2 years ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 28

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....

3 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 8

The second week in Santa Fe started out much as the first had gone. I spent the morning with Anna who had narrowed down the selection of cutlery to two different styles and now needed me to help her make the final selection. As usual we both liked one pattern over the other, so the cutlery was paid for and consigned to Mendoza Freight for delivery. The china pattern was a different story. Anna still couldn’t find anything she liked, so I suggested she explore the possibility of getting a...

4 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 10

We skipped our exercises and practice for the second day in a row, in the interest of leaving town early in the morning before anyone else was awake. I’d paid for the room and stables for four weeks the day after we’d checked in. We still had two days of the four weeks left, so there was no issue with just leaving. After one last check of the room, we walked downstairs carrying the saddlebags and scabbards and slipped out the back door to the stables where we saddled the horses, added the...

3 years ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 12

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...

2 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 7

We rode into my usual camp in the copse of trees just north of Santa Fe two weeks later. Her wounds were healing nicely. She hardly seemed to notice the wound in her arm at all, but was still slightly favoring her side. However, we were both tired. Tired of riding, tired of trail food, tired of sleeping on the ground, tired of being dirty, and just plain tired. I helped Anna off her horse, took her in my arms, and hugged her tight giving her a big kiss in the process. “One more night of...

1 year ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 16

I left Tomas alone for a few days. He went to the village and rode along the river with Jesus and others he’d picked from the files. He was getting a feel for the land where he was going to be responsible for growing crops. The day before the election, Tomas asked to see me after breakfast. I asked Clara to send a coffee service up to the terrace and Tomas followed me upstairs. We sat down at a table enjoying the early morning sunshine. As I poured our coffees I asked Tomas what was on his...

3 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 17

We all rode out after breakfast the next morning. The half day ride was quick. We all saw the Estancia through George’s eyes, as he talked about what a change there had been since his last trip north along the Camino Real. Crossing the river just before noon, we rode up the slope and I discovered that this was the first time he’d seen the Hacienda in all its glory. We gave the horses over to the cousins, after pulling our weapons and saddle bags off. Anna and I led George through the...

2 years ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 2

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...

4 years ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 9

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...

1 year ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 12

“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...

3 years ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 32

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...

3 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 4

Standing at the terrace railing with a light breeze blowing from the north while sipping a fresh cup of coffee the next morning, I watched the gaggle head down the slope before breaking into their separate groups. Giuseppe and Sofia with their escort of three of the cousins headed off towards the site of yesterday’s ambush. Tom and Yolanda rode out to practice shooting, while Miguel and the cousins led their group of farmers across the river to begin another day of Apache training. My mind...

4 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 6

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...

3 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 11

I sat at the picnic table on the patio looking out at the nightly spectacle of glorious colors as the sun set behind Picacho Peak. A song with a snappy beat wafted softly over the outside speakers hidden in rose bushes climbing up both sides of the patio on their trellises reaching for the roof. I couldn’t quite make out the words to the song, but it was very familiar. If I didn’t know better, I’d believe I was actually back in my twenty-first century home. But I did know better. “You’ve...

3 years ago
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Refuge Robledo Mountain 2Chapter 14

After breakfast, the next morning, we all went our separate ways. The Padre, Yolanda, and Sofia were taking her kids to school while Alejandro went out to visit his cousins on the upper plateau. He was a little sad to see the others leaving but brightened up when Anna said he would be starting school in a few days and would go with them in the mornings. Tom and Giuseppe went off to check the dams and the quarry. I told Cristina we were going to be using the study most of the day and asked her...

1 year ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 1

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...

3 years ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 11

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...

2 years ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 13

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...

3 years ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 15

“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...

4 years ago
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Retreat Robledo Mountain 3Chapter 18

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...

1 year ago
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Robledo MountainChapter 6

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...

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