Retreat Robledo Mountain 3 Chapter 20
- 3 years ago
- 33
- 0
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 conversation I’d overheard just after I’d been promoted to Staff Sergeant and joined the NCO ranks.
A crusty old Chief Master Sergeant was lecturing a new Second Lieutenant in his office. As usual, the Chief had left the door open. I was walking by on some errand or another. Everyone in the hallway clearly heard the Chief talking.
“Remember, LT, your job is to know the details of what needs to be done and when. It’s the NCO’s job to get those details done. If you learn nothing else, here; learn this, and learn it well. Never, ever, try to tell an NCO how to do something. You tell an NCO what needs to be done and when it needs to be done by. If the NCO needs help or additional resources to get something done, they’ll let you know.”
I was smiling to myself at the memory, when I heard Laura soft laugh in my left ear. Then I knew that I’d just gotten my answer to the problem.
I decided that I was done for the day and I was due for some Anna and JJ time, when George came up the outside steps and sat down at the table across from me. He looked a little wan and I asked what he’d been up to all day that had worn him down so much.
He barked a quick laugh and said, “I’ve been reminding myself why I left the Army, Paul. I’ve been in the saddle since just after breakfast riding the east side of the Doña Ana’s with Maco, trying to get as familiar with that area of the Estancia as I am with the west side.”
I commiserated with him for a few minutes before turning to the subject of his impending wedding, and asked him how things were going with the Padre. He assured me things were going well, but Celia still hadn’t set a date yet.
She was close to choosing the date, but there were a couple of things getting in the way that she needed to work out. She wouldn’t tell him what those things were, so he had no idea how to help her. I shrugged and agreed that there wasn’t much he could do.
We were talking about how the militia was shaping up, when one of the young cousins from the corrals on the upper plateau came running down the steps and handed George a message. George glanced at it, sat up straight, and read it more closely before handing it to me.
It took me a few moments to puzzle out the shorthand, but when I did I looked in alarm at George. The message read:
From: SS 2 South
To: SG
Message: lge nmbr (70+) men in sml grps mvng north cnvrg nr pt bravo
“Well, George, it looks like you were right,” I said.
He nodded, and with a grim face turned to the young man.
“Send a message from me to the entire Estancia. Message to read, Alert, Alert, Alert. Execute Alpha One Alpha, immediately. Alert, Alert, Alert.”
The boy looked at him for a moment, nodded his head, repeated the message verbatim, and ran off the terrace up the steps.
I was ready to run downstairs and ride out, but George hadn’t moved yet. “What are you thinking so hard about, George?” I asked.
He gave a deep sigh before replying. “A lot of men are going to die sometime in the next twelve hours. I just hope I’ve trained them well enough that it’s ours that do the killing, not the dying.”
“Me, too, George! Me, too. Let’s go find our ladies, and let them know what’s happening. Then we’ll head for the rally point.”
He nodded, and we went off in search of Celia and Anna. We found them together in the dining room. George told them what was happening, and we each hugged and kissed our lady goodbye before grabbing our weapons from the study. One of the cousins came riding up leading our saddled horses behind him as we walked out the courtyard door onto the lower plateau.
We mounted and began the long ride to the rally point, with George setting a steady but unhurried pace. As we rode, I asked George what the second Alpha in the message meant.
Still with a grim face he said, “That’s a small refinement we came up with a couple of weeks back. It means the enemy is converging and settling in for the night three to five miles outside the Estancia. A Bravo instead of an Alpha would have meant one to three miles. In either of those two cases, everyone was to go to the rally point without raising any dust. If the message had just read Alpha One that meant a full attack was on its way and to make all possible speed to the rally point.”
I could see horses and wagons moving all around us, heading in the same direction we were going and thought to ask him about food and water for the men and horses.
As it turned out, the feed and water for the horses were staged at the rally point a few weeks ago. A wagon from the village and the ranch were sent out to both rally points every morning and brought back in every night. The food was used for lunch the next day. I couldn’t help but laugh and agree when he said the ladies of the Estancia would make fine logistics and supply NCOs.
When we finally reached the rally point we found two hundred of the expected three hundred men already there. I followed George’s lead again and we rode to a makeshift corral deep inside the arroyo. We unsaddled our horses, turned them loose inside the corral, and threw our saddles on one of the wagons lined up outside the corral.
As we walked back to where the men were gathering, I asked George what Point Bravo was. It turned out that it was one of three places the Scout/Sniper teams had found within five miles of the Estancia where a large group of men could hole up and camp for the night.
We found Tom talking to a couple of men just outside the main gathering of men. He turned as we walked up and said, “The last message came in fifteen minutes ago and said that Point Bravo was confirmed. There are over seventy men preparing a full camp with small cooking fires and horse picket lines.”
George nodded, thanked him, and turned to look out over the men, when one of the cousins appeared at his side out of nowhere. George acknowledged his presence with a short nod, but otherwise ignored him for the time being. He walked out to the middle of the arroyo and stood there looking at the men milling around. Without a word, men started coming forward and forming up into ranks of five.
George patiently waited until there were sixty full ranks of five men then turned to the cousin.
“Send all present and accounted for. Expect attack during early morning hours near first light. God bless and good luck,” he said.
The cousin climbed out of the arroyo, took out his mirror, and began signaling.
“That was well done, George. Well done, indeed. The training you’ve given them has paid off very well so far,” I told him.
Deep in thought he nevertheless acknowledged the compliment and again voiced his hope that it was good enough.
I turned towards Tom and saw Steve standing next to him. To say I was startled was an understatement.
“Steve, what the hell are you doing here? You’re supposed to be at the Hacienda.”
Steve shrugged. “Tom and I were spending a couple of extra hours in the saddle when the message was flashed and since this was closer than the Hacienda I just came with him,” he replied.
“It’s too late to send you to the Hacienda now,” I groaned with dismay. “You haven’t trained for this and you don’t have a weapon, so I want you to stay close to George until this is over. You do what he tells you to do, when he tells you to do it. Got it?”
George had heard the exchange and was shaking his head in disgust. I took the opportunity to change subjects.
“Tom, George, both of you raise your right hands and repeat after me.” They looked at me curiously but raised their right hands. “I, state your name, do hereby faithfully swear to execute the duties of the office I am about to enter and enforce the laws of the United States.”
When they completed the oath, I threw both a badge and said, “Congratulations. You are both now Acting Deputy US Marshals. I need you two to gather all the men, and administer the same oath to them. I’m a little short of badges so we’ll have to make do with the two you have.”
While I was talking, I had pinned my badge on my coat, and they followed suit before walking to the center of the arroyo together. George waved his arm around his head and less than a minute later sixty men were gathered around him and Tom. He talked quietly for a few minutes and the group broke up.
George stood on one side of the arroyo while Tom stood on the other as men began to line up in groups of five in front of the two men. Each team took the oath, were congratulated, and went back to whatever they were doing. In less than ten minutes after I’d given them the task, it was done.
They both walked back to me and George looked at me. “Now what, Paul?” he asked.
I shrugged and said, “It’s your show, George. I do need to talk to you a little later, when you have time, about how you see this unfolding so that we’re both working from the same plan.”
George looked at me skeptically and asked, “What do you mean, ‘working from the same plan’?”
I pointed to the badge on my chest. “We have to obey the law, too, George. So far, those men out there haven’t broken any laws that I’m aware of. None of us even know who they are for sure. Tomorrow morning when they get close enough I have to be standing where we can see each other. If they are who we think they are, then I will identify myself and let them know they are under arrest. If any one of them goes for a gun, I expect you and the rest of the men to put holes, lots of holes, into every single one of them. But I have to give them the chance to surrender.”
George gave a deep sigh. “I know you’re right, Paul, but it makes me mad to think of the extremes we go to just to make sure the criminals are offered the chance to surrender.”
Having had his say he turned around and walked off.
Tom cleared his throat to get my attention and said, “Come on. Let’s get our saddles and some blankets so we can set up our area of the camp.”
Steve and I followed Tom back to the corrals, where he showed us a wagon half full of blankets. We each grabbed a couple of blankets, found our saddles, and followed Tom over to an area against the arroyo wall where we set up our sleeping areas. We were losing daylight fast, so we walked over to the food wagons, and each grabbed a sandwich.
Leaning against our saddles, we ate the sandwiches and washed them down with water. George showed up carrying blankets and his saddle just as the last of the light faded away. When he sat down, I handed him a sandwich and told him to eat, as he was going to need the energy later. He thanked me and quickly ate.
When George was done eating, he leaned back against the saddle and gave a long sigh. “I wish I could figure these guys out.”
“What’s troubling you, George?” Tom asked.
“Well, either these guys are much better led and trained than we thought, or they’re being led by idiots. In either case I’m worried that something we haven’t accounted for is going to happen and we won’t be in the position to stop them,” George said with an explosive breath.
We were all silent for a moment.
“Run it down for us, George,” I said quietly. “Give us specifics of what has you spooked and then tell us how you see it playing out in the morning.”
George sat quietly for a moment and then started talking. “What’s bothering me is that, with one major exception, they did everything we expected all the way up until they got to the rally point. From there they haven’t done anything I expected.
“From everything we know about them and the tactics they’ve used in the past, they shouldn’t be here tonight. There’s no moon for the next two nights. In less than a half hour no one out here will be able to see their hand in front of their face.
“Then there’s their rally point. With no moon tonight they should have rallied much closer to the Hacienda. Instead, they rallied almost ten miles away and, rather than moving closer as a group, they pitched camp.
“When they did that I began to get really worried that something else is going on and they are just a distraction. However, the last report we got from the Scout/Sniper teams and observation posts, just before we lost the sun, reported no activity at all to the west, north, or east.”
He gave another worried sigh, going quiet for a minute before continuing.
“The success these guys have had over the months clearly tells me they aren’t being led by a complete idiot, and that someone in their leadership group has had some kind of training. This just doesn’t make sense.
“As far as how I see it happening tomorrow there’s not much to say. Given the lack of moonlight to see by, I don’t expect them to send out their normal scouts. Also, with the lack of moonlight, they won’t be able to move towards the Hacienda until the false dawn gives them some light to see by.
“They really only have two options in the morning, if they are really going to attack us. The first option is that they ride out from their camp and up the road to get closer to the Hacienda and Ranch, figuring that everyone is going to be at breakfast and they won’t be noticed until it’s too late. In that case, we ambush them as planned.
“The other, much more worrisome option, is that they move out from their camp in small groups to another rally point much closer to the Hacienda. We didn’t plan for anything like that, and it becomes much harder to stop them. We’ll have to break the men up into their smaller teams and send one or two teams after each group. It’s very likely that a lot more of our men are going to die if we end up doing that.”
Tom interrupted George at that point. “Is it possible that there’s a much simpler explanation for how they’re acting, George? Maybe something as simple as they think they are already close, within a mile or two of the Hacienda? Would that explain what they’ve done so far?”
I’ve always been a big fan of ‘Occam’s Razor’, and Tom had used it to nail this problem down as far as I was concerned. I didn’t say anything though as I wanted to hear how George would respond.
Time seemed to stretch out and slow to a crawl, as we sat quietly waiting for George’s response. It seemed as if we’d been waiting thirty minutes, but I was sure it was less than two minutes, when we heard George mutter something about ‘Occam’s Razor’ under his breath. I smiled in the dark, knowing that George was upset that he hadn’t thought of a simpler explanation.
It was quiet again for a moment, and then we heard George say, “Tom, that would certainly fit the facts we have, and you’re probably right. You’ll excuse me, though, if I continue to try to come up with other reasons, just in case.”
We heard Tom snort just before he said, “George, you’re the expert. I’d be very worried if you weren’t trying to come up with other reasons.”
For the next hour, we talked quietly among ourselves about other things. Mostly George’s forthcoming wedding and his conversion to Catholicism. There was little to do besides talk, and with no light there was absolutely nothing to see except the stars. Eventually, we all drifted off to sleep.
I don’t know about everyone else, but despite the tension that had been building inside of me since we got the alarm, I slept extremely well. Perhaps it was exhaustion from all the worrying I’d been doing for the last few months or the stress of re-planning everything since word had come that Steve would be visiting us.
Whatever the reason, I slept soundly through the night, and didn’t wake up until I felt someone nudging my arm. I opened my eyes, and saw a vague human shaped gray outline against the dark night sky. It was George telling me we were moving to the ambush site in fifteen minutes.
I must not have moved at all while I slept, because as I got up I discovered I was extremely stiff. As far as I could tell with the limited light I had plenty of room so I closed my eyes and concentrated as I began doing Tai Chi exercises. I stopped after ten minutes, feeling much looser and ready for what lay ahead.
Although a long way from daylight, there was enough light to see by now. I picked up the blankets and my saddle, and returned them to the wagons, grabbing another couple of sandwiches from the food wagon as I passed it. With my shotgun hanging on my left side from its sling, and my rifle slung over my right shoulder, I walked around the arroyo looking for George, Tom, and Steve as I ate my sandwiches.
I finally saw them up near the road, and walked over giving them a quiet good morning. We stood quietly for the next five minutes and watched the activity as the men prepared to leave. Eventually, the men, all three hundred of them, were gathered around us and quiet expectation filled the morning air.
George broke the silence and in a calm normal talking voice said, “You all know where to go and what to do. We’ve practiced it enough times that there shouldn’t be any surprises. We are using ambush point one. That’s three quarters of a mile from here, and we don’t know yet what the enemy is doing or if they’ve started moving towards us, so let’s get there as quickly as we can. Team leaders, take your men out and get into position.”
As the men started to move off, George spoke up in a little louder voice. “Oh, and remember that Paul is going to be standing in the middle of the road, so make sure you don’t shoot him by mistake.”
“I’d appreciate that, and so would Anna!” I added.
That got the nervous laughter that George was expecting, and he waved everyone forward. It was a far cry from a military formation, but as the men passed us they broke into a trot with each team staying together. The four of us joined in at about the middle of the pack, and ran forward as well.
It was immediately apparent that Steve was struggling to keep up with us, so we slowed a little and let the rest of the men pass us. It was a good thing we didn’t have to go farther than we did, because he wouldn’t have made it. He was gasping for breath when George slowed to a walk, near the ambush point. He led us over to an arroyo heading east off the road and sat down with his back against the arroyo wall, with a good view of the Doña Ana Mountains where he was expecting to get the signal updates from.
When Steve quit gasping for air, George clapped him on the back, and with a smile said, “We’ll work on your running when you get back from Austin.”
Steve groaned and just shook his head, still too out of breath to talk. George stood up and motioned for me to join him. I joined him on the road and we walked fifteen yards further down the road. He stopped next to a four-foot-tall boulder standing just off the left side of the road.
“If you insist on standing and meeting them on the road this is the best place to do it. The boulder will give you some protection it you need it and somehow I think you will,” he said.
I nodded, liking his thinking and then turned back to look towards the arroyo. “Remind me how the men are deployed,” I said.
He turned and swept his arm along the length of the arroyo. “There are two hundred men in the arroyo waiting for the first shot to be fired. If they do what they’ve been told, then they won’t be seen until then.”
He turned to the west and swept his arm out towards the river. “There’s a draw about fifty feet from the road that roughly parallels it. There are a hundred men in that draw with the same instructions as the ones in the arroyo.”
He turned north and pointed to four separate small hills about three hundred yards behind the arroyo.
“There’s a Scout/Sniper team on each of those four hills. At the first sign of someone pulling a gun or making any other threatening move, they will fire. That is the signal for everyone else to rise up and start firing.”
Something was off here, but I couldn’t put my finger on it. I turned around a full 360 degrees, looking at everything before it dawned on me.
I turned to George and asked, “What happened to all the brush?”
George laughed heartily for the first time since yesterday afternoon and said, “I had anything taller than a small barrel cactus cleared out for a hundred yards from the arroyo and the draw. I left the mesquite and creosote growing along the edges of the arroyo and draw, to give our men some extra concealment but the Comancheros won’t have anything to hide behind. It’s now a classic killing field. If it comes to gun play this morning, the raiders will be wiped out in less than thirty seconds. Let’s hope it takes them longer to wonder about that than it did you.”
“George, I meant what I said yesterday evening. You’ve done a hell of a job here. Let’s get this done and then hopefully we can rest for a few years,” I said in a very sincere voice.
As he was about to reply we both caught a flash from the Doña Anas. George turned and made a big wave, signaling a ‘ready to receive’ acknowledgement with a torch since direct sunlight hadn’t reached us here yet. The message said that the raiders had broken camp. I raised an eyebrow when the message said the raiders were less than two miles away and coming up the road at a canter. They were much closer than I’d expected.
George waved another acknowledgement before turning to me. “I’d still like to know why they are doing it this way instead of how they usually do it, but at this point it’s curiosity, not worry, that makes me wonder. Hopefully one of them will survive long enough to tell us.”
While George had been talking I’d been watching the growing dust cloud to the south. “We can always hope George, but it really doesn’t matter anymore.” I pointed to the south with my chin. “Whatever reason they have for doing it this way, they are doing it in a hurry. You’d best get along back to the men, and let them know the raiders are almost here.”
George turned and looked at the dust cloud with me for a moment before wishing me good luck, and walked back to the arroyo. About halfway there, he stopped and turned to look at me.
“None of us want to be the one to tell Anna you died from stupidity, Paul. Don’t take any chances. You get your ass behind that boulder at the first sign of gunplay and stay there. Let us do what we trained to do.”
Done, he turned and disappeared into the arroyo with the men.
I stood gazing at the dust cloud as it grew before walking back to the boulder. I unslung my rifle, leaning it against the backside of the boulder, and walked around to the side of the boulder nearest the road. I checked that the safety was off on the shotgun and that it was fully loaded, before leaning it back against the boulder. I began clearing my mind using the calming breathing exercises I’d been taught so long ago, as I waited.
Less than ten minutes later, I could clearly see the dark mass of riders below the dust cloud. After another five minutes and I could see the individual riders. I pushed myself away from the boulder, grabbed the shotgun and took two steps onto the road where I stood with the shotgun cradled in my arm.
The lead riders finally saw me when they were less than a hundred yards away. As they passed the last of the mesquite and creosote bushes entering the clearing George had made, the riders began to move out to the sides of the two lead riders before slowing to a walk. They all came to a complete stop when they were ten yards away from me.
There was no question about it any longer. It was indeed Flat Nose and his gang of Comancheros. Flat Nose looked just as he’d been described.
A big burly man with thick, long, greasy, hair and a full beard that was just as long and greasy as his hair. His nose was indeed flat and spread out over much of his face. The hair, beard, nose, and beady deep-set eyes all combined to give him the look of an angry bear.
His looks and body language, even from the saddle, conveyed the impression that he was going to get what he wanted, and nothing was going to stand in his way. In short it screamed mean, sadistic, brutal, bully.
I calmly looked over both him and his men before saying, “Good morning, Flat Nose. I’d welcome you to Estancia Dos Santos. Sadly, though, you’re not there yet. But where are my manners? Let me introduce myself, I am US Marshal Paul McAllister. You and all your men are under arrest for murder, theft, rape, and kidnapping. If you throw down your guns and surrender peacefully I can guarantee you a fair trial.”
There were a few snickers from among his men, but Flat Nose just glared at me with those dark beads of coal where his eyes should be. When he started talking it was in a surprisingly smooth mellow voice not the deep gravelly growl I expected.
“Good morning, Marshal. I want to thank you making my day complete. Not only do I get the riches, women, and cattle of the ranch behind you, I also get you. You’ve caused me and the organization I work for much grief in the last few years, and today I have the pleasure of putting an end to it.”
I smiled to myself. The man had a certain swagger to him, but he had no real clue of what he was facing. “Flat Nose, the ranch and everyone else on the Estancia has known you were coming since yesterday afternoon when you all met up at your campsite. They’ve had plenty of time to prepare. You aren’t facing a single family living in a jacal, or badly built adobe home, getting caught in a surprise raid. You’re facing hardened farmers and vaqueros fighting from a large stone building. And they are expecting you. A few of your men may be able to make off with a few head of cattle but you, and the rest of your men, will be lying dead. I encourage you to make this easy on yourself, and surrender now.”
Flat Nose gave me a sadistic smile. “Marshal, my name is Fulgencio Madrid not Flat Nose. You will die in just a few minutes, just for addressing me in such a manner. Not once, but twice. As for the ranch, I have eyes and can see the building from here so I know it’s less than a mile away. The boss in Santa Fe wants you dead, and the ranch wiped out, as a lesson to everyone else in the valley. By the time we are done today the ranch building and the bunk house behind it will be destroyed. There won’t be a building left standing at the ranch.”
This time, I couldn’t help but give a loud laugh. “Flat Nose, you are one stupid son of a bitch. I really expected more from a man who could lead as large a group of cutthroats as you’ve got here. Let me give you a little hint about what you face at the ranch, if you should get by me. The building you see is two stories tall and easily fifty times larger than any building you have ever raided.
“It looks so close because it’s so big. It was built to house eighty vaqueros and their families. There are only two ways in, and both have long since been barricaded. Yes, there is a bunk house behind the ranch building. It has apartments for twenty single vaqueros. You are welcome to try and take it but you won’t find anything there, as the single vaqueros moved into the ranch building last night. But enough of this chit chat. This is the last time I’m going to say it. Either surrender, or go for your guns.”
I think I touched a raw nerve calling him Flat Nose publicly for the third time. He glared at me for another couple of moments then, keeping both hands on his saddle horn, he stood and swept his gaze in a 180-degree arc from the end of his line of men on the left past me, to the end of his men on the right. I knew he was playing for a little time to look things over, and make sure he hadn’t missed something obviously wrong.
When he was done he turned back to me. “Marshal, I told you when we started talking that you are a dead man. I don’t listen to dead men. Even if you weren’t dead, you are still lying to me so either way I’m not going to listen you. It’s time to end this little game you’ve been playing. It’s time for you to die.”
I’d been halfway expecting him to have a saddle gun but the sight of him raising his hand from the saddle, with a gun already in it, still surprised me more than a little. It didn’t slow me down any, though. I pulled the trigger on the shotgun three times as fast as I could get the barrel on target while taking two steps to my left to get what little protection the boulder could provide.
After the first blast of my shotgun bullets started flying from behind me and to my right as the men of the Estancia opened fire. I knew I’d hit Flat Nose with at least one of the shotgun blasts, as he was lifted off his horse and thrown backwards. His horse ran past me down the road and that probably saved my life as I saw it shudder from getting hit with at least three shots as it passed between me and the right side of Flat Nose’s men.
By the time the horse passed me the fighting was over. All of the raiders were down on the ground along with several horses. Riderless horses were running off into the desert in every direction, and those that weren’t, were ground hitched and trembling.
I woke up suddenly, feeling the sun shining on my face through the windows and French doors of my bedroom. One moment I was blissfully asleep and the next I was awake. From the strength of the sunlight playing on my tightly shut eyelids it must have been near noon. I lay there, in absolute silence, trying to figure out why I was still in bed so late in the day. That proved to be too much effort, so I drifted back off to sleep. The next time I woke up, it was from a nightmare. A short...
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....
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...
Leading all five of my horses, I walked into the Las Cruces of 1850 for the first time late that afternoon about four, after nearly a full day of walking. Mr. Mendoza’s Livery Stable and Freight Yard was easily found. The first person I saw directed me to the distinctive building with the wooden second floor at the north end of town. Luckily, Mr. Mendoza was outside talking to a young boy. When he saw me, he looked surprised. He quickly dismissed the boy, telling him to muck out two specific...
The stable boy had my wagon and mules waiting for me, after I checked out the next morning. I made quick work of loading the door and jambs on the wagon, before heading to the bank. Levi had everything ready to go, and in less than three minutes after I entered, I was back in the wagon and started for home. I spent another three butt numbing days getting home! The next morning, I loaded up the empty panniers on the mules, saddled up the horse, closed up the wall and house, and left for Las...
I checked out of the hotel and was at the restaurant a little before eight, getting my Anna fix. Just as Anna was bringing my coffee, Jorge and Giuseppe walked in together. While we were eating, I reminded them I had to get my horse and mules from the stables, and then make a few stops in town for supplies before leaving. I paid for the breakfasts, said my goodbye to Anna, and walked over to the stables. I spent a few minutes talking to Mr. Mendoza, while the stable boy got my horse and...
“I’m sure glad this is all over,” I said to Anna, four days later, as we were leaving our bedroom to get JJ and go downstairs to breakfast. For three of those days, Anna and I babysat the Greenburgs until lunch when we were replaced by Tom and Yolanda. That left my afternoons free to visit the various parts of the Estancia, usually with the older kids, as well as get in some shooting practice. The other day was spent in the Estancia meeting, where we reviewed the progress we’d made against...
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...
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...
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...
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...
“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...
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...
When we left for Las Cruces Thursday morning, it was with the knowledge that Miguel had a team scouting either side of the road a mile ahead of us for the entire trip. That settled both Anna’s and my nerves, significantly. Beth and Izabella opted to ride in the wagon with the baby while Celia drove. She had asked to go with us for reasons of her own, which I privately hoped included seeing George during the visit. I still couldn’t figure out the situation with Izabella and Alejandro. They...
We found Juan inventorying a large stack of adobe bricks on one side of the yard. His back was to us as we walked up, and we heard him mumbling something under his breath about crazy stupid Anglos. Tom and I grinned at each other. I cleared my throat, watching Juan jump and turn around with a startled look on his face. “I hope it isn’t us you’re mad at, Juan. I just got back, so it can’t be me.” He laughed and said, “No, it’s those soldiers at the fort. They can’t make up their minds...
We pulled out of the Hacienda bright and early on Thursday, the 11th of October, 1855, right on schedule. By we, I mean Tom, Yolanda, Anna and me along with Raphael, who was driving the wagon we were taking with us, and a team of vaqueros who were going along for security. The wagon Raphael was driving was one of the original wagons, with the steel box bolted behind the driver’s seat. Tom and I had loaded the box with 2000 gold bars late the night before. The Estancia was getting low on...
I led a procession of four teams, the wagons, and the final four teams down the road. Instead of staying on the Camino Real to Mesilla, I detoured to Las Cruces, rode down the middle of Main Street and then on to Mesilla. By the time the day was done, everyone in Las Cruces and Mesilla was going to know who I was, and that neither I nor the Estancia Dos Santos was to be trifled with. Entering Mesilla, I slowed my horse until I was beside the lead vaquero. “Rodrigo, when we get to the plaza,...
“What can I do to help?” I asked Anna after breakfast the next morning. The ladies were clearing the family table, to start getting the room ready for the meeting set to start in a couple of hours. Tom, Steve, and I were finishing the last of our coffee, and from the way the ladies were moving through the room, it was very apparent that we were in the way. Anna beamed me one of her smiles and gave me a small kiss. “Take these other two, and go keep grandfather company. You three will only...
“Mi Pablo, please get your work done quickly, and stay safe,” Anna said quietly with tears in her eyes. We were standing in front of the restaurant holding each other closely as we said our goodbyes. “My love, I promise not to fight any windmills on this trip, and I’ll do my best to stay out of trouble. You take care of the kids, keep the Estancia running, and stay safe while I’m gone. I’ll be home as soon as I can,” I told her while thumbing the tears from her eyes. She nodded, gave me a...
It seemed like the entire Estancia had turned out to wish us all safe travels. Both sides of the road, from the bottom of the slope to the bridge were lined with people, as were both sides of the road from the opposite side of the bridge to the Camino Real. Anna and I sat on our horses at the top of the slope, watching the procession of ten outriders, twenty escorts, the coach, four gold wagons, a supply wagon, and twenty more escorts move down the slope, across the bridge, and up to the...
The small slim man, known as ‘The Boss’, was almost swallowed by the overstuffed chair in which he was sitting. Drinking from a large glass of whiskey, he reflected on his life as the mantle clock softly chimed in the new year. His wife, an abstemious young lady, was asleep in bed, and had been for a few hours. Their only real fight in almost eleven years of marriage, had centered on the fact that she was a lark and he was a night owl. Neither could understand the strong biological drives of...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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....
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...
“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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
“¡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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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...