Read Above the Bridge Online

Authors: Deborah Garner

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General

Above the Bridge (25 page)

BOOK: Above the Bridge
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“Keep trying,” Paige urged. “Search the sides.”

“Nothing,” Jake said, stopping for a minute to catch his breath.

“Try again,” Paige insisted, closing her eyes and praying they hadn’t gone to such extreme effort in vain.  She watched as Jake resumed the stretch with his arm, feeling around for another thirty seconds or so until he let out a sharp gasp.

“I’ve got something,” he shouted, pushing his body even flatter against the wall and struggling to dislodge the rough item his fingers had grasped.  It took numerous attempts before he finally eased away from the wall, pulling a dusty sack out, clods of embedded dirt falling away from it as he dragged it to the middle of the cave’s floor. 

Together they stared at the crusty object in silence, Paige out of gratitude that she had not been mistaken in dragging Jake up the cliff and Jake out of sheer disbelief.  Finally Paige looked up and spoke.

“You open it, Jake,” she said quietly.  “It’s yours.  You should be the one to open it.”

Jake glanced up at Paige briefly, a look of nervous anticipation in his eyes.

Slowly, he reached for the sack and tugged on the lumpy knot tying it closed.  Decay on the rope’s fibers made it impossible to untie them, so he pulled out a Swiss army knife from his pocket and sliced his way through the stubborn strands until they fell away. Pausing only to take a deep breath, he held the sack up at an angle and let the contents spill out on the cave’s floor.

There was only the slightest light flowing in through the small opening of the cave, but it was enough to see the sparkle of the nuggets that fell on the ground.  Jake stared at the pile of gold, unable to speak.  Paige watched him silently, wondering what it must feel like for him to reach the goal he had dreamed of most of his life.

“Now what,” Jake finally said, sounding lost in the echo of the cave.

“That’s up to you, Jake,” Paige said quietly.  “This is your family’s legend and history.  Only you can decide what to do with it.”  Leaving Jake to think, she returned to the cave’s entrance and climbed through the opening.  She brushed aside some of the rocks they had dislodged earlier and sat down on the ledge, looking out over the valley.

Jake remained in the cave for some time and then emerged to sit beside Paige.

“Look at this valley,” Jake sighed.  “It’s a treasure in itself, gold or no gold.”

“I can’t disagree,” Paige responded, looking across the rolling buttes and over to the Tetons before bringing her eyes to the closer section of valley below.

“That’s Kelly, isn’t it?” Paige asked, looking at the small buildings from above.  “And the Gros Ventre River, running next to it?”

“You’re getting to know the area,” Jake said in agreement, reaching out with his arm to point towards the town.  “Just think, Great-Grandpa Norris and his back-stabbing partner both lived within view of this mountain.”

“And now so do you,” Paige added.

Jake nodded his head.  “You know, I bought that old ranch because it would put me in the same area they lived in, thinking that would help me find the gold.  But all this time, I was looking in the wrong direction, west to the Tetons.”

Jake leaned back on his arms and sighed.  In all the time he had invested, searching for the gold, he’d never once considered the east side of the valley.

“You know, that area was called the ‘Bridge’ by settlers back in the early 1900’s,” Paige pointed out, remembering information she’d found through the National Park Service. 

“Really,” Jake responded, clearly surprised.

“Yes, really,” Paige answered. “Early homesteaders built a timber bridge across the river.  There was quite a town there before that flood wiped it out.  Mercantile, hotel, dance hall, sawmill, feed supply and livery barn, etc.”

“So, then…” Jake said, tumbling images around in his head, “those marks at the bottom of Frank’s map… the ones I thought might be a ladder…”

“…were a bridge,” Paige finished the sentence for him.

“And the round smudge that I thought covered something else…” Jake continued.

“…was a cave,” Paige filled in again.

Silence settled in, replacing conversation.  Paige felt exhaustion creeping into her bones and Jake’s thoughts tumbled wildly within the realization that the long-awaited dream had become reality.  Finally Jake spoke up.

“We have to leave it,” he said quietly, so quietly that Paige was almost sure she had misunderstood him.

Seeing the stunned expression on Paige’s face, he spoke up again, this time loud enough that there was no question what he was saying.

“I can’t take it, Paige,” Jake said.  “This is the legend that has been passed down to me through my great-grandfather, my grandfather and my father.  It’s meant to be passed down again.  I have to leave it.”

Paige sat still, trying to take in Jake’s words and reasoning.  It seemed crazy to have gone to such lengths to find the gold he had dreamed about his whole life, only to leave it behind.  But it was the legend that had kept him going, not the gold itself.  Maybe it was the legend that would keep others going in the future.  As crazy as it seemed, she could half-way understand his twisted reasoning.  Besides, it wasn’t her decision to make.

Jake climbed back into the cave, while Paige remained outside, her back resting against the cliff wall.  This was something he needed to do on his own.

She looked across the valley at the Grand Tetons, feeling the strong sense of area history and the relativity of time as she had come to know it.  She compared her own journey to the history Jackson Hole’s towering peaks had seen long before.  It all amounted to a split second, the passage of time.  Even the century of change she had witnessed was nothing compared to the open expanse of the future.

Jake returned to the ledge and Paige stood to help him.  Slowly, they worked to rebuild the surface of the cliff, stuffing dirt and twigs between rocks to hold them firmly in place.  Layer upon layer, they built multiple barriers to separate the cave from the outer ledge.  Gathering dirt clods and brush, they scattered these against the outside section that hid the cave’s entrance until the surface blended with the rock wall itself.

Moving back along the ledge, they reached the tall rock pile that they had broken down before, crossed to the other side and built that up, as well.  With the surrounding rocks and brush stacked high, the ledge behind was well hidden.

Carefully, they retraced their steps down the mountainside, finally reaching Jake’s truck and heading back to town in silence.

 

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

Paige stepped through the front door of The Blue Sky Café and took her place in line.  The wait had grown shorter, even in just the few days that she and Jake had avoided the place. The tourist season continued to slip further into the past. 

She eyed the baked goods with approval.  All her favorites were there:  raspberry-orange muffins, maple-pecan scones and zucchini-cinnamon bread.  The chalkboard announced lunch specials for the day:  Roasted Tomato-Basil Soup, Greek Salad with Kalamata Olives and Feta Cheese and a Grilled Chicken Panini, served with sliced avocado and fresh cantaloupe.

“Well, look who’s here,” Maddie said - a little too cheerfully, it seemed - as Paige approached the counter.  “I thought you must’ve gone back to New York.  Haven’t seen you in here the last few days.”  Turning away briefly, Maddie waved to a local who was heading out the door after adding cream and sugar to his coffee.

Not crediting herself with the same acting ability as Maddie obviously had, Paige kept things simple.

“You’re pretty much right on both counts,” Paige said lightly.  “I’m headed back to New York in just a few days.  And I haven’t been in because I had to finish up an article and get it sent back there by today.”  Paige pointed to one of the raspberry-orange muffins in the case, which Maddie grabbed with a square of wax paper.

“Coffee?  Latte?”  Maddie offered, holding up an empty mug as a question mark.

“Why not,” Paige said, slipping into the conspicuously empty counter seat where Old Man Thompson usually sat.  “Coffee will be fine.”

“So how did that go?”  Maddie asked lightly.  “Your article, I mean.”

Paige shook her head and let out what she hoped sounded like a sufficiently discouraged sigh.

“Not as well as I hoped it would,” Paige said as she reached for the coffee mug.  “I thought I was onto something really interesting, but it turned out to be a false lead.”  She blew a puff of air across the top of the mug to cool the surface of the coffee.  Without looking up, she knew she had Maddie’s full attention.

“What I mean is,” Paige continued casually, “Jackson Hole is such an amazing area.  There’re all sorts of things to write about - outdoor activities, the tourism industry, the wildlife and conservation efforts, etc.  But I was convinced I’d stumbled into a whole realm of hidden history.  It would have made for an outstanding exclusive, the sort of thing that could really help my career.” 

“And instead?”  Maddie prodded, wiping down a countertop near Paige’s seat.

“Instead, I just ended up with a basic article about the area.”   Paige repeated her earlier sigh for good measure.  “Don’t get me wrong,” she added quickly, feigning an apologetic tone.  “You have a beautiful valley here and a rich history.  Our readers will be interested.  It’s just personally…” She let her voice trail off.  “Well, I guess I was just hoping there was more.  I thought…”

“You thought...?”   Maddie pushed her for more information, exactly as Paige hoped she would.

Paige set her coffee mug down and leaned forward, lowering her voice to a whisper.

“OK, I know this will sound crazy, but I thought…” she paused and glanced around, as if checking to make sure the café was empty, before turning back to Maddie.  “I thought I had found out about some gold that was hidden in the hills a long time ago.”

“Well!”  Maddie exclaimed, causing Paige to jump, in spite of having anticipated the reaction.   “Well,” Maddie repeated more calmly, obviously pulling herself together.  “That would have made quite a good story, I’m sure.”

Paige shook her head, appearing exasperated with herself.

“It sure would have.  Imagine if I’d pulled a story like that together.” Paige was actually starting to feel self-pity, she sounded so convincing. She wisely stifled a sudden impulse to laugh.

Maddie walked around the end of the counter and picked up two empty mugs that customers had left on a table.  Setting them in a bus tray, she casually asked, “What even gave you the idea of this crazy story?  It sounds pretty far-fetched.”  Paige had to admit she admired Maddie’s determination to pry more information out of her.

“Sheesh, this will sound even more clueless on my part, but I kind of got swept up in this by a guy I met here.”

“Really!”  Maddie rolled her eyes in girl-to-girl sympathy.

“Yes, really,” Paige confessed.  “And it turns out the guy was just gullible, believing some story he’d heard from his uncle…no, wait, maybe his grandfather.  I don’t know - someone in his family.  Anyway, even he realizes now it was just some sort of tall tale.” 

Paige stood up, fumbled around in her purse and pulled out several dollars, causing crumpled receipts, lip gloss and numerous other items to fall out of the over-stuffed handbag.

“Always the same problem,” Paige laughed as she bent over to retrieve the wayward contents.  “I never seem to learn that a purse can’t hold a suitcase worth of stuff.”

“You’re not the only one,” Maddie agreed.  “Doesn’t matter what size the purse is, either.  It’s never big enough for everything.”

“Isn’t that the truth,” Paige replied lightly.  She gathered up her belongings quickly, tossed the purse strap over her shoulder and left the money next to her empty mug.  Dropping the untouched muffin in a small bag, she shrugged her shoulders as a final statement.

“Let me guess,” Maddie inquired with a grin.  “The guy was good-looking?”

Paige didn’t have to pretend to blush, it came so easily.

“You’ve got it,” she admitted.  “Now who’s the gullible one?”

“Hey, honey, it happens to the best of us,” Maddie called out as Paige waved from the doorway.

 

*   *   *   *

 

To:  Susan Shaw

From:  Paige MacKenzie

 

Re: Jackson Hole Article

 

Hi Susan,

I’m attaching a final draft of the article on Jackson Hole.  As you’ll see, it turned out that the buried treasure theory was a false lead, though I know it would’ve made a great story.  On the other hand, I was able to gather an exceptional amount of research on the area’s history.  Both the local library and the Jackson Hole Historical Society were helpful.  Conversations with long-time residents of the area added a lot of perspective, as well - things I wouldn’t have found in history books.

I’ll be packing up and heading back to New York shortly.  I just want to take a few more days to enjoy the area.  It’s truly amazing.  You’ll have to make a point of seeing it sometime.

 

See you soon,

 

Paige

 

*   *   *   *

 

To:  Paige MacKenzie

BOOK: Above the Bridge
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