High Country : A Novel (5 page)

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Authors: Willard Wyman

BOOK: High Country : A Novel
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5
Twice across the Pass

There was moon enough for Ty to see Bernard, stiff and determined as he led Apple, Wilma Ring’s little mare. Fenton rode ahead of Bernard. In the open places Ty could see him too, turned almost backward on Easter, watching the long string of Forest Service horses, tail-tied, using the halters Fenton and Ty would bring back. If everything worked.

The first matter was Bob Ring. Ty saw how closely Fenton focused on his task. He’d come back at dusk with food, waking Bernard to make him eat, Fenton himself half-angry and half-amused to tell them that Buck had come back from Missoula without the tents, which needed more patching. Rather than stay to see it done, Buck had picked up the guests and driven back to tell Fenton.

“Maybe he thought I could hold back the rain.” Fenton handed

Spec a plate. “Your people ever try that? Dance to hold back the rain?” “We don’t fool with what ain’t changeable. You shouldn’t fool with
no ranger’s leg. Let the government pull his ass out. They put him in.” “Hell, Spec, you know Bob Ring.You’d pull him out too.” “I ain’t pleased with where he gets his paycheck,” Spec said. “Which
don’t help me warm to your plans.”

Spec was against it from the first, but Ty didn’t see what else Fenton could do. Jasper and Spec would take the guests in over the north pass without tents, while Buck went back to Missoula to get them. Fenton and Ty would take Bernard’s horses in to the south, find a way to bring Ring out, then pack up the tents and catch up with Spec.

Fenton guessed they’d be a day and a half behind, that he’d catch them at their second camp. Spec had the kitchen fly if it rained, and Jasper’s good cooking. The only thing missing, as far as Ty could see, was sleep. And Fenton acted as though he’d forgotten what that was.

He’d kept talking and organizing gear until dark, then he’d gone back to the big house to reassure the guests, who were getting edgy about starting without Fenton to tell them what to do. In the middle of the night he’d come back to the corrals, gotten Ty up, caught up the Forest Service horses, and had them all on the trail before Bernard was all the way awake.

Now he hardly stopped Easter for a breather, not until the snowfield. Ty got his first look back at the country from there, Crippled Elk Lake far below, above it spare cliffs, broken rocks and boulders jumbled at their base. He could see the stream they’d crossed and recrossed boiling down, jumping and foaming before settling back into its course.

Fenton stood down and climbed onto the snow, which pitched steeply before easing into the milder grade of the snowfield beyond. There was no wind, just the icebox cold lifting from the snow.

“Slick,” he called down. “Hard to stay upright.” He slid back and climbed onto Easter. “Gotta get back here before it gets mushy.”
Easter was already moving across the snow, the string trailing behind, slipping and skidding but coaxed along by Fenton and Easter as they worked their way up the snowfield.
Ty held Smoky in as Bernard struggled up the bank, his horse slipping and scrambling for footing so vigorously that Bernard dropped Apple’s lead and grabbed his saddle horn. Apple turned and bolted, trying to pass Smoky on the low side of the narrow trail. Ty grabbed the lead and managed a dally just as the little mare went knee deep into the scree above the cliffs.
It was all new for Smoky, but she saw nowhere to go but onto the snow, away from the unpleasant drag. She spun Apple back from the cliff’s edge, and before Ty knew it they were pulling her up onto the snow.
“Saved, by god!” Fenton had watched it as he angled Easter across the snowfield. “That’s why I’ll take a mule, boys. A mule never would come that close to suicide. Willie will be thankful.”
“Wilma,” Bernard spoke up now, the color coming back into his face, “seemed to know everything to do about that broken leg.”
“She is a pistol.” Fenton looked ahead to find the trail emerging from the snow. “Won’t be long now before Bob has to dust off his shotgun.”
They saw the smoke as they came into the meadow. They forded the creek and there was Bob Ring, his leg wrapped and elevated, his toes bluish.
“Not sure Wilma’s too interested in your circulation, Robert.” Fenton dismounted and threw his lead-line toward Ty.
“I knew it.” Bob Ring was propped up against a wadded canvas manty. “Break my leg and now I got to listen to you. Don’t know which is worse.”
“We’ll have you out before you decide it’s me.” Fenton reached into his saddlebag and pulled out a bottle. “Enjoy this while you think on it.” He handed Ring the bottle. “I’ll loosen up this rescue work.”
“I didn’t want him to bend it.” Wilma came up from the creek with water, tall and thin, her eyes so sharply blue they made Ty look again. “He tosses so.” She let Bernard take the bucket.
“You done fine, Willie.” Fenton got the first knot undone. “Tidier than what I’d of done. And I been the doctor in here more than I like. Drink up, Robert. Ty’ll have things packed before the sun hits the meadow.”
Ty wasn’t sure Fenton remembered the only thing he’d ever packed was salt, in rotted old panniers with no hitch to tie. He knew enough to balance the loads, which he did as best he could. Fenton kept checking, jamming something deeper into a pannier now and then to give Ty the idea. But he never stopped his conversation with Bob Ring.
“Throbbing might slow if you concentrate on that bottle. Soon as these boys get lined out, I might have a sip myself.”
“Time they get lined out it might be gone,” Bob Ring wiped at his mouth. “It’s some better than your usual.”
There were beads of sweat on Ring’s face, lines of dampness showing through his shirt.
“Drink lots. We’ll get you out. It just ain’t gonna be pleasant.”
“I’ll do that.” Ring took another pull on the bottle. “Stop your morbid forecast and I might even save you some.”
“Stirrup sip’s all I need.” Fenton was looking at saddle pads. “Help yourself. I’ll ready that leg after we pack.”

Fenton packed the first horses so fast Ty couldn’t follow it. He just pulled rope where Fenton pointed, watched a perfect diamond appear.
“Pack this last one.” He handed Ty a lash cinch. “I’ll look at that leg.”
Ty tightened the cinches and hung balanced panniers on the cross bucks. He tucked a bedroll over the top and threw a manty over all of it, snugging it tight. That was as far as he could go.
“Can you tie a hitch?” he asked Bernard. “He went too fast for me.” Bernard shook his head. “He was teaching me. I think she knows.”
“I know some.” The girl looked to see that her father was all right, then pointed at this rope and that, telling them when to pull, how to tighten. She was serious and precise and now and then a little unsure. But when Ty pulled the last rope taut, a lopsided diamond appeared.
“Doubt I could do it again.” He tied the rope off, surprised.
“You will. He’ll show you. Just make him as careful with my father as he is with his mules.” She went to Fenton, crouched over her father’s leg.
“Need it straighter before I splint it.” Fenton seemed to be speaking as much to himself as to Bob Ring, who held the bottle and watched.
“Doubted you would be so generous with this just for pleasure.” Bob Ring looked at his daughter. “Hang on to my upper half while Fenton straightens my lower. That lump doesn’t want to be there.”
“Ty,” Fenton called. “Come hold this leg steady.” He touched the bump again. “Save on the bleeding in there if things is more in place.”
Bob Ring lifted up into his daughter’s arms, sweat dripping from his face. Ty and Bernard held the leg steady as Fenton pulled, Ty queasy as he felt the thigh muscles tense, Ring fighting against Fenton’s pull.
“Not sure I got you drunk enough, Robert. You ain’t exactly relaxed.” Fenton ran his hand across the blue place on the side of Bob Ring’s calf, the lump diminished. “It’s near in line. Drink more. I’ll hustle us up a splint.”
He pulled the torn pant leg back down, wrapped the leg in a saddle pad, then opened a length of bark from a lodgepole, fit it over the pad. He tied the bark closed with strips of canvas, padding the top and bottom and making sure the splint locked Ring’s foot, stretching the leg. He wrapped a manty around all of it, tied it firmly with canvas strips.
“Drink,” he said. “ Yo u’ve rode drunker than this and still got home.”
“Not with a leg this fat. Or this broke.”
The color had gone from Ring’s face. Fenton saw circles of sweat soaking through his shirt. “Don’t see how to make it ride better, Bob.” Fenton massaged Ring’s toes. “It’ll bleed in there. But less. It’s mostly in place.”
“Mostly’ll have to do.”
“That leg won’t kill you. I ain’t as confident about the splint.”
Ty got Ring to his feet. He saw that the girl was crying.
“Get me on and lead me out.” Ring looked at Ty belligerently. “And leave me that goddamned bottle ...I got plans.”

Bob Ring’s parents had been Pentecostal preachers. It wasn’t long before he began singing hymns. He knew all the verses, each verse more vigorous than the last. He was singing loudly when they climbed onto the snow, Fenton leading with the pack horses and looking back to see if Ty and Ring were all right. The snow was softer now, a worry to Ty. Ring hadn’t been all that steady, singing and drinking and flopping around in his saddle, trying to get comfortable. It would be rougher crossing the snow. He looked back at the girl, leading Apple now, her face as white as Ring’s when Fenton set the bone. Bernard followed, grim faced as he listened to the hymns.

Fenton circled his string and dismounted.

“Bet we’re on ten feet of snow here,” he said. “But solid. Good place to have a look at that leg. It won’t like the downhill.”
“I have no plans to complain.” Bob Ring was casting around for what hymn to sing next. “It’s not the Christian way.”
“The Christian way won’t keep you from bleeding all over your saddle if that splint rubs you wrong.” Fenton added his kerchief to the padding.
“‘The meek shall inherit the fuckin’ earth.’ That’s what He said.” Ring offered Fenton the bottle.
“Forget about who’s gonna inherit what till we get to the doctors.” Fenton saw something was left in the bottle and handed it back. “By the looks of that leg you won’t want a meek doc.”
They slipped and slid their way down the softening snowfield, finally dropping back onto the trail, Bob Ring rolling around in his saddle more than Ty wanted him to. Ring’s face was drained of blood again and Ty heard him begin swearing, quietly at first, then tilting the bottle up, draining it and smashing it onto the rocks.
“Fuck ’em,” he shouted. “All of ’em. Fuck ’em all....”
“Oh!” Wilma was off Apple, looking for broken glass. “Oh Father!” Ring’s, eyes were glassy. He kept swearing in bursts, Ty finding himself as lost for what to do as the girl, knowing only to keep following Fenton.
He didn’t look back much after that, concentrating solely on keeping Ring from being jarred. The trail switched back in long traverses, fording the stream again and again, the final crossing just below the waterfall he’d barely seen as they’d climbed in darkness, the country invisible and unknown. Now he felt it more than saw it, all of him concentrating on Ring.
By the time they came to the corrals the swearing was over. Ty wasn’t even sure Ring was conscious. His eyes had been closed for the last mile, and he was slumped in the saddle, the splinted leg, grotesque, protruding like a growth.
Buck was there with the tents, mantied and waiting to be packed. Cody Jo was there too, with two coolers of fresh meat they would pack in for Jasper. Fenton pulled the unconscious Ring from the saddle, holding the wrapped leg steady with his great strength. Ty watched as Cody Jo cut the pant leg off. Blood had soaked through the saddle pad, the splint cutting through the muscle of Ring’s thigh.
“Never said a word.” Fenton unscrewed the cap on a bottle of peroxide. “Just sang and swore.” He poured peroxide into the wound, the foam hissing and whitening. Ty turned away and saw Wilma crying as she dug through the packs looking for something, anything, that would help.
“Make sure that don’t infect,” Fenton said to Cody Jo. “He’ll claw it when he wakes. He’s got himself pretty drunk.”
“I’ll go with him,” Cody Jo said. “I’ll have Wilma. Buck can drive.”
“Willie’s done herself proud.” Fenton turned and looked at the girl, weeping quietly now in the pile of duffle. “This ain’t been no picnic.”

After they left Fenton took the truck to get more hay. Ty sponged the sweat marks from Smoky and looked around to see what Spec and Jasper had left them to pack, counting five mules and one pack horse. He pulled his bedroll from the the pile of duffle, spread it out to get some sleep.

But sleep didn’t come. He lay there, thinking about his first day of packing. Or was it two days? He wasn’t sure knowing was important as he wondered about what was still to come. They would start in soon after Fenton got back, going over the north pass this time and riding steadily until they caught up with Spec. Fenton had said they’d be a day and a half behind. Ty thought it might be longer.

He guessed Spec was right: Fenton was optimistic. But he did what he had to do. Bob Ring had needed him. Ty didn’t see how any of it could be helped.

He got out the neat’s-foot oil and began to oil the Meana saddle, wondering if Bob Ring and Willie were all right. He wasn’t sure if he was more concerned about Bob Ring or the girl, knowing only that he was very tired, that there was a lot of riding still to come.

He was worried about the packing too. Two of the mules Spec had left were Cottontail and Loco.

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