In This Issue
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If you just can't wait to read this month's stories one at a time, here they are - all the tales!
All the Tales
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Freedom Ford
by Ellen Gray Massey
As Walking Owl paddled around the bend in the icy Osage River, he was surprised to
see a woman wrapped in a faded comforter fishing from the river bank.
Quietly, the Osage nosed his canoe into the soft mud bank and stabbed his paddle
into the river bottom to arrest his movement. He did not want to startle her by his
sudden appearance.
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The Hanging
by Terry Alexander
Water flowed from the slanted roof, splashing in the torrent of the once dry dirt
street. Stray drops nestled in the wood, seeking out the nicks and depressions
in the material to ebb into the interior of the structure.
Nick Taylor stood in the down-pour. He stared at the body swaying in the howling
wind. Edgar Clifford twisted on the length of rope, driven by the strong air currents.
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Massacre at Guadalupe Canyon
by Michael Koch
Jim Craig ran a weathered hand through his sweat soaked hair. He held his hat above
his head shielding his eyes. Standing in the stirrups he watched the cowboys pushing
the dust covered cattle through the canyon. The place was called Guadalupe Canyon.
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Shadows on Pea Ridge
by C. Allan Butkus
"Shadows are getting shorter."
"Yep, it's about noon."
"You think there's any place in the world where there is no shadows at noon?" said
David Morgan.
"Suppose so. Just about any day that's real cloudy don't have no shadows," said
Cletus Jones.
"You know what I meant. Can't you just answer questions straight up? Or is it
just because you are a lying Arkansas Yazoo," said David.
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Freedom Ford
by Ellen Gray Massey
As Walking Owl paddled around the bend in the icy Osage River, he was surprised to
see a woman wrapped in a faded comforter fishing from the river bank.
Quietly, the Osage nosed his canoe into the soft mud bank and stabbed his paddle
into the river bottom to arrest his movement. He did not want to startle her by his
sudden appearance.
Back on one of his infrequent trapping trips to the Blue Mounds area to visit his
ancestral grounds near the grave of his grandfather, he was traveling upstream to
check his catch.
So that the woman would not think he was an outlaw or a Jayhawker, he shed his wool
coat and felt hat and searched through his knapsack for his Osage headband and leather
jerkin. He reasoned she would not be afraid of an Indian as White-Osage relations in
this area had always been amicable; the Osages had peacefully moved to Kansas and only
occasionally returned to trap. He had been careful this trip to avoid notice because
of the troubles between the Missourians and the Kansas Jayhawkers over whether Kansas
would enter the Union as a free or slave state. Preacher Jim Anderson and John Brown
often raided these western border counties of Missouri to kidnap slaves and take them
back to Kansas. Encouraged by the growing hostility and unrest, other men used slavery
as an excuse to raid, rape, and kill.
The borderland in 1858 was not a safe place for anyone, let alone Indians and Blacks.
As he purposely rattled the steel traps in his canoe, Walking Owl paddled around the
bend in full sight. The woman jerked up, stumbled in the folds of the comforter, and
dropped her pole.
"Don't be alarmed," Walking Owl's soft voice came from the opposite side of the river.
His English was perfect. "I am Walking Owl of the Osages on a trapping trip. I met
Caleb Watson here two years ago and he gave me permission to trap." The woman's rigid
pose relaxed as soon as she heard his cultured voice. "Are you Watson's wife?" he asked.
"Yes." She expelled her pent up breath. "I'm Etta Watson. Caleb spoke about you."
Walking Owl remembered that Watson had just built his house, and with the help of his
two slaves, had broken some of the prairie sod on his farm. He knew the richness of
the area. His people had lived for generations on this borderland of the eastern
hardwood forests and the western prairie. He was a child when his chief moved the
tribe to Kansas.
He remembered something else from his casual meeting two years ago. Watson was letting
his slaves pay for their freedom by their labor. The couple should be free by now.
A bite on the line pulled Etta's pole down the mud bank. She grabbed too late. The pole
hit the water and, tugged by the fish, started down the river. With dexterous strokes
from his paddle, Walking Owl retrieved the pole. In seconds, a bass flopped on a pile
of pelts in the canoe. He beached in an inlet downstream from Etta and handed her the
fish as he rose to his full six feet ten inches.
Both of them laughed. Etta's eyes sparkled at sight of the four pound fish.
Their pleasure was cut short when they heard two rifle shots from the Watson house.
"Caleb and the children!" Etta cried. She saw smoke coming from within a cabin near
the barn, "They're after Ned and Tillie!"
She dropped her fish and comforter and raced through the marshy lowland onto the field
of corn stubble. Walking Owl sprinted after her, cut in front of her, and forced her
out of the open field into the trees. They crouched together hidden behind an oak trunk.
From near the smoking cabin came repeated piercing female cries. At Walking Owl's
questioning look, Etta whispered, "Tillie."
"Your slave?"
Etta nodded and then moaned, "She and Ned are free now."
Walking Owl counted two mounted men with rifles who circled the big house; they yelled
as they made a game of dodging the sporadic shotgun blasts from the house. In front of
the smoking cabin a bearded man on foot stood guard over a middle-aged Black couple.
The outlaw's bay horse, tethered to a post of the empty corral, pranced around afraid
of the fire. White smoke poured from the open door of the cabin. Fingers of orange fire
flickered across the back window. Suddenly the whole cabin was in flames.
"Jayhawkers are burning Ned's house," Etta cried. "And the barn."
"Any horses?" Walking Owl asked as he remembered that Watson owned several horses and
a substantial herd of cattle.
"All stolen!" Her teary eyes looked at Walking Owl. "Nothing left to steal. Except
Tillie and Ned."
"I'll swing around and try to reach them," Walking Owl said. She nodded. He handed her
a Smith and Wesson pistol. When she smiled her appreciation and gently ran her finger
over the cold metal, he knew she was familiar with guns. "At the main house, will your
husband keep the two men busy?"
"Yes. I'll get behind the shed to pin them in Caleb's crossfire." At Walking Owl's
surprised look, she continued. "We've had other attacks. We know what to do. Jeremy and
the little girls, they help."
The two parted. With the barn blocking him from the outlaws' sight, Walking Owl ran
noiselessly through the corn stubble, skirted the barn, and squatted behind a wood pile.
Downwind from the fire and partially hidden in the smoke, he was within range of the man
holding Ned and Tillie. He pulled his kerchief over his nose and waited for Etta to get
into position.
Tillie's screams subsided; Ned's deep voice tried to calm her. They were bound back to
back to prevent their escape. Tillie's dress was torn at her waist. Mud covered Ned's
shirt and trousers; blood dripped from a cut on his cheek. When Ned and Tillie tried to
side-step away, the bearded captor struck them with the butt of his gun.
"Ain't ya had enough?" the outlaw asked, his attention distracted by the commotion at
the house.
"Yee-e-e-hi-i-i!" the black-coated attacker yelled. He shot at the house as he circled it.
Ignoring the blood on his face, Ned struggled to loosen the ropes while the bearded man
watched his partners. "Stupid fool," the captor said as he struck Ned again, "cain't ya
see we're freein' ya?"
"We're already free," Ned cried. "We own land here."
"Yeah," the bearded man sneered, "and I'm president of the bank." He shoved Ned so hard
that he fell, dragging Tillie with him.
Lying on the ground, hands tied and unable to get up, Ned used his feet. When the outlaw
leaned over, with the barrel of his gun in the air ready to strike again, Ned kicked him
in the groin.
In agony and holding himself with one hand, the outlaw swore as he hopped around doubled
over. Ned and Tillie worked together to stand up. Just as they were erect and side-stepping
to escape into the smoke screen, the bearded man shot above their heads and at the ground
at their feet. One bullet struck Ned's leg. Ned looked in disbelief at the hole in his
trouser leg and the redness that oozed out.
"Don't ya move," the outlaw hissed, "or I'll shoot yer damn black feet clean off."
The couple froze.
In position by the shed, Etta signaled to Walking Owl. They each fired at the two men who
circled the house. The shots from inside the house increased.
"Let's git the hell outta here," the black-coated leader yelled. He galloped his roan toward
the bearded man. "Git them two and let's ride."
His stout partner fired a parting shot at the house and followed. He jumped out of the saddle
and cut the ropes that bound the couple together, and while the bearded man wrestled with
Ned, he grabbed Tillie around her waist. He ignored her blows and kicks as he tossed her like
a sack of meal on his horse and remounted.
Walking Owl stepped into the open, his tall figure materializing out of the smoke. When he saw
the Osage, the bearded man gasped and abandoned Ned. He vaulted on his gelding and mercilessly
spurred after his two partners.
Ned struggled out of his bonds and stood up just as Walking Owl reached him. With a powerful
lunge in spite of his leg wound, Ned tackled the Osage.
"Hold on, friend," Walking Owl said, "Save your strength to get your wife back."
Ned noticed the Osage's headband and jerkin, and calmed by his voice, he paused long enough for
Walking Owl to grab his hands and explain who he was.
"Well, come on," Ned cried, and then jumped up and limped down the road after the vanishing
outlaws. "Tillie!" he screamed.
Walking Owl blocked his way. "Easy, friend. We'll get her back. Better have a plan first."
A young boy and two smaller girls burst out of the house into Etta's arms. Ill and weak, Caleb
Watson steadied himself against the door jam while he still held a twelve-gauge shotgun. "We're
not hurt," he said as Etta ran to him. Her children hung on to her, all three talking through
their tears as they re-entered the warm house.
"Papa made us hide under the bed," one of the girls said.
Supported by his wife, Caleb turned to the Osage. "Walking Owl, welcome." The two men shook
hands. "We are grateful."
"They took Tillie!" Jeremy cried, as he looked at the four adults in turn.
No one answered him. Trying to hide a cough, Caleb fell weakly into his chair. Etta examined
Ned's leg wound.
"Just nicked you," she said. "Didn't hit the bone, but you've lost some blood. Need to stay
off of it."
"Can't," Ned said. With much difficulty he stood erect even though he swayed slightly. "Gotta
git Tillie."
"Mrs. Watson is right," Walking Owl said. He stepped up to the doorway. "I'll go after Tillie
while she dresses your leg."
Both Ned and Etta shook their heads. "I'm going with you," Etta said to Walking Owl. All three
men objected. "Yes, I'm the one to go. Walking Owl needs help against three men. And Ned, we
need you here in the house in case the outlaws come back." When his pain made Ned sit down,
she turned back to the Osage. "Caleb can doctor Ned's leg better'n I can."
Walking Owl studied the determined woman. She had demonstrated her quickness and skill with a
gun. "You're right," he said. "Everyone can help. Jeremy, you run to the river and get the bass
your mother caught. Girls, get the stove going to fry it. I don't figure you've eaten in a while.
Caleb and Ned can watch the road in case the outlaws return."
"They won't return today," Caleb said. "Nothing left here for them. They came for Ned and Tillie.
They'll have to take Tillie to their camp first." A spell of coughing doubled him over.
Ned groaned and again tried to stand up.
"What'll they do to Tillie?" Jeremy cried.
"Nothing," Walking Owl said, "because I'll get her back." Then he asked Caleb, "They didn't come
here to free the slaves?"
Both Caleb and Ned shook their heads. "No," Ned said. "They'll steal anything that'll bring 'em
money. The burnin' and killin' is jest for fun."
"So they won't take Tillie to Kansas?" Walking Owl asked.
"No," Caleb said. "They'll take her to Independence to sell at the slave auction after they...."
Ned groaned and slumped into his chair with his head in his hands.
Etta disappeared into a back room. Still wearing her stocking cap, she returned dressed in her
husband's coat and trousers, with Walking Owl's pistol thrust in her belt. "We're wasting time,"
she said.
Walking Owl nodded. "They'll have to cross the river?"
Caleb nodded. "At Freedom Ford."
Walking Owl did not remember a ford of that name.
"Tillie named it that," Ned said, "when Caleb brought us here a few years ago and promised us
our freedom."
"Good name. Could we beat them there if we paddled up the river?"
"If we hurry," Etta said. "The road swings back east for a few miles and is crooked and rough
all the way."
"They won't hurry since we don't have any horses to chase after them," Caleb said.
"We'll get Tillie back," Walking Owl assured Ned. "You stay and protect the family." He did
not wait to hear Ned's agreement, but disappeared out the door, tailed by Etta.
By the time Etta reached the river, Walking Owl had removed his trapping gear and pelts and
was ready to push off. He put on his wool coat and felt hat. He folded Etta's old comforter
and laid it on his knapsack. She pushed the canoe to dislodge it from the bank, jumped into
the front, and grabbed the extra paddle.
Walking Owl avoided the strong current in the center of the river. He paddled the canoe the
three miles to the ford. When possible, he stayed under the bluff for added cover in case the
outlaws would spot them.
Silently the canoe moved upstream. Tillie's periodic screams reached them when the twisty
trail on the bluff came close to the river.
"She's letting us know where they are," Etta said.
Walking Owl nodded agreement, his body tense from listening to all the sounds. Over the soft
lapping of the water against the canoe and the almost imperceptible gurgle of the water as
the paddles cut into it, he distinguished the voices of the men. He caught a few words before
the trail veered away from the river.
"You said they was only one sick man there," came the words of one of the men.
"Where'd that there giant come from?"
"Sell her in Independence." This was followed by Tillie's screams.
Walking Owl paddled with powerful strokes. In the quieter water along the banks, he avoided
logs, overhanging branches, and the icy rim along the bank while his eyes missed nothing. He
listened for sounds to judge the outlaws' location and speed. Caleb had surmised correctly.
The men were in no hurry. Tillie's screams and the outlaws' voices, along with the horses'
hoof beats, told him that he and Etta would reach the ford before them.
Etta's back was rigid as she held the paddle in her mittened hands. Neither said anything
though she occasionally turned to look at Walking Owl. He smiled encouragement and nodded
approval. "I won't let them harm Tillie," the position of his body seemed to say. Gradually,
Etta relaxed.
Walking Owl recognized the ford ahead, a shallower channel where the water ran over a rocky
shelf-like outcrop. He paddled to the western bank to a tree-covered cove. He backed in,
breaking the thin ice coating on the still water. Holding to overhanging limbs, he stepped
onto solid ground, and pulled the canoe up the bank to steady it for Etta to step out. In
the twenty-five degree weather they were careful to keep dry.
"The man that has Tillie is in the middle," Walking Owl whispered. "They'll cross the river
in that order, one at a time." He pointed across the river where the men would soon appear.
"After the black-coated man crosses and goes on down the road, there," he pointed behind him
where the road continued in its northwesterly direction through the trees, "when he gets across,
can you deal with him?"
Etta held up Walking Owl's pistol for answer.
The Osage heard the horses approaching through the trees across the river and motioned for her
to follow him. They hurried the two hundred feet upstream through the underbrush, as they dodged
the trees and avoided the swampy regions to Freedom Ford. They crouched behind a huge oak where
the trail emerged out of the river. Across the stream the road entered an easy slope down to the
rocky ford.
When the outlaws appeared, their horses stepped cautiously onto the rocky approach. Walking Owl
whispered, "When the second man with Tillie crosses the river, I'll cut her free and take care
of him and the third fellow."
Walking Owl cocked his head toward the west to tell Etta it was time for her to get into position.
He clasped her hand in encouragement. Both crept out of sight.
Following the black-coated leader came the stout outlaw with Tillie tied behind him. The rope that
bound her hands together was fastened loosely around his waist. She sat upright, alert for any
opportunity to escape. Her body trembled with the cold. Last came the bearded man, who muttered
while he slumped in his saddle, his head down.
The leader did not see the Osage on the side of the trail behind a sycamore tree. Nor did he
notice on the other side of the trail Etta's brown coat or her black wool stocking cap that
protruded above a fallen log.
The bearded man continued to grumble.
"Shet up," the stout man said. "It's yer fault. Easy, ya said. Jest one sick man."
"Well, it was when I freed his hosses and cattle and all his grub." He laughed at his own
wit. "I didn't figure on the slaves fightin' us."
"And ya didn't figure on two more guns," the leader said. "Ya 'most got us killed."
"Where'd they come from?" the stout man asked.
"From outta the smoke." The bearded one looked around nervously. "I seen a giant ghost."
"Ever heerd a ghost shootin' a gun?" The leader laughed.
"It come floatin' outta the burnin' barn, rollin' along the ground with the smoke. Then it
stood up. Eight, nine feet tall. I seen it."
While the men were distracted, Tillie worked at the cords around her wrists. When her captor
pulled tighter on the rope connecting them, she cried out at in pain. "Cheer up," he said to
the bearded man, "We done good. Giant ghost or not, this 'ere gal'll bring five, six hundred."
He grinned and patted Tillie. Since Tillie could not kick him, she spat at him. As he ducked,
the outlaw laughed. "Freed 'em from their owners," He laughed and patted Tillie again. "Then
we sell 'em."
"And we git the money." The bearded one began to cheer up.
"So quit yer grumblin'. If you wasn't so clumsy, we'd have the big buck, too."
The outlaws failed to distinguish among the natural river sounds, a soft "Bob, bob white,"
and after a pause, another call. They were so preoccupied with their greed that they did not
spot a black stocking cap that waved above a rotting moss-covered log.
Walking Owl did not miss either sign. Nor did he miss Tillie's actions. She looked quickly in
Etta's direction, jerked herself upright in her seat behind the outlaw, and increased her struggles.
The leader urged his roan into the cold water. When he reached the western side, he spurred his
horse to make him leap up the mud bank. From the top, he waved the others on. Then he spurred
his roan on down the trail.
The stout man's big mare stepped gingerly into the water. More slowly than the leader's roan
because of her double load, the mare carefully placed each hoof down on the slick rocky bottom
as the current swirled around her legs.
The stout man had difficulty encouraging the mare and holding his seat while Tillie constantly
fought him. The mare slipped several times, going down to her knees once.
The diversion was what Walking Owl needed. With his rifle slung across his back, and his knife
unsheathed, he waited. The mare reached the mud bank, paused, and then scrambled up the slippery
bank with her two riders. Tillie lunged against the outlaw's back with the whole force of her body.
He jerked the reins; the mare slipped back.
Walking Owl leaped. He landed between Tillie and the outlaw. His force knocked mare and riders to
the ground. At the same time two pistol shots rang out in the woods west of him.
With his boot heel dug into the mud bank for anchorage, Walking Owl grabbed Tillie's arm and
quickly cut the ropes. Caught unaware, Tillie started to struggle, until she recognized him as
the one who rescued Ned. Freed, she grabbed a tree root. The mare quickly righted herself, jumped
the bank, and galloped upstream through the trees.
The enraged outlaw rolled over. He kicked Walking Owl's legs out from under him. Both men struggled
as they slid and rolled down the bank. When they reached the water line, the outlaw was on the bottom.
As he splashed into the cold water, he called out in pain, giving the Osage the advantage. Walking Owl
jumped back; his boots sunk several inches into the icy mud along the water's edge. His powerful shove
pushed the stout man farther into the river. He sunk out of sight for a few seconds before emerging
with a gasp that turned into curses.
Tillie pulled herself to level ground and disappeared behind some logs and bushes. With Tillie safe
for the moment, and the stout man temporarily out of action—his horse gone and his gun wet and
useless—Walking Owl had only the bearded man across the river to contend with.
In action now after his initial surprise when the Osage dropped from the sky, the third outlaw
had pulled his rifle from its case and took aim. Walking Owl leaped to level ground. He rose to
his full height as he reached over his shoulder for his rifle and leaped behind an oak just as
the bearded man's first shot struck the bank. There was no second shot. Still seated on his
gelding, a perfect target for Walking Owl, the outlaw seemed frozen in fear of the tall Osage.
Walking Owl fired at the ground in front of the horse. The gelding reared. The bearded man hit
the ground; his gun flew from his hands and slid over the rocky surface. Snorting and bucking,
the horse fled back down the road he had just traveled. Swearing loudly, the outlaw scrambled
for his rifle. Walking Owl's next shot struck the gun. It bounced a few inches into the air
and slid over the wet rocks closer to the river.
With his peripheral vision Walking Owl saw the stout man wading toward the bank. The Osage sent
a shot in his direction, not at the man, but between him and the bank to force him to stay in
the river. After a few minutes in the icy water, he would be no threat for a long time.
The Osage melted into the trees. The stout man muttered curses as he pulled himself out of the
water. On foot with wet and damaged guns, the two outlaws were harmless for the present.
But the leader...?
Since the two pistol shots, he had heard nothing from Etta, nor from Tillie after she climbed
the river bank. He heard the hoof beats of the bearded man's fleeing gelding. He cocked his
head upstream to listen and thought he recognized the movement of the stout man's mare through
the trees.
But there was no sound from Etta's direction. He hesitated, debating whether to go down the
road to see about her and the black-coated leader, or....
A call of a bobwhite came from the direction of his canoe. Reassured, Walking Owl sprinted d
ownstream. In the hidden cove, the two women were seated in his canoe, Etta at the bow, Tillie
bent over in the middle wrapped in the comforter.
"We're all right," Etta whispered in answer to his unspoken question as he glanced at both
women. Though Tillie's short hair and face was plastered with mud from the roll on the mud
bank, the only change in Etta was that her stocking cap had been pulled on carelessly.
Walking Owl climbed into his seat. He thrust his paddle against a tree root and gave a powerful
push. Silently the long canoe glided into the current.
A pistol shot knocked Walking Owl's hat from his head into the canoe. Another shot splintered
the back of the canoe above the water line. Tillie gave a muffled scream and fell forward to
lie in the bottom of the boat. Walking Owl glimpsed the figure of a man on the bluff behind
him. He was too far away to distinguish which outlaw it was. Walking Owl and Etta leaned over
to avoid the bullets and paddled rapidly to get out of pistol range. A third and fourth shot
splatted harmlessly behind them.
When out of range of the sniper, Walking Owl asked Etta, "Was that your man, the black-coat?"
"No." Her voice and the stiffness of her body left no doubt.
"Then the bearded man had a pistol."
As he continued to paddle rapidly, and taking advantage of the current in the center of the
river, Walking Owl seemed to make the canoe fly through the water. Tillie sobbed softly. Her
shoulders shook; her whole body trembled.
"We're safe now, Tillie," Etta said. Though she did not cease her paddling, she turned to
look at her friend several times to give her encouragement. "This is Walking Owl."
Tillie twisted her upper body to face him. "Thank you," she said in a voice hoarse from her
screams. Walking Owl inclined his head in response and handed her a blanket from his knapsack;
his eyes searched the bluffs for the outlaw. She wrapped the blanket around her, leaving only
her face exposed.
When Tillie's tremors stopped, Walking Owl asked gently, "Did the men harm you?"
"No." She studied this tall man who had stepped out of the smoke to save Ned at the farm and
dropped from the sky to rescue her at Freedom Ford. "You really are a giant. One of the outlaws
thought you was a ghost. He was too scared to shoot straight when he seen you back there at the ford."
"I was counting on that."
They continued rapidly. Though uneasy about the outlaws attacking them on the river, Walking Owl
was more worried about the people at the Watson house. If the bearded man caught up to them so
quickly on the river, it was possible he might return to the house. And he was concerned about
Tillie's long exposure without a coat. His toes were beginning to stiffen where his boots had
leaked. Etta missed a few strokes in her paddling to blow on her hands to warm them up. They
must reach the house quickly.
He had miscalculated back at the ford. He figured they would be safe from pursuit at least
until the stout outlaw built a fire to dry his clothes and until both outlaws could catch
their horses. He should have killed both of them, but to avoid any possible repercussions
against his tribe, he never shot to kill White men, even outlaws.
Tillie examined Walking Owl, from his muddy, leather boots up his long, lean body to the
hole in his hat, which once again was on his head. When she caught his black eyes looking
at her from under his wide hat brim, she asked, "Where'd you come from?"
Walking Owl grinned for the first time; crinkly lines appeared around his eyes. "Actually,
just a few miles from here." He swung his arm to the east. "Blue Mounds." When Tillie
opened her mouth in disbelief, he added. "That was a long time ago. I'm from Kansas back
on a trapping trip."
"Oh." Tillie wrapped Walking Owl's wool blanket tighter around her. "Why'd you leave here?"
she asked.
"My grandfather moved us to our Kansas lands. It was the only way for us to survive."
"It's crazy," Tillie said. "White men got your people off of this land and then brought us
coloreds in. And now they want us out too. Don't make sense."
"Caleb and I want you here, and we want Walking Owl, too," Etta said.
Tillie looked back at Walking Owl's immobile face. "I didn't want to come here in the first
place, but now I don't want to leave."
"I didn't want to leave." The women had to strain to hear Walking Owl's words. "I'm trying
to find a way to return."
Tillie shook her head sadly. "You can't return. And Ned and I must leave." Walking Owl
nodded as they turned the last bend of the river before reaching Watson land.
"No, Tillie," Etta said. "You don't have to leave. This trouble will soon be over."
"Tillie is right." Walking Owl said. "What's happening on this border is just the beginning."
"But, Walking Owl, you can pass for a White man."
"But Ned and I can't," Tillie said. "Though we're no longer slaves, we still ain't free."
After a careful search of the area for hidden men, Walking Owl directed the canoe into the
Watson cove. "No one in this borderland is free, Tillie, not you and Ned, not me, or the Watsons."
Etta tied the canoe to an exposed root. "It'll be better one day, and Freedom Ford will represent
what you named it for, Tillie."
As Tillie extricated herself from the folds of the blanket, she looked at Walking Owl and
shook her head sadly.
All was quiet at the homestead. Smoke curled from the chimney. As they crossed the corn field,
Tillie repressed a sob at the sight of the pile of embers that was her home. "The outlaws will
be back," Tillie said.
"Probably," Walking Owl agreed.
"But not right away," Etta said. "We won't let them harm you."
Tillie shook her head. "Can't live like this. Gotta leave. They'll be back, or others will."
When they were halfway across the field, Jeremy and his sisters burst out of the house,
running toward them. This time they crowded around Tillie; they hugged and kissed her.
"The fish is ready," Jeremy said to Walking Owl. "Papa ate some and feels better. He doctored
Ned's leg. It's gonna get well." As proof he pointed to the doorstep where Caleb and Ned stood.
Though assured by the men that there was no sign of outlaws, Walking Owl was worried about the
one with the pistol. He excused himself to scout out the trail.
"They are gone," he said when he returned. "The tracks say that the bearded man caught his bay
and crossed the river. There's nobody on this side. Keep a constant lookout for them. Now I must
return to Kansas."
He shook hands with Caleb and the children. As he turned to Ned and Tillie he asked, "You'll
come to me when you get to Kansas?" They both nodded. "Don't wait too long."
When he reached Etta he looked into her eyes for a few seconds. "You didn't tell us what happened
to the black-coated outlaw on the roan."
"No."
Caleb took her hand. "Do you want to tell us?"
She looked long into her husband's fever-bright eyes. She glanced at young Jeremy and at her two
little daughters. She looked at her undamaged house and to their rich prairie acres behind the
still-glowing ashes of the barn. She glanced over the sooty blotch on the land where once stood
Ned and Etta's cabin. Then her eyes settled on Ned. A scab was already forming on the cut on his
handsome face. His bandaged leg was propped up on a footstool, and his torn shirt exposed his bruised
arm. His right hand covered Tillie's hand on his shoulder. Tillie stood behind him, her dress stained
with mud from the ford.
Etta then turned back to Walking Owl. "My dear friend, today you saved the lives of everybody here.
All you asked me to do was, 'to deal with the man on the roan.'"
"And...?"
"I dealt with him." She handed Walking Owl his pistol.
Walking Owl held up his hand in an Osage farewell. When Jeremy and his sisters crowded to the
window to wave goodbye, he was not in sight.
The End
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