Authors: Dale Cramer
Tags: #FIC042030, #FIC042000, #FIC026000, #Amish—Fiction, #Frontier and pioneer life—Fiction
C
aleb returned home that Monday afternoon. He dropped off Domingo in San Rafael and trundled into Paradise Valley a day late, without the preacher. He half expected to meet one of his sons or John Hershberger on the road home, coming out to check on him, but he made it all the way back to the valley without seeing a familiar face.
As soon as he rounded the end of the ridge and caught sight of home he was filled with a deep sense of foreboding. His people had long awaited the arrival of an ordained minister. It would be cause for major celebration, since no Amish settlement was complete, or even entirely functional, without one. Under normal circumstances they would have posted one of the boys at the ridgetop to watch for his wagon. They would have spotted him ten miles away, and by the time his wagon reached home there would have been a crowd waiting to greet their new preacher. Even if the lookout reported that Caleb was alone, the whole settlement would have gathered to find out why. But no one turned out. He saw smoke rising from a few cooking fires at the Amish farms, but despite good weather there didn't seem to be anybody out and about. Very disturbing.
Finally, after he turned in and made it halfway up his driveway his wife and children straggled out of the house to greet him. Even from a distance he could see Martha wringing her hands, and the dark look on all their faces filled him with dread. Something was terribly wrong.
He stopped short of the house, and Mamm hurried up to him as he climbed down.
“Diphtheria,” she said, fighting back tears. “Many of the children have taken ill.”
It knocked the wind out of him for a minute. This was worse than anything he could have imagined. “We must get a doctor,” he finally said.
Mamm shook her head. “One is already here. He came from Saltillo late Saturday in a fancy automobile and stayed up all night giving everyone shots. He's over with the newcomers just now, at the camp. Already one of the new children died.”
“Who? Which one?”
“Little Enoch Byler. He was three. We buried him yesterday.” She lowered her head, struggling to speak. “There will be more.”
Caleb removed his hat, hung his head and was silent for a few seconds. When he raised his head again he said, “I guess this explains why no one is asking about the minister.” Important as the preacher was, his absence paled in comparison to a diphtheria epidemic.
“But wait,” Caleb said, “the doctor got here on Saturday? Why, I left on Friday and nobody was sick yet. How did a doctor get here so fast?”
“The doctor in Agua Nueva wired him when Aaron got there. He asked him to bring medicine to Paradise Valley.”
“Why was Aaron in Agua Nueva?”
Mamm dabbed at her eyes and struggled for control. “Because the first ones to get sick were Ada and Little Amos. Kyra saw the sickness on them two hours after you left. She didn't think Little Amos would live. The poor child was very sickâit's worse for the little ones. Aaron and Rachel took him to Agua Nueva in the surrey. And Ada, too.”
The color drained from Caleb's face. “So, are they all right? Where are they now?”
Mamm snuffled, fighting a sob. “They haven't come back yet. We've heard nothing. We only know they were with the doctor in Agua Nueva on Friday, and he had medicine. The doctor who came here said that if everything went right they might be home yesterday.”
Caleb nodded, staring down the road to the west. “If they don't get back tonight, I'll go looking for them in the morning. Could be they're broke down someplace in the mountains.”
Miriam was standing next to her mother, listening. “Where
is
the minister?” she asked.
Caleb sighed. “Ervin Kuhns and his family didn't ever come to the train station in Arteaga. Me and Domingo waited for them all day Saturday, thinking mebbe they just missed the train and took another one later, but they never showed up. We went back on Sunday, but they still didn't come yet. In the afternoon, finally some passengers from Nuevo Laredo told us the border was closed and no Americans were allowed to cross just now. They didn't know why, but when I talked to the stationmaster he said sometimes they close the border to keep a disease out.”
Miriam nodded slowly. “There was a medicine show in the hacienda village last weekend, and one of the women told Kyra they just came from the States. Maybe the medicine show people were the ones who brought it here. So what will Ervin do?”
“I don't know,” Caleb said. “They might wait in Laredo for the border to open up again, but I don't think soânot if they don't know how long it will be. If it was me, I'd get on a northbound train and go back home. Anyways, Ervin's got his own wagon. If they do make it to Arteaga, he can get here without our help. It just won't be as easy.”
Mamm kept staring down the road to the west as if she could will the surrey to appear out of the mountains with Aaron, Rachel, Ada, and Little Amos in it.
“I'm mighty worried about my children, Dat. I hope they're all right.”
Caleb put an arm around her shoulder. “Don't fret, Mamm. I'm not worried a bit so long as Aaron is with them. They'll be fine.”
A dark sense of foreboding gripped his heart like a cold fist, but he hid his dread behind a reassuring smile. It was his job. Mamm looked to him for hope.
Rachel clung to the horse's mane, leaning forward as much as she could, doing anything to put some space between her and the weasel who shared the saddle with her. Her hands tied, his arms around her holding the reins, there was no way to avoid him, no way to keep his hands from groping. Every time she straightened up he put his face next to her ear and whispered his dark desires. His breath was foul, his body odor worse.
“
Mi pequeña fresa madura
,” he kept calling her.
My little ripe strawberry.
Just let me die,
she prayed.
Please, Gott, just take me home.
They rode for hours on the narrow trail without stopping, up and down rocky ridges, through mountain passes and along babbling bottomland creeks, working their way ever northward. In the evening, before the light completely failed, they finally stopped in a little mountainside meadow and made camp. The weasel dragged her from the saddle and threw her down, turning his back on her while he tended to his weary horse. No one seemed concerned that she might run. They were in the middle of the wild mountains and there was no place she could go.
One of the men had shot a young deer with his rifle an hour before they stopped. Now El Pantera slung the field-dressed carcass on the ground in front of Rachel, untied her hands and pulled a hunting knife from a sheath at his backâthe knife with the rosewood handle, the one that felled her brother. She was sitting cross-legged on the ground when he threw the knife so that it stuck firmly and quivered an inch from her knee.
He leaned close with that evil grin and said, “The knife is for skinning the deer, señorita. If you get other ideas, I will use it to skin
you
. Now get to work. My men are hungry.”
She picked up the bit of rope they'd used to bind her hands and used it to tie her hair back out of the way while she skinned the deer. One of the bandits built a fire, and an hour later the deer hung spitted on a green sapling, roasting over the fire.
They had built the fire between two downed logs, and after they had tended and tied all their horses they came one by one and sat on the logs warming themselves in the glow of the fire. Darkness had fallen, and two rows of faces leered at Rachel, laughing raucously at their own rude remarks as El Pantera made her come and sit beside him on the log.
They passed around a canteen, and when El Pantera had drunk his fill he handed it to Rachel. She didn't want to drink after these animals but her throat was parched and she didn't know when she would be offered water again. Their eyes were on her as she wiped it clean with her sleeve and turned it up.
She got a big mouthful and almost swallowed before the pain hit. Fire exploded in her throat and she pitched forward instantly, spitting, gagging, coughing uncontrollably. Some of the bandits laughed so hard they fell backward off the log.
Pounding on her back, El Pantera grinned widely and said, “Our little strawberry doesn't like mescal. I suppose it is an acquired taste.”
Later, after they had eaten most of the venison and some of them had begun to yawn, they wandered off to get their bedrolls from the piles of gear and saddles by their horses. El Pantera went away for a minute but he returned shortly with a set of wrist irons dangling from his hand. He held them up to show herâtwo iron cuffs shaped like Ds, with a short length of chain between them.
“Such a pretty girl,” he said. “I want you to have these bracelets. My gift to you.”
He threw a horse blanket down next to a skinny pine not far from the fire, made her sit on the blanket and wrap her arms around the tree. He put her hands in the cuffs, took a little T-shaped tool from his pocket, inserted it into the barrel of the D and gave it several turns until the latch clicked.
Squatting beside her, gazing into the simmering fire, he tucked the tool into his vest pocket and said, “We would not want you to wander off and get eaten by wolves in the night, señorita. I think you will be warm enough here. Sleep well. I have big plans for you.”
His ominous words haunted her for a long time after he walked away, for she had heard rumors about El Pantera and the kind of business he engaged in. She tried very hard not to think about it, to concentrate on finding a way to get comfortable lying on a horse blanket with her arms wrapped around a tree. Her life was overâshe had already accepted thatâbut the endless possibilities of horror and torture that awaited her frail human form before she would be allowed to die plagued her thoughts for a long time. Again, she prayed for death, for release. Eventually she cried herself to sleep.
âââ
She jolted awake, but she couldn't move. Someone was straddling her, holding her down, and his hand was clamped over her mouth so she couldn't scream. The fire had died to embers and in the darkness she couldn't see his face, but she knew the smell of his putrid mescal-tinged breath.
“Make a sound,
mi pequeña fresa madura
,” the weasel whispered, “and it will be your last, do you understand?”
Wide-eyed with terror, she barely had the presence of mind to nod. She understood, and she did not doubt for a second that the weasel would do as he said.
His hand moved away, but in the next instant he stuffed her mouth full of a filthy rag and tied a bandanna tightly around it so she couldn't scream even if she wanted to. She would have. She would have screamed loud enough to shake boulders loose from the mountains and then welcomed his knife, but all she could manage was a muffled moan.
Rough hands grabbed her ankles, flipped her onto her back and yanked so that her arms stretched tight against the handcuffs. She could only make out the dimmest silhouette in the paltry light cast by the dying embers of the fire, but it was enough.
She raised a leg and kicked hard. Her foot found his chest and drove him backward, but in the next instant he bounced back and punched her in the jaw, his foul breath brushing her face with dire threats.
Dazed now, and helpless, she turned away from the weasel and stared at the dying campfire. The patch of simmering coals pulsed a dim red. In the moonless night it was the only thing Rachel could see, so she fixed her gaze on it, hoping to find a way to remove her mind from what was about to happen.
But the coals moved. Against the blackness, as if by magic, a burning ember the size of a man's fist floated slowly up out of the ashes and hovered all by itself, three feet above the ground. The coals crumbled, the campfire drew breath and a little flame sprang up.
Startled by the sudden brightness, the weasel turned his head to look, and as he did the ember arced through the air like the end of a baseball bat and caught him flush on the jaw. Sparks flew. The weasel flipped over and landed on his back, partially on top of her. The flames of the campfire leaped higher, and in their light she saw El Pantera standing over them both, holding a thick branch like a spear, the pointed, smoldering tip a foot away from the weasel's face.