MATAGORDA
Major
Tappan Duvarney rested his hands on the rail and started toward
the low sandy shore. It was not what he had expected of Texas,
but whatever lay ahead represented his last chance. He had to
make it here or nowhere.
He listened to the rhythmic pound and splash of the paddle
wheels and looked bleakly into the future. Behind him lay the
War Between the States and several years of Indian fighting with
the frontier army; before him only the lonely years at some sun-baked,
wind-swept frontier post, with nothing to look forward to but
retirement.
When the war had broken out he was a young man with an assured
future. Aside from the family plantation in Virginia, his father
owned a shipping line trading to the West Indies and Gulf ports--four
schooners and a barkentine, and good vessels all.
Tap Duvarney had made two trips before the mast on the barkentine,
had taken examinations for his ticket, and had made two trips
as third mate, one aboard a schooner, and the other on the barkentine.
His father wanted him to know the sea and its business from every
aspect, and Tap liked the sea. He had taken to the rough and rowdy
life in Caribbean ports as if born to it.
The war changed all that. His sympathies and those of his
family were with the Union. He had gone north and joined up. Renegades
had burned the plantation buildings and run off the stock; one
schooner had been lost in a hurricane off this very coast, two
others had been confiscated by the Confederacy and sunk by Union
gunboats. The barkentine had disappeared into the mysterious triangle
south of Bermuda and left nothing behind but the memory. The last
schooner, beat and bedraggled, had burned alongside the dock when
the war came to Charleston. Tap Duvarney returned from the war
saddled with debts, his father dead, his home destroyed.
There seemed only one thing to do, and he did it. He went
back to the army and a series of frontier posts. During the nine
years following the war he fought Indians from the Dakotas to
Arizona. He managed to keep his hair, but picked up three scars,
one from a knife, two from bullet wounds.
Finally, his father's estate had been settled and he emerged
from the shambles with a bit more than seven thousand dollars.
It was then he heard from Tom Kittery.
Captain Wilkes stopped beside him now on his way to the pilot
house. Duvarney knew that Wilkes was worried about him, and genuinely
wished to help. The captain was a good man who had served on one
of his father's ships.
"You'll find Texas a fast country, Major. Do you have friends
here?"
"One . . . so far as I know. I met him during the war."
"You haven't seen him since? That's quite a while, Major.
Is that the man you've gone into a partnership with?"
Duvarney thought he detected a doubtful note in Wilkes's voice,
and he was not surprised. He was a bit doubtful himself from time
to time.
"I know the man, Captain. Whatever else he may be, he's honest
. . . and he's got guts. I go along with that."
"The cattle business is good," Wilkes said. "Indianola has
been the biggest cattle-shipping port in Texas for a good long
time, so I've had a good deal to do with it. I may know your partner."
"Kittery . . . Tom Kittery. Old Texas family."
"Kittery, is it? Yes, he has guts, all right. There isn't
a man in Texas would deny that. And he's honest. But speaking
as a friend, I'd never leave the ship, if I were you. Come on
back to New Orleans. You're a good man, and you know the sea.
We'll find something for you there."
"What's wrong with Kittery?"
"With him? Nothing . . . nothing at all." Wilkes glanced at
Duvarney. "I take it you haven't heard about the feud?"
Wilkes paused, then went on. "You're walking right into the
middle of a shooting war . . . the Munson-Kittery feud. It has
been going on since 1840 or there-abouts, and from the moment
it is discovered that you are associated with Kittery you'll be
a prime target."
"I know nothing about any feud."
"You say you knew Kittery during the war? He may have thought
the feud was a thing of the past because it seemed to be over.
Until the Kittery boys left for the war there hadn't been any
shooting for several years.
"In the years before the war the Kittery faction numbered
some of the toughest, ablest fighting men in Texas; so the Munsons
laid low and played their music soft. And when the Kittery boys
went off to the war, the Munsons stayed home.
"Even so, they kept quiet until Ben was killed at Shiloh.
That started them stirring around a bit, but it wasn't until Tom
was captured--reported dead, in fact--that they began to cut loose.
"They ran off a bunch of Kittery cattle, then burned a barn.
Old Alec, Tom's uncle, rode out after the Munsons and they ambushed
him and killed him. After that they really cut loose. They killed
two Negro hands who had worked for the Kitterys for years, and
burned the old home--one of the oldest houses on the coast.
"Cattle were beginning to be worth money, and the Munsons
thought they were rich on Kittery beef. Only somebody stampeded
the biggest herd one night and ran them into the Big Thicket.
Well, you don't know the Thicket, but finding cattle in there
is like hunting ghosts. The Munsons never were much on hard work,
and rousting those steers from the Thicket would be the hardest
kind of work. So the steers, and a lot of other cattle are still
in there."
"Maybe those are the cattle I bought," Duvarney commented
ironically. "It's my luck."
"Are you wearing a gun?" Wilkes asked.
"I have one." As a matter of fact, he had two guns. "From
what you've said, I should be wearing one."
"You should." Wilkes straightened up. "I'm going up to take
her in, but my advice to you is: stay on the ship . . . If you
do leave her, be ready for trouble. They laid for Johnny Lubec,
and they laid for Tom. They were waiting for him when the boat
docked . . . my boat."
"Tom?"
Wilkes smiled grimly. "Tom was no fool. I told him what had
happened to Johnny, so he left the ship as we were going past
the island, entering the bay.
"The fog was thick that morning, and he lowered himself over
the side on a raft we'd built for him, and paddled ashore. He
slipped ashore on Matagorda Island, and nobody knows the island
better than Tom. It's long, but so narrow you wouldn't think a
man could hide there, but he managed it. Anyway he was still alive
the last time we were here, and I hope he still is."
"You mentioned Johnny Something-or-other?"
"Lubec. Johnny wasn't a Kittery, just an orphan kid they took
in and treated like one of the family. Folks said that Johnny's
pa was one of the Jean Lafitte pirates.
"Anyway, Johnny grew up with the Kitterys, so when he came
home the Munsons were laying for him. They shot him down and left
him for dead, they went off to have a drink, and Johnny crawled
away. He got to the house of an old Indian who lives on the Black
Jack Point, and the Indian cared for him.
"The Munsons were fit to be tied when Tom gave them the slip.
If they'd known Tom was alive they would never have reopened the
fight, not even with Jackson Huddy or the Harts around to help.
At that, they almost got Tom."
"What happened?"
"Tom rode over to his old home. Nobody had told him the place
was burned out, and I guess he figured some of his people might
be there. He rode home and the Munsons were laying for him. They
heard him coming and shot him out of the saddle, put two bullets
into him.
"Jim Hart and two renegade riders of the Munson crowd were
there, and when Tom fell they just knew they had him. They ran
in on him and he killed one of them and burned Hart a couple of
times. Then he crawled to his horse, pulled himself into the saddle
and rode off.
"Tom must have figured he was dying, or he wouldn't have done
what he did. He rode to the Munson place and hollered up the folks.
Well, they'd no idea Tom was even alive. Word hadn't got back
from Indianola yet, so old Taylor Munson, the bull of the woods,
came to the door. Tom told him who he was, and shot him down.
And then Tom dropped form sight."
Tap Duvarney stared gloomily toward the nearing shore. He
had bought a partnership in a herd of cattle to be driven to Kansas
. . . not a feud. He wanted no part of it.
"Months went by," Wilkes went on, "and nobody saw hide nor
hair of Tom. The Munsons hunted him high and low, and finally
they were ready to believe he was dead. Cattle and become big
business, so the Munsons rounded up a herd and started for Kansas.
When they were close to Doan's Store, Dale Munson rode over to
pick up the mail and some tobacco, and ran right into Tom Kittery.
"First any of the Munson crowd knew of it was when Dale's
horse came into camp with Dale tied over the saddle. There were
two bullet holes in Dale's chest you could cover with a silver
dollar."
"You mentioned a Jackson Huddy," Duvarney said.
"He runs with them, and after old Taylor Munson was killed
Huddy sort of moved into command. And I mean it is a command.
"When it looked like the fight was going their way, Munsons
began showing up from all over. I'd say there were forty or more
gun-packing men in the clan. And they've played it smart. Two
of their kin are elected to office, a sheriff and a judge. Another
one is a deputy over to Victoria."
When Wilkes had finished speaking he went to the pilot house,
and Tappan Duvarney lingered by the rail.
He had no choice, he was thinking. Every cent he owned beyond
what he carried in his money belt--and that was little enough--was
invested with Tom Kittery, who was supposed to be buying cattle
and hiring an outfit.
It was an odd friendship that had developed between the two
men. Tap Duvarney, then a lowly lieutenant in the Union forces,
had been sent south on a secret mission. His southern accent was
perfect for it, as was his knowledge of the country. Trouble developed
when he ran into Captain Tom Kittery. He captured Tom, but he
was more than a hundred miles from the nearest Union outpost.
He had a choice of turning Tom loose, which would mean his
own pursuit and capture, shooting him in cold blood, or trying
to take him back. Tap Duvarney decided on the last.
On the way, although Tom was continually trying to outwit
Tap and escape, the two developed a respect and a liking for each
other. During the long hours en route, Tom talked a good deal
of Texas and the cattle business, suggesting that if they came
out of the war alive they should become partners. And that had
been the beginning of it.
Walking back to his cabin now, Tap Duvarney dug down into
his sea chest and got out a Russian .44 Smith & Wesson. The holster
was worn from use, but he belted it on. He hesitated a bit over
the second pistol, then thrust it into his waistband.
Pausing before the mirror, he straightened his cravat, and
studied the hang on his coat to see if the pistol showed a bulge.
It did not.
He turned from the mirror, gathered up his gear, and swung
his sea chest to his shoulder with practiced ease. Then he picked
up the carpetbag and walked out on the deck, placing his things
near the gangway.
Several passengers had come out on the deck to watch the steamboats's
approach to Indianola. Most of them he knew by sight and had measured
and catalogued them. All except two fell into familiar categories.
One of these was a tall, wiry man in a tailored black broadcloth
suit, a hawk-faced man with a saturnine expression, as if he viewed
the world with wry amusement. The other was a girl.
She was young and beautiful in the way a ranch girl is beautiful
who does not know the skills or artifices of the city. She was
blonde, with blue eyes and a clear fresh complexion, but she looked
somewhat sullen now, and seemed to be approaching the Texas coast
with no anticipation of pleasure.
Several times Durvarney had caught her eyes upon him, showing
curiosity but nothing more. He lifted his hat. "Ma'am, I presume
you are acquainted in Indianola?"
"Yes, I am," she answered. "My home is in Texas."
"A fine state, I've heard. I was wondering if you could tell
me where I could locate Tom Kittery."
Her eyes were suddenly unfriendly. She looked at him, a hard,
measuring glance. "If you are looking for Tom Kittery you will
have to find him yourself. If there is anyone who knows where
he is, I don't know about it."
"I see. Well, no harm done. I expect he will find me soon
enough, when he knows I am here. He has enemies, I believe?"
"He has . . . too many of them."
Then they stood silently together, watching the approaching
shore, and Tap found himself wondering about her. She was dressed
neatly but not expensively, in the style of a ranch girl going
to the city, or coming back from a visit. From her attitude, she
was not happy about coming home.
"You enjoyed New Orleans, ma'am?"
She turned quickly. "Oh, I did! It's a wonderful place, so
many people, beautiful clothes . . . so many nice places to go--if
there was somebody to take you."
"You have friends there?"
"I have an uncle and aunt there. I'm afraid they did not approve
of a lot of the most exciting places."
"Quite properly," Duvarney commented dryly. "The most interesting
places in New Orleans are no place for a young girl.
"As for me," he added, "I look forward to Indianola, and to
Texas."
"You're going to stay there?"
"I hope to. As a matter of fact, I have some investments there.
An investment, I should say. In cattle."
She looked at him. "You did not mention your name. Or where
you were from."
"Sorry, ma'am. The name is Tappan Duvarney, and I am from
Virginia."
"You're Tap Duvarney?"
He was surprised. "You've heard of me, then?"
"I'm Mady Coppinger." She glanced quickly around to be sure
no one else was listening. "Tom Kittery is my . . . he is a friend
of mine. He told me about you. As a matter of fact," she added,
somewhat irritably, "he has been talking of very little else since
you decided to come down.
"Mr. Duvarney, you must understand something. Tom Kittery
is a hunted man. The Munsons are looking for him and when they
find him they'll kill him. If you want to stay alive, don't you
dare mention his name, or they'll be gunning for you."
"I will have to find Tom."
"Don't you go asking for him. I'd say you'd best hire yourself
a rig . . . or a horse and ride south. Take your time. Ride south
toward Mission River. If nobody stops you keep on riding, but
don't be in a hurry. Tom will find you."
Buy
Me! | View
Cart | Checkout
|