Taz and Kodak
Montana Sky
By:
Rick Beck
(© 2019 by the author)
Editor:
Jerry
The author retains all rights. No reproductions are allowed without the author's
consent. Comments are appreciated at...
beck@tickiestories.us
Chapter 10
Sheriff and the Prosecutor
Taz rode down into the meadows to the ranch
house before breakfast. He found himself thinking about the food the general's
wife might provide. He didn't think of food all that often, because left to his
own devices it came out of a can, except when the general brought something up
when he came to see how he was.
The first appearance in court wasn't for another two weeks, but Taz had to
identify the culprit that tried to brain him with the wire cutters. It was all
part of a case being built against the rustlers. They no longer hanged rustlers
in Montana, but they did get stiff jail time for stealing valuable beef.
The general signed the central complaint, but the assault on Taz figured into
the charges and the time the men were looking at. Taz picked the three men he'd
seen at the fence out of three separate lineups. He sat with the general as they
listened to the prosecutor describing the case.
"We've got clear identification. The rustling charges carry substantial time.
The assault charge gives us a bit more leverage with the assailant, but as of
yet, we can't get anything out of any of them."
The sheriff was waiting at the jeep when Taz and the general came back to head
home.
"Gen. Walker, I've got a bit of news, and I don't know what to do with it."
"Sheriff Ward, what can I do for you?"
"I'm not sure you can do anything. Do you know Bob Meeker?"
"I've heard the name. I'm not up on my local officials."
"He's no official. He's an attorney that works exclusively for the White
Brotherhood. They have their place on the other side of the pass from your
ranch."
"Not familiar with it or him," the general said.
"White Brotherhood is a white supremacy group. Meeker is their attorney. They
bought a place out your way three years ago. We get alerts from the Justice
Department on local militia and militaristic groups. They're all mixed up in
mock military type activities."
"I see. Well, that's all fine, but what does it have to do with me?"
"Meeker is representing those rustlers. They're connected to the WB. They've
been rustling cows in the area to finance their activities. We're right long on
suspicion and right short on proof. We've tried to get a man inside their
organization, but they're pretty careful about who they take up with. We haven't
even got a look inside their compound. No probable cause."
"Sheriff, I don't see where this involves me or my ranch. I'm an old cowboy and
not into local politics. I pay my taxes, and I keep clear of trouble whenever
possible. If you have something else to say I suggest you get on with it. I got
cows to tend to."
"No, sir. I want you aware of what's behind the men who took your cows. They
might get out on bond, and the likelihood of them ever showing up for trial is
slim and less than slim. So, your herd isn't safe and those men are going to be
out there somewhere beyond my reach. I don't have enough to tie them to WB to
get a search warrant for their compound.
"The WB isn't going away and if we can talk the judge into holding onto the
rustlers, I'm going to need your help. The judge might respond to your request
to deny bond. So far we've been able to hold onto them, but I don't know how
much longer. Meeker is arguing for bond as we speak."
"Under those circumstances, give me the judge's name. I'll give him my two cents
worth, but I'll have to use you as my source of concern."
"No problem. He's already heard from me, but he isn't convinced yet. If I can
convince him they're likely to disappear because they are with the Brotherhood,
he might go for it. You calling to express your concern would make it more
likely. Your being willing to back the judge's play with that small army you got
out at your place would probably allow him to rest easier.
"We don't have a big budget to defend the jail, and at the moment I've got no
reason to suspect they're about to come take those boys away from me; but then
again, I don't have any reason to think they won't if they have a mind to."
"What do you think these boys are up to? What do they do?"
"They want to take the country back. Get it in the hands of the rightful owners.
If we were further south, the judges down there would cut those boys loose in a
minute. They're all right wingers and big believers in being armed and
dangerous."
"The Indians? Why would a white supremacy group want to give the country back to
the Indians?" the general wondered out loud.
"Indians aren't people to them, Gen. Walker. I can appreciate your sense of
humor, but white men are people. Everyone else is something else. They think
this is their country."
"Yes, lot of that going around. Doesn't sound like your average Sunday school
class. I think I'd like to keep an eye on those fellows if you don't object? I
may be retired military but I'm not without influence. I'm still a reserve
officer with a lot of cowboys that are reserve soldiers. Any breach of the peace
becomes my business."
"That's what I wanted to hear. I'll be bolder if you're backing my play. If I'm
right we'll be able to smoke those boys out of there and shut down the WB."
"Okay, Sheriff Ward, I'll do what I can. Keep me posted on this thing. I have a
communications man on duty at all times. You need a small army, I just happen to
have one. I'll see what I can rustle up from my side of the pass. I'll be in
touch. I won't move without telling you."
"Thanks, General. I was told if I explained it to you, you'd come through for
me. I feel a bit easier about this deal now. You don't want that crowd living up
there."
*****
Taz sat in the back of the jeep. Kendall
turned off on the mountain road to go back to the ranch. The general didn't have
anything else to say, but Taz could tell he was thinking about what the sheriff
told him. Random rustlers were one thing, but a dangerous organization rustling
to fund illegal activity was another.
The arraignment was scheduled in two weeks, and they'd need to go back to town
to be available for whatever might come up. The general made a statement about
the rustlers being a flight risk and their attorney objected, but the general
prevailed and bail was denied. This alarmed the rustlers, who didn't take it
well. Their attorney had obviously misled them.
There were some extra precautions taken to keep the herd closer to the house,
where the general's men could manage them and keep an eye out for anything out
of the ordinary. Orders were given over dinner as the general had side arms
taken out of storage for his cowboys to wear while on patrol.
The general didn't like having weapons out around the house but he was a
practical man, prepared for any contingency. There was the possibility he and
his men might be called on to go clean out a nest of desperadoes. Having
soldiers for wranglers meant there was a small army at hand should he need one.
He intended to be a rancher and nothing else, but something else always managed
to take place to remind him he was a general, and he came from a line of
generals, and saying he was a rancher didn't change that. He'd seen enough war
and dying, and long ago lost the taste for it, but no one was going to threaten
him or his ranch.
Taz saddled Cyclone after dinner and headed back for the mesa. It was the first
time his thoughts about Kodak went beyond missing him. For the first time Taz
wondered where Kodak might be. It wasn't a wonder if he was dead or alive, but a
wonder involving his whereabouts.
He didn't know it meant anything, except he felt differently, as he tried to
picture where his friend might be. Taz had never missed anyone before. He'd
never been as close to anyone as he was to Kodak, so missing him was no
surprise. It was the idea he was alive that surprised him. He wasn't any great
optimist. It went beyond optimism to a feeling he had and didn't understand.
That damn old Indian was still fucking around in his head, but how angry could
he get if it made him feel better?
He didn't mention his change of heart to Gen. Walker. The general saw Taz as a
pragmatist. It was how a general had to be to keep from getting in his own way.
Taz was realistic about his life, and not expecting too much from it was good
for him. Kodak was good for him.
He'd never gotten much of value out of life before Kodak. Each day was just a
new struggle. After doing his best to remain hopeful, once he'd heard Kodak's
plane was missing, Taz began to doubt. His heart was full of optimism, though he
kept it to himself because he was pragmatic.
If he told the general about his dream and his new feelings about Kodak, the
general couldn't help but wondering if the bottle of bourbon remained sealed.
Taz wasn't sure about the dream or its meaning. Thinking about it created doubt,
and so he didn't think about it.
The dream was part of it. There were other things. There was Medicine Band's
edict. There was Jeremy's visit, and the conversation about Medicine Band's
ability to go into the spirit world to bring back answers. There was nothing to
explain how Medicine Band knew anything about Taz. Not only didn't he mention
Kodak to anyone at the encampment, he didn't mention Kodak to anyone. He was
private, and it had nothing to do with anyone but the two of them.
Taz wasn't sure what he knew or how he knew it. He felt something. Maybe
Medicine Band was responsible. Maybe his own need to believe Kodak was alive had
him believing he was. No matter what the reason, he held onto his hope silently,
waiting for another sign.
The general had not mentioned Kodak, and that meant there was no news from his
connections with the Pacific Fleet. They had found nothing, which meant there
was no wreckage, which meant there was no proof Kodak was at the bottom of the
ocean.
With the rustlers caught, the fences stayed in good repair. Regardless of that,
Taz rode the fence line each day. When he was done riding fence to the north, he
rode the fence line between the mesa and the meadow, to make sure the cattle
were safely confined where the general wanted them.
Some days he took out Milkweed for this chore. Cyclone snorted and objected to
being left in his stall. And when Taz brushed and treated Milkweed
affectionately, Cyclone didn't care much for it, and so Taz would always brush
Cyclone last, making sure she had all the hay she wanted, which soothed hurt
feelings.
It was early the following week that he rode back toward the Indian encampment,
but the field where more than a dozen teepees had stood was empty. He sat for a
time, thinking about the events surrounding his visit to the temporary village.
It was difficult to be sure that what happened actually happened the way he
remembered it.
The evidence was gone. He rubbed the spot on his head where the wire cutters had
hit him. He wanted to believe Kodak was alive, but it had been a long time, and
he couldn't even pin down something that happened a week ago.
He pondered how long someone could survive out in the Pacific alone. As he rode
back toward the cabin his mind wandered, and he felt a bit out of sorts. He
decided to ride to the ranch house to see if he could get enough wood to build
the two horses a corral, where they could run during the day.
With the sound of wolves at night, he didn't want to let the horses roam free.
There was no guarantee they'd be there when he wanted one, so a corral seemed
like a good idea. He explained what he wanted to the general and he would have
the wood delivered about the time of the arraignment.
Taz collected a Winchester during his visit, in case the wolves came closer to
the cabin. He didn't intend to kill one unless it was necessary, but the rifle
created options that might be necessary. He also remembered the rustlers, and
didn't want to remain unarmed. He was having thoughts about things that could
happen, and he wasn't sure he liked it. Maybe it was because something happened
to Kodak.
The arraignment was routine. Gen. Walker and the sheriff objected to bond. Their
connection to the White Brotherhood was cited. Previous defendants with similar
connections had disappeared once they were released on bond. Attorney Meeker
objected, the judge overruled his objection, and denied the rustlers bond. They
were marched back to jail. The trial was set in 30 days.
Taz drove the wagon load of wood back up to the cabin with Cyclone walking
behind. He spent the rest of the afternoon piling the wood where he wanted it.
The weather turned warm and sunny, but the soil remained soft from the spring
rains that encouraged the grass to grow green.
Using a post hole digger in the soft soil, he planned the corral to be near the
canyon wall to offer the horses some shade for the really hot days. First came
the posts, and then he nailed the cross sections to fashion the enclosure. It
wasn't pretty, but it would keep them inside where they could exercise.
As he was working his way around to the front side of the corral, nailing the
wood as he went, Taz realized he wasn't alone. Jeremy was in jeans and a button
up shirt, while riding an Indian pony with no saddle.
"Need some help, cowboy?" Jeremy asked.
"Sure. Nothing like a little help to speed things along."
"For the horses?" Jeremy asked.
"Yeah, give them some running room."
Jeremy held up the wood for Taz to nail in place. It was late afternoon when Taz
drew some water for them as they went to sit on the front porch.
"Brought you some dried venison. You need a root cellar. Keep things cool. Do
you have a shovel?"
"Yeah, but I don't keep much in the way of roots," Taz said.
"It's a cool place where things will stay fresh longer. Roots, dried meat,
canned goods. It's cool storage, since your fridge don't work."
"Sounds like something convenient."
"Any news about your friend?"
"No."
"Any more dreams?"
"I don't know I'd call them dreams. I hear his voice at times. Not anything I
understand. It's just words. Sometimes it's in the daytime. He's saying Tazerski.
Wishful thinking I think. Why'd he be calling me that?"
"It's your name."
"He didn't use it. I don't remember him ever calling me that. He probably did,
but this is just like he's talking to me. Why would I be imagining him saying
something I know he never said?"
"When did you start hearing his voice?"
Taz sat for a minute, taking a long pull on his glass of water. He knew
precisely when it started, and he wasn't so sure that it wasn't a suggestion put
in his head by Medicine Band. The man had talked to him, and now Kodak talked to
him, but he wasn't there.
"The night I left the encampment. The night your father spoke to me."
"You said there was no one there, when my father spoke to you; but don't you
see, I never left the sweat lodge until you got up and left. The sweat lodge was
full and no one left but you. Your conversation with Medicine Band was taking
place in the spirit world. You were in the middle of the sweat lodge with twenty
other Indians and you're the only one that heard my father speak."
"That's your story."
"I've heard about it happening. I've done my best to have it happen to me, but I
can't let go of my reality. I can't do it and I think you did. I'm hoping I can
figure out how."
"Putting it that way, it's downright scary. I keep thinking I'm crazy. I just
want my brain back."
"The door has been opened. I don't know you can close it. You've got to accept
the spirits are present in your life. It'll make you crazy if you don't."
"That's your version. I've got my own. I don't plan to let spooks make a fool
out of me. I can do that all by myself. I don't need help."
"I'm fascinated, as a shrink and as an Indian. I don't know I understand, but
you're proof the spirit world exists. I want to know how you opened the door.
I'm not going to stop trying to figure it out. You're proof it can be done."
"I'm just a guy with a friend who is missing. I try to make sense of it as best
I can. What I hear in my head makes no sense."
"Not in conventional sense, but we don't know everything," Jeremy said
confidently.
This was as close as Jeremy could get to the answer he was seeking.
"I've talked with my father about it for hours. He thinks I'm limited by the
world in which I've lived. He says, I've lost my connection to Mother Earth and
all living things. I came home to get it back, if I ever had it. Now that I'm
educated, I want the knowledge my father has and could never get me to want to
see."
Jeremy knew his desire to be well-educated disconnected him from what he didn't
see as important when he was younger.
"My father says, by following the path I picked, I was always on a journey back
to my people and my roots. While psychiatry had little to do with what I needed
to find, what was in the mind, its capacity to see beyond any random boundaries
established for it, was key to the answers I seek. He's a smart man and I came
home."
"That's his story."
"Yes, it is," Jeremy agreed.
Taz was not an easy man to pin down. The more Jeremy prodded him the less he had
to say. Never having a great understanding of himself, or what came after
survival, survival was on his mind, which kept his life manageable.
Letting anyone know what Taz was feeling wasn't an easy proposition. It took Taz
a lot of years to figure out what he felt. Only because people asked him about
feelings did he wonder if he might have some. He didn't so much feel life as he
endured it for most of his childhood. There was one feeling he'd had and did not
like in the least, and that was pain. Only after meeting Kodak did he become
aware that life wasn't merely pain or no feelings at all. Once he met Kodak he
thought there might be more to life than survival.
The disturbing part of what had taken place in the sweat lodge was how much it
upset him. The meaning of it went far beyond his ability to understand it.
Discussing it wasn't on his mind. Being unnerved by hearing Kodak's voice
speaking his name so clearly to him, was.
Where his feelings ended and his brain power picked up left him a little short
in the substance department. Taz thought he had a firm grip on his life, but no
one had to tell him that hearing a voice he hadn't heard in a month saying his
name was impossible. He had been hit in the head with a pair of wire cutters and
all the weirdness since might be a result of that.
He wanted to believe it was the blow to the head that accounted for the voices
and the sleeplessness that came with them. If Kodak was talking to him, why
didn't he do it in the day time? What time was it where he was?
Jeremy wanted to believe some mysterious door had been opened to another world,
and Taz wasn't buying into voodoo. No, there had to be a reasonable explanation
that covered it all, but Taz was unable to come up with one. Silence seemed to
be the best answer when Jeremy claimed to know. What kind of shrink was he?
To be continued...
Posted: 03/27/2020