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Trapper White
Trapper White
Trapper White
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Trapper White

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Nature had infused the woods this day, with a mind boggling display of plumage. The forest was clamoring with the screech of blue jays, chattering sparrows, and trilling robins. Catbirds meowed along the creek and orioles sat in rows along split rail fences. Huge obsidian crows caw cawing to, or at each other. Cowbirds hopped along in front of and behind the riders, flashing their iridescent blue-black wings in sporadic pseudo-flights every few feet along the road. Wild canaries in flashing flocks of brilliant lemon yellow dipped and flowed into sight across the meadows under a lovely pale blue sky. The beautiful, soft, haunting coo coo coos of the doves, or rain crows, as the people here called them, came from deep within the trees.
They came from under the trees, out of the brush and weeds, by the side of the road, in the late evening twilight, as quickly and unexpectedly as copperheads, their movements masked by the increased darkness of the overhanging trees and the sound of the rushing water in the creek. Armed with pistols and knives, one grabbed the reins of the frightened saddle-horse as the two other men fastened hold of the rider.
Like famed author Louis LAmour, Lucas presents rough and tumble protagonists, often in a historical context, who overcome mounting odds. Lucas characters also present an alternative to modern day role models.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 22, 2016
ISBN9781490760544
Trapper White
Author

J.P. Lucas

The author has a wide range of life experience: raised in a near nineteenth-century Appalachian mountain environment; an American history student and a revolutionary war descendant; a student of human characteristics and behavior, lifelong businessman, father, mountain horseman, hunter, pilot, machinist, heavy equipment operator, MSHA instructor, mine owner; and an inventor, writer, speaker, and musician.

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    Trapper White - J.P. Lucas

    Chapter 1

    T he man on the Big Bay horse thought of the beauty of this place as he passed along the road. The huge leaf-covered limbs of the trees formed a natural, overarching, canopy-covered avenue.

    The host of flowering plants, the fresh water, and the wonderful oxygen-saturated mountain air along this near wilderness track created an incredible and wonderful incense that richly filled the senses and charged the heart of the forest rider.

    Along the creek, the sounds of the water flowing in the tumbling deep blue streamwere multitude. Some were the mere tinkling sounds of tiny wind chimes; others bubbling, some booming, more crashing cymbals in the back of the orchestra countered by deep kettle drum thumping and boisterous gurgling. The slight kerplip of drippings blended with the constant, urgent, got-to-get-on rushing of the powerful water---the wonderful performance of a beautiful backwoods symphony.

    This year, as spring had come into full hot summer, he had seen catfish brought out of the creek that wound head to tail around the inside of a wooden washtub.

    Hunk, with his homemade three-pronged gig, had already been gigging in the creek for frogs. A few times, so far, this summer, he had brought Sarah brimming buckets full of the most tender, delicious frog legs in the world.

    She was the consummate backwoods chef, and the result of Hunk's gig trips and Sarah's expertise with a cast-iron skillet, lard, and salt always resulted in a repast fit for a king.

    He thought of how well a man and his family could live in this country, even now when times were hard; only the lazy need go hungry.

    All summer long, the berries came on: blackberries, raspberries, blueberries, huckleberries, gooseberries, and tiny wild strawberries. Then the apples! Some so sweet they tasted like they were pumped plumb full of brown sugar juice, and some so sour they'd make a pig squeal. There were wild crabapples to mix in with the jams and jellies to set the jell. This was God's good country.

    Pawpaw fruit, hickory nuts, black walnuts, white walnuts, or butternuts as some called them. The most delicious chestnuts in the world: beechnuts and hazelnuts. Not a few of them but tons upon tons of them---an overabundance of God-given bounty.

    Ahh, and then the harvest! Squirrels made fat on the bounty of the forest---huge red fox squirrels and sleek gray squirrels. Floured or rolled in eggs and cornmeal and fried, either kind made the best breakfast gravy in the world.

    Fresh venison---deer with that strip of tenderloin along the backbone stripped out and sliced into sections and then split into butterfly tenderloin steaks. Sarah dipped them in brown flour and fried them in a skillet with a little lard and just the right amount of salt. Browned! Lush, succulent tawny brown they came out, cooked to a delicious tan clean through and so tender they came apart with your fingers. Or she would bake the whole tenderloin smothered in onions and great big quarters of cabbage laid on top.

    Bear meat! She'd clean the fat off for rendering and bake the meat with wild onions and whole potatoes served up with hot fresh cornbread and butter. A feast that satisfied a man's appetite, forged strong bones and layered them in sinew, and filled his blood with super fuel to power the machinery.

    Then there was fried rabbit with mashed potatoes and greens: poke greens, dandelion greens, turnip greens---you name it!

    Onions, about the size of a black walnut, boiled and smothered in homemade butter served up with fresh pork. Fat hog meat sweetened by the thousands of pounds of sweet chestnuts, hickory nuts, beech nuts, and acorns they fed on as they ran free in the woods. Meat that melted in your mouth and served with shoestring beans, cornbread, and delicious cooked or raw sweet onions and more potatoes. What king could want more?

    Sometimes the big man wondered if the eating was the best part of all this---or was it the smelling? As it wafted along the side of the mountain, the aroma of Sarah's cooking was enough to make a man want to quit plowing or cutting timber way too early of an evening. Ah, but he waited, and then in the end, the eating sure made the waiting worthwhile. The sights, sounds, and smells of the country were enough to make one's heart swell.

    Then there were the intangibles. The know-how to preserve all that bounty for winter---drying, smoking, salting, pickling, jarring, and jelling. Primitive frontier knowledge passed down from Mom and Dad, Grandpa and Grandma, from one generation to the next.

    Here, there were totally unique things---things that bound a man to the land. There's something about the mountains that got hold of his heart, his very soul. Also, there was a sustaining something that lent a great deal of security to one who had loved ones planted beneath the shelter of the giant protecting arms of the forest within a stone's throw of him. It is something that gave him deeper roots than the newcomers in the land.

    As the horse picked out the trail in the oncoming twilight, he thought to himself; he had much to be thankful for. When his grandpa had come here in the last century, he had to slip around the country with both eyes and ears open just to keep his hair. In fact, some of his kin hadn't slipped around quite well enough. Some were buried here in hallowed ground. Others had simply not come home. No one ever found where they had fallen. Finally, the fight between the red and white man had ended.

    Then another war had come and gone. Next came the recent war like none before in this part of the world---a war among neighbors, a war that should never have happened, a war that pitted the country against itself. Now that war had been over for quite a while, and the country, at least in some places, was beginning to heal.

    For the most part, folks could travel around the country on their business without fear. There were a few outlaws in the country, but they mostly didn't interfere with much, generally fighting among themselves, mostly robbing and killing one another. When they stepped out of line and got out of their little circles, the law was harsh---so harsh, in fact, that a lot of felons didn't spend much time in jail, if they got that far. Other than the scoundrels combing the country to try and steal by scandalous purchase what a man had rightfully come by, it was a fairly peaceful place to live.

    With it getting on to evening, the big man had only stopped for a couple of minutes at Hawks Place, and now, from somewhere behind the high walls of the forest, an early ranging owl inquiringly let out a whoo into the coming darkness, and a friend, or maybe a relative, sent a whoo back.

    Late for getting home, sparrows and finches flitted about like small windblown leaves, almost invisible now against the deep darkening forest. More heard than seen, they sought the inner branches of the evergreens and rhododendron for a safe hideout for the night. Somewhere behind him, a whip-poor-will sounded into the twilight. Off toward the hollow to his left, a rain crow with its beautiful long coo called for his mate, heavenly music on such a beautiful night.

    Ahead, just at the end of sight, in the branched over-tunnel road that he followed, appeared a small dark spot in one of the snaking tracks of the wagon road. Mr. Rabbit stood on his hind legs, looking like a coffee pot with long upright ears from this distance, turning his head and sniffing the air, trying to make up his mind. Should he go up or down the creek tonight? Which offered the best option for fine, tender young green sprouts or clover? Seeing the horse and rider coming toward him from down the creek, he decided to be on the safe side and the best possible pickings tonight would probably be somewhere up the creek.

    Just before the rider came to the log and plank bridge, a fish jumped in the creek, fell back with a slap on the water, and settled back into the depths, another satisfying morsel in his gullet as he finished his hunt for the last of today's skimmers that skated across the water in the slow spots and backwaters.

    Now time was on the rider's side. Another hour or a little more and he would be unloading his horse and mule. He was so close to home now that he could---at least he thought he could---smell, almost taste, Sarah's out-of-this-world cooking. He marveled at the way she always fixed him a special supper when he had been away from home even for just a short time.

    He wondered---actually, tried to guess---what she would have fixed this time and thought that if she hadn't done anything, it would be enough just to see her, just to hold her another night. Sarah, his precious Sarah. Where had she come from? She was so different.

    He had often heard her as she prayed, how she thanked God for him, and for him to hear her pray that way was worth more than all the wealth of the world. Yet he had never been able to find the words to express his gratitude for her simply because what he felt for her went beyond his vocabulary. He had never learned how to say what he had no words for. He just knew his heart was tied to Sarah's, and God in heaven understood his gratefulness.

    Then like horsemen everywhere, his attention came back to the road he traveled as his horse pricked up his ears and cocked his head higher, looking up and down the creek as they crossed the bridge. The laden mule had held back momentarily at the first hollow clomping of the horse's feet upon the planks of the bridge and then stepped up his pace to hurry across close behind the horse.

    Chapter 2

    T hey came from under the trees and out of the brush and weeds by the side of the road as quickly and unexpectedly as copperheads, their movements masked by the increased darkness of the overhanging trees and the sound of rushing water in the creek. Armed with pistols and knives, one grabbed the reins of the frightened saddle horse as the two other men fastened hold on the rider.

    The horse was fighting a sudden ghost who had materialized out of the near darkness, rearing in his fright and striking out with his forefeet to rid himself of the half-seen demon in the flapping black coat that was trying to drag him back to the ground by the reins of his bridle.

    The rider was struggling with two other groping and grasping imps, attempting to drag him from the saddle. Suddenly, loosening a foot from his stirrup, he kicked the head of one of the men, striking his attacker in the eye with the hobnailed heel of his boot. Ab Hawkins screamed and grabbed his face momentarily, and then anger overcoming his pain, he, becoming furious, returned to the fight with a knife in his hand.

    Delmer Cowley had managed to stop the fighting horse in its attempt to flee. Enoch, the third man, still unwounded and pulling on the horseman, had managed to partially unbalance and almost drag the rider from his saddle.

    Ab Hawkins, with the wounded eye, was now attempting to leap onto the horse behind the saddle and keep from entangling himself in the lead rope that was attached to a frightened, kicking, rearing pack mule while trying to stab the rider in the back with his knife. His first attempt resulted in a painful and dangerous wound to the rider's back. In his effort to evade the man behind him with the knife, the rider jumped from his horse, wrapping his arms around Bryant, the man pulling on him from the ground, struggling to unhorse him.

    Finding himself atop Bryant when they hit the ground, the now desperate, wounded rider drove his oaken fists into the face of the man with all his might, hoping to take one man out of the fight. Bryant stopped moving, but the man with the knife, in the meantime, had leaped from his half-seated position on the horse and managed to stab him in the back once more.

    Hawkins's attempt to kill the man from the horse resulted in the rider falling forward on top of the motionless Bryant. Hawkins stabbed him in the back again.

    The rider now lay motionless.

    Cowley, who had been holding the horse, had released it in a general effort to help his companions, and both animals had immediately fled---packs and stirrups flapping---up the road in the direction they were traveling before the attack.

    For some moments, Cowley and Hawkins stood shocked, almost unbelieving, at the ferocity with which the rider had instantly defended himself and the damage he had been able to inflict in such a few seconds.

    Hawkins, with the wounded eye, knew he had lost the eye and suffered a broken bone in his eye socket, possibly more. He thought his head was going to burst. He wondered how he had ever been caught by the man's boot heel so perfectly that it smashed his eyeball. He was screaming, mad, holding his face, half seeing, kicking at the man, his former adversary, in horrendous fury and agony. Bryant, the man beneath the rider, was still motionless, his facial bones crushed by the hammer blows of the rider.

    They had been warned. This man would be no easy target, but how tough could a hick farmer be? Then they were not amateurs either. They were professional killers---hired to do what should have been a simple and quick job.

    They had not used their guns for fear of being heard, and now two were badly wounded.

    Cowley, the horse holder, the only one unhurt, rolled the body of the man they had attacked, whom they assumed to be dead, off his partner.

    Having no choice, he forced Hawkins, despite his agony, to put aside his pain and rage and help him drag the rider into the creek and into a place that would at least keep the body from being found immediately, which should give them some time to get away.

    Coming to the spot they had chosen for the attack, they had left their horses about a half mile down the creek, in a seldom-traveled hollow where they were unlikely to be seen or heard by anyone. Now two of them were badly wounded, and Bryant was hurt so badly, in fact, that they were unable to revive him.

    They decided they would drag their compatriot into the brush, and then Cowley would help Hawkins, with his wounded eye, to his horse and come back with his own horse and another for the unconscious man. Cowley could then get his two frightfully wounded friends to a safe place and go for help.

    In the end, it was a wasted trip back for Bryant. The old convict no longer needed help. He needed what he had never shown anyone else: mercy---God's mercy, in fact, for he was dead.

    Cursing their luck and loading him on his horse, Cowley hauled Bryant about halfway back to where Hawkins waited, wading the horses in the creek, to cover his trail. Removing Bryant's body from the horse, he carried him up the creek bank and dropped him behind a rotting log on the side of the hill.

    Kicking dirt and leaves over the body, Cowley slid down the creek bank to his horse, mounted his horse, and, leading Bryant's, went quickly on down the creek. He rode up the now pitch-black hollow where the pain-crazed Hawkins waited, tied Bryant's horse behind that of Hawkins, took the reins of Hawkins's horse, and led him away uphill and into the dripping mist of the dark forest.

    They were several miles away from the scene of the fight when Cowley, tired to the bone from his exertions and nursing Hawkins, finally stopped to tie him on his horse to keep him in the saddle. Then while listening to his incessant moaning, he realized that they had not completed their job, and now even their pay was at risk. They were supposed to steal the man's money and equipment. This was supposed to have looked like a robbery.

    Chapter 3

    S itting in the office wing of his mansion on a hill in Pittsburg, watching the sun go down, Ross Connelly waited for news from West Virginia. This part of the country was in boom time. The steel mills in the East were feeding off the land hunger of the immigrants in the West. Western Indian tribes that had held millions of acres of land, whole sections of the country, were being decimated or were already eliminated.

    Railroads were vying with one another, like any other school of sharks, for rights of way into new territory. Millions of tons of steel were being turned into rails, engines, railcars, and cranes for the Western expansion. Steel was now replacing wood as the major component of ship building.

    Riveted steel bridges by the thousands were being built. Steel was gold in cold gray form. Coal was essential to the making of steel. Good coal---excellent coal---was worth a fortune. Pennsylvania coal miners, as miners everywhere, were eking out an existence, creating millionaires.

    West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia had some of the best-of the-best developing coal. The Southern businessman had been hopelessly crippled by the war. There was little or no competition from them. They had been financially destroyed. The land and all it held now belonged to the Yankee businessman who knew how to acquire and develop it.

    Though Western Virginia, now West Virginia, was officially a Northern state, the people were, for the most part, hardscrabble hillside farmers. As such, they were in need of work and cash in a desperate way. When given a job in a coal mine, they could be worked hard and, in fact, could be worked like slaves. The best part was that one could pay them with scrip.

    Scrip was one of the most ingenious designs ever for buying men. In fact, the labor and loyalty of whole families could be bought for money one could print or mint himself.

    As far as labor went, a man could not get a better deal---hire the worthless hillbillies for slightly more than they were worth, nearly nothing, and then pay them in scrip that was no good except in a man's own store.

    Build them a shanty, a rough sawn clapboard house on the side of a yellow clay mud hill to live in, and deduct the rent for the pigsty from their scrip wages. This right to own slaves was granted by a government that had the gall to claim to have eliminated slavery.

    A better scheme had never been devised to get rich if a man had a place to start---cheap labor and a high-demand product. Ross Connelly had found a place that had the product and the labor. In his mind, he had already laid claim to it.

    Another one of the good things about mining coal was that it was a market that fed on itself. Coal was shipped on freight trains that consumed tons upon tons of coal a day to make steam for the engines that pulled them. Someday, soon, railroads were going to come within spitting distance of what Major Connelly thought of as his mother lode.

    Maj. Ross Connelly knew where some of the best coal south of the Mason Dixon lay and had set in motion a plan to acquire it. He had done his homework.

    During a stopover in Charleston, he had heard a conversation among a couple of backcountry farmers that had aroused his curiosity. They had only mentioned in passing that they were trying to lay in enough of White's coal to carry them through the winter. They had said that it sure made starting a fire a lot easier if you used White coal. One could nearly light it with one of them newfangled sulfur-head matches, and it surely did burn hot and clean.

    After a few casual inquiries around town, Connelly had found where White coal lay. Having checked out the survey records and deeds to the land, he had decided that what Eugene White had was worth a further investigation. He had stayed in the area and had hired a man who lived along the river a few miles from the place to purchase a sack of coal from White. He was astounded at the quality of the coal and, from the courthouse records, at the amount of it that White owned.

    He immediately wired for two of his coconspirators to come down from Pittsburg to plan a strategy for getting the coal out of the mine that he and his partners now envisioned as their own to the river and the railroad that was planned to run to the North. Most of the coal from the Kanawha was shipped downriver on barges. Connelly wanted his coal to go north to Pennsylvania and maybe as far north as New York, although there was nothing wrong with the downriver market either. His planning for the development of his fortune eliminated nothing.

    Ambling around the country for the next several days, they came to the conclusion that they had discovered El

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