“That’s Babe hosting the spillover,” she says, rising to pull her stockings off. Her legs look even skinnier without them on. “She’s gonna be over to get me if we don’t go out.”
She puts on two sweaters and oversized men’s pants and her mukluks and Hod scouts the stairway so they can hit the street unnoticed. With Hod’s parka on her and the hood up Addie Lee gets barely a glance from the stunned-looking celebrants emerging from the saloons and dance halls, though a bob-tailed mastiff trails close, sniffing at her till Hod chases him away. They walk north of town, avoiding the wagon road, until Skaguay is only a hundred columns of woodsmoke in the sky behind them.
She plays at blowing puffs of breath into the air, turning in a circle to look up at the treetops, then stops and stares into his face. “McGinty aint really your name, is it?”
“No.”
“Most of the percentage girls, they got a different moniker up here than what they were born with. A lot of the men too, hidin from the law or their wives or whatever. Like there aint no rules cause it’s not really America.”
“There’s rules,” says Hod. “It’s just different people in charge of them.”
They start to climb, circling around the boulders and felled trees, the sharp air feeling good in Hod’s chest. Inside there is smoke everywhere, cigars and pipes and woodsmoke and his clothes all smell like smoke but here, where the stampeders have never been, there is only clean wind shaking the tops of the spruce trees.
There are women in the camp who aren’t for rent, not the way Addie Lee is, who do laundry and cook and wash pots and sell goods or run boarding houses, but they dress against the cold and wear big shoes and none of them, not a one, shows the least bit of interest in Soapy’s other nigger. It was the same in Butte, the same in every mining camp he’s ever worked in. He climbs slightly ahead when it gets steeper and reaches back to pull her up.
“I suppose you come here for the gold,” she says.
“Me and fifty thousand other halfwits.”
“So what happened?”
“I got to the top,” says Hod, “but I never got over.”
He motions for her to stop, taps his mitt against his lips.
There is a bear coming down the slope.
It is immense, dark brown flecked with gray, swinging its head and grunting now and then as it rubs its flanks hard against the tree trunks.
Hod feels Addie Lee slip her arm into his and pull tight, so little that is actually her inside the layers of clothing, a thrill shooting through him, and then the bear sees them or smells them, stopping to stand, steadying itself with a massive arm against a spruce tree, its tiny, stupid eyes trying to comprehend.
“We’ll get out of your way,” says Hod in as steady a voice as he can muster, then pulls Addie Lee sideways, neither of them taking their eyes off the beast.
It makes something between a bark and a grunt and drops back onto all fours, pawprints dwarfing the tracks of their feet as it descends on the path they took up. They watch till it is lost in the trees. Addie Lee has tears running down her face but doesn’t seem scared.
“To think there’s such a thing in this world,” she says.
They climb up a ways farther, not talking much, angling sideways so they won’t surprise the bear on the way down. Where there is enough snow she tries to slide down on her back, but it’s too powdery.
“There’s never a crust on the snow here,” she says. “It’s dry as sawdust.”
“You don’t get a thaw, you don’t get a crust.”
She is in a dark mood by the time they come back to town, making their way through the badgering merchants and frantic, ignorant stampeders.
“It’s just what men turn into when they get up here,” she says, studying them, her face mostly hidden by the parka hood. “Or maybe that’s what they are all along and they just start to look the part more. All hairy and stinky and grunt and snuffle and climb on you and grunt and snuffle and climb off and go digging in the ground.” Smokey waves to Hod in passing from the seat of the wagon, signaling that there is work to be done. Addie Lee doesn’t notice. “And every once in a while they get sore and tear each other apart.”
Hod walks her up the stairs to her room in the Princess Hotel and leaves her there, panning her washwater for gold dust.
Father—
Please forgive the tardiness of my correspondence, but we have been in transitu of late and the regular mail schedule is not in effect. As you may surmise from the postmark on this missive, I am in St. Louis, part of a specially chosen unit testing a novel mode of military transport.
Our commander Moss, of whose organizational skills I have written before, has long entertained General Miles with the notion of replacing the temperamental, noxious, and oat-burning horse with a vehicle less expensive in its upkeep and more in tune with our age. Thus was born the Infantry Bicycle Corps. Though the cavalry was afforded the first opportunity to participate in this great experiment, they proved much too fond of their equine cohorts (and, I must say, of the dashing figure they cut mounted upon them) to accept. As the colored troops invariably are saddled (apologies) with whatever duties our paler brethren-in-arms abhor, and as Lt. Moss was the originator of the scheme, the honor of implementation has fallen on the 25th.
Junior kneels, tablet resting on a stump, writing. He has been left to guard the wheels while the rest of the squad are off tom-catting on the east side of the river. He had taken it for a display of trust, the lieutenant recognizing the most responsible of his troopers, till Moss went off with the mayor’s party and the others started in about all the high times he would be missing. Telling him to polish their wheels while he was at it, Army humor never subtle or kind.
The Corps has, previous to my enlistment, cycled dispatches about the Bitterroot Valley and taken one longer journey, which I am very sorry to have missed, to the Yellowstone area and its attendant natural wonders. A pair of the lieutenant’s stalwart wheelmen having since mustered out of the service, I volunteered myself and Pvt. Scott (who, by the way, sends you and family his warmest regards) to take their places. My own recreational familiarity with the device gave me a leg up, so to speak, on poor Royal, but in no way prepared me for the rigors of extensive cross-country cycling. We pedal our steel-rimmed Ramblers over the roads, such as they are, in these vast, unpeopled spaces of Montana, whenever they are available and in passable condition. Otherwise it is the bumpy course through scrub and sagebrush, flushing rabbit and antelope in our path and deploying rapidly to “hand-over” our metallic steeds when we encounter the occasional stock fence. On these training jaunts we carry only our bedrolls, on a rack bolted in front of the handlebars, and our rifles slung over our shoulders.
Junior kneels before the stump, writing, because he cannot sit, may never, in fact, be able to sit again. There is no glory in his wound, the simple mention of being “saddle sore” drawing the wrath of the former cavalrymen in their party, and he has resolved himself to suffer in silence. He talks to Royal, of course, and Royal seems to listen, but there has been a reserve in his friend lately, an edge of What have you gotten us into? Not just the cycling, but the whole idea of joining the 25th in hope of heroic action when there has been little more than monotony and cursing and scutwork of the lowest variety.
It wants a battle.
“The bicycle requires neither water, food, nor rest,” General Miles has written, and at times it appears that the same qualities are expected from the colored soldier. Our training at the wheel is additional to our other duties at the fort, so as you may imagine only the most intrepid (some would say “ambitious”) of the enlisted men have stepped forward. Lt. Moss’s quest this year was a sojourn from Missoula to St. Louis (over 1,000 miles as the crow hobbles) and back, to demonstrate that the only limit to this method of transport is human “spunk” and endurance. We are principally under the tutelage of Sgt. Mingo Sanders, a veteran of some years who has distinguished himself, despite being nearly blind in one eye, in several of the regiment’s more trying engagements. Largely uneducated but possessed of an ample reserve of “mother wit,” he is a man the younger soldiers look up to — sanguine under pressure, resolute in action, a sympathetic guide to the rawer recruits.
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