OLD NATHAN by David Drake

The bed frame was covered with a corn-shuck mattress and a blanket so tattered that Bascom Hardy had abandoned it after his brother’s death. The cunning man remembered the image of Gray Jack cowering beneath the low bed, hopelessly slight cover but all there was . . . and sufficient, because the one/thing who entered the cabin the night of the new moon wasn’t interested in looking for whoever might be hiding.

The leather hinges had rotted off the chest by the sidewall. The lid hung askew to display a few scrappy bits of clothing. Gray Jack was too big to fit into the chest, but it had been just the right size for Mistress Fergusson.

Neither of Bascom Hardy’s two watchers had escaped, not in the end. One hanged and one raving; and a third, Old Nathan, waiting for his fire to burn down so that he could make ash cakes with the coals.

The cunning man sighed. He’d been afraid before, plenty of times; but he’d never been so fearful that he didn’t stand up to it. If there was a thing on earth he was sure of, it was that running didn’t make fear less, and standing couldn’t make it greater.

But that didn’t mean the thing you feared and faced wouldn’t eat you alive. There were false fears; but some were true enough, and there was nothing false about whatever came to this cabin for the bodyguard and the witch a month ago, and a month before that.

Old Nathan added more wood to the fire, then began a task to keep his hands full and his mind calm. As he worked, he clucked his tongue against the roof of his mouth and called softly, “Hey there! Anybody t’ home?”

“Who’s thet you’re speakin’ to, then?” the mule demanded from the other side of the closed door. Like everything else about the cabin, the door panel was crude but massively strong. It had wrought iron hinges and crossed straps of iron on the outer face.

“I reckon there might be somebody as could tell me about Bynum Hardy,” Old Nathan answered. “A squirrel, maybe, er a mouse.”

The mule snorted. “Naught here t’ bring airy soul,” the beast said. ” ‘Cept a man, I reckon, ‘n they ain’t got the sense God gave a rock.”

Old Nathan opened his mouth to snarl a reply; but when he thought through the mule’s comment, it was all true enough. No food, and shelter worse nor a log rotted holler. . . .

He went on with his task.

“Whut is hit you’re doin’ in thur, then?” the mule asked.

It occurred to the cunning man that his animal was uneasy, though there was little chance of a bear or a painter hereabouts. Bynum Hardy’s cabin was strengthened against human enemies, not beasts. . . .

“I’m pulling the charge from my rifle gun,” Old Nathan said. He tipped down the flintlock’s muzzle. The powder charge dribbled along the bore and out onto a square of hard-finished leather. From there he would transfer the powder back to the polished cowhorn whose wooden stopper measured the charge proper to this weapon.

“Whutever possessed ye t’ do sich a durn-fool thing as that?” the mule demanded in outrage. “Whut sort uv place d’ye think this is, anyhow?”

On the table before Old Nathan lay the ball and the patch lubricated with a mixture of butter and beeswax. He would not use tallow, anymore than he would eat meat; from a bird, a beast, or a human, it was all the same in his mind.

“Ifen I leave the charge in the bore overnight,” he said softly, more to himself than the mule, “hit’ll draw water ‘n rust. And besides . . .”

Firelight winked from fresh, unoxidized lead where the screw in the back of the cunning man’s ramrod had dug in to withdraw the ball. When he returned home, Old Nathan would recast the bullet; but—needs must and the Devil drove—he could use the ball as it was. Seated with the screw gouge down against the powder, it would fly true enough for the purpose.

“And besides,” the old man said, “I don’t reckon whativer comes ‘ll be much fazed by a rifle ball, so mebbe hit’s best I don’t put temptation in my way.”

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