OLD NATHAN by David Drake

“Thet bullhide,” said the Baron, calculation underlying the appearance of mild curiosity, “hit’s somethin’ special, now, ain’t it?”

“Reckon it might be,” the boy agreed, glad to talk because it delayed by that much the next swig of the liquor that already spun his head and his stomach. “Hit was pegged up t’ Mister Nathan’s wall like hit hed been thar a right long time.”

“Figgered thet,” Baron Neill said in satisfaction. “Hed t’ be somethin’ more thin ye’d said.”

Bowsmith sighed and took another drink. For a moment there was no sound but the hiss of the lamp and a whippoorwill calling from the middle distance.

“Reckon I’ll take the hide with me t’ the barn,” said the Baron, reaching for the rolled strop, “so’s hit won’t git trod upon.”

The grandson holding the strip of hide turned so that his body blocked the Baron’s intent. “Reckon we kin keep it here en save ye the burden, ol’ man,” he said in a sullen tone raised an octave by fear of the consequences.

“What’s this, now?” the patriarch said, backing a half step and placing his hands on his hips.

“Like Len sez,” interjected the man with the lamp, stepping between his father and his son, “we’ll keep the hide safe back here.”

“Tarnation,” Baron Neill said, throwing up his hands and feigning good-natured exasperation. “Ye didn’t think yer own pa ‘ud shut ye out wholesale, did ye?”

“Bar’n,” said Eldon Bowsmith, emboldened by the liquor, “I don’t foller ye.”

“Shet your mouth whin others er talkin’ family matters, boy,” snapped one of the clan from the fringes. None of the women could be seen through the open door of the cabin, but their hush was like the breathing of a restive cow.

“You youngins hev fun,” said the Baron, turning abruptly. “I’ve got some candles down t’ the barn. I’ll jist study this”—he tapped with the pipestem on the pocket in which paper rustled—”en we’ll talk agin, mebbe ‘long about moonrise.”

Midnight.

“Y’all hev fun,” repeated the old man as he began to walk down the slippery path to the barn.

The Neill women, led by Mary Beth with her comb readjusted to let her hair fall to her shoulders, softly joined the men on the porch.

* * *

In such numbers, even the bare feet of his offspring were ample warning to Baron Neill before Zephaniah opened the barn door. The candle of molded tallow guttered and threatened to go out.

“Simp?” the old man asked. He sat on the bar of an empty stall with the candle set in the slot cut higher in the end post for another bar.

It had been years since the clan kept cows. The only animal now sharing the barn with the patriarch and the smell of sour hay was Bowsmith’s horse, her jaws knotted closed with a rag to keep her from neighing. Her stall was curtained with blankets against the vague possibility that the boy would glance into the building.

“Like we’d knocked him on the head,” said the third man in the procession entering the barn. The horse wheezed through her nostrils and pawed the bars of her stall.

“Why ain’t we done jist thet?” demanded Mary Beth. “Nobody round here’s got a scrap uv use fer him, ‘ceptin’ mebbe thet ol’ bastard cunning man. En he’s not right in the head neither.”

The whole clan was padding into the barn, but the building’s volume was a good match for their number. There were several infants, one of them continuing to squall against its mother’s breast until a male took it from her. The mother cringed, but she relaxed when the man only pinched the baby’s lips shut with a thumb and forefinger. He increased the pressure every time the infant swelled itself for another squawl.

“Did I raise ye up t’ be a fool, girl?” Baron Neill demanded angrily, jabbing with his pipestem. “Sure, they’ve a use fer him—t’ laugh et. Effen we slit his throat en weight his belly with stones, the county’ll be here with rope and torches fer the whole lot uv us.”

He took a breath and calmed as the last of the clan trooped in. “Besides, hain’t needful. Never do what hain’t needful.”

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