Clyde Barlow exhaled an enormous cloud of fragrant pipe smoke, pulled at the brim of the filthy, brown cowboy hat, and smiled a toothless smile.
âSo, you bought that old lodge up on Crippled Pine Creek? Thatâs a piece oâ Teton County histâry âf âere ever was one. Yessiree, been there since WWI, and afore that, itâuz mining country. Up in them mountains thereâs a whole bunch oâ old, rotted-out cabins and them little mines them prospectors dug lookinâ fer gold. I suppose your lookinâ to get away from it all, just like the others.â
âNo, Iâm looking to bring a little of it to me. Iâm going to open up the lodge for hunting and fishing parties, as soon as I get it fixed up. Funny, the real estate agent didnât say anything about any mines on the property.â
The old man smiled again as he packed the nails and other assorted hardware in a cardboard box.
âWell, Harryâs sold that place before, so he oughta know âbout âem. Some folks think thereâs ghosts up there, the ghosts of them miners, least thatâs what they say. The young folks go up there neckinâ, and they claim toâave seen emâ. Harry probâly thought itâd queer the deal fâyou heard âbout that. Some folks is funny that way, âspecially if theyâve got some Injun blood. Never worried âbout it, myself, though, anâ my Grandma was a Blackfoot. Fishinâs too good up there to care about a few spooks.â
The pipe belched out another voluminous cloud.
âWell, that be all for ya today?â
Dave Morrison hadnât planned his life to include owning a hunting lodge. His plan was an MBA, a high-paying job as a stockbroker with a partnership sometime before he turned forty, and a life of ease beginning at fifty-five.
This spring had forced some changes to his plan. The markets were down, and clients werenât trading as heavily as the business plan had forecast. This meant the monthly profit figures were short, and Walters, the manager of the brokerage firm, had made a âsuggestionâ that all brokers should roll their accounts.
Dave knew he was a key account manager for the firm. Heâd brought a lot of investors to the brokerage, and his clientsâ trading generated better than half of the firmâs income. He had been there when Walters bought his way in, six years ago. What right did he have to tell Dave to screw the people who depended on his advice for their retirement income or for college funds for their children? On Friday, he told Walters he was taking two weeks vacation, and headed for his favorite spot on earth. He needed time to think, and Teton County, Montana was a place made for thinking. Dave had been fishing and hunting in that area for most of his adult life.
The hotel room in Choteau wasnât fancy, but Dave didnât need fancy. His favorite fishing spots beckoned during the day. After a good evening meal at the hotel restaurant, he read a little and then went to bed. Dave spent more time out of town than in the room. It was almost an accident that he looked at the real estate pamphlet over breakfast.
The place had five hundred acres that were mostly mountains, a year-round stream full of trout, and enough grassland and forest to attract deer, elk, and other game. His inspection of the lodge was a little disappointing. It needed a new roof and some way to get water from the stream, but he figured it might dress out in an acceptable, if really rustic, fashion. For the price, he couldnât really have expected more. On his final night in Choteau, Dave poured himself a double scotch and tallied his own investments.
It had taken another month to sell some selected stocks, the house, and most of his furniture. The convertible made a nice trade on a four-wheel drive pickup. Dave transferred the money to the bank in Choteau, and drove to his new home.
After nine weeks of hard work and several trips to Clydeâs store, the place was looking better. Dave had planned on at least a year of repairs before he could open the lodge, but it was now at least livable. The roof no longer leaked, and heâd replaced the rotted floor with new white pine planks. Water was still a problem, but Dave had located and repaired the old cistern put in by one of the former owners. A little plastic pipe would get water from the Crippled Creek to the cistern, and a hand pump would get it from the cistern to the kitchen. All this could easily be done before winter. The cold months would be spent fixing the interior. In spring, heâd place ads in several hunting and fishing magazines, and would hopefully host the first guests for deer season in the fall.
Dave and Clyde had quickly become friends. The old man was about eighty, looked at least a hundred, and belched vast plumes of smoke from the battered old pipe that seemed to be a part of his face. It had become a pleasure to make the long drive to the store even though it cost Dave most of a day to make the trip. Clydeâs son actually ran the store now, but Clyde still came to work every day. The old man was a volume of area history and myth.