Grandpa Henry shook his head then grinned at me. "Believin' it in yer head, but not quite in yer heart, then hearin' it made real does shake a body up. Now I know why y'all looked so odd when I told you the date. Still, after some of the stuff I've seen them Lakota medicine men do, I guess this ain't a hell of a lot more strange. "
He waved me toward the barn. "We still hafta find you some decent clothes and things."
After our mutual revelations, we walked on into the barn and over near the tack room. Grandpa started rummaging around in a stack of wooden boxes, pulling one out to the side every now and then. Soon he had three setting side by side.
"Here we go ... this is all the stuff the army sent back. It ain't much β not for the six years you've been gone. Well there's a small mercy ββ at least they didn't steal your guns or books. They even threw in your doctoring bag. Everything is here.
"You musta been well respected and liked for them to return everything you owned. Usually all that gets sent back to the family when a soldier is killed is the worst of the clothes. Troopers are not well paid and often come from poor circumstances. They rob their own dead, not just the fallen enemy. I saw a lot o' that when I was a lawman workin' out of the forts.
"Now then, the clothes look a might big but if we boil them and you wear them wet they should shrink a mite."
"You mean Clay's things don't you, gram β oops β I mean... Uncle Henry. Damn this is confusing."
"It sure is. You just look so much like Clay would have, if he had lived, and ... you're even a doctor."
"Well I'm not really a doctor. I just had a bunch of training in what I would call Battlefield or Combat First Aid, but compared to what they get now, probably as much or more than most of them around here. I've patched up wounds, removed bullets, sewn them up, treated sickness ... Hell, I've even delivered a couple babies."
"Shit, Son, that makes you about the best doctor in 200 miles, if not one of the only ones β there ain't many. And of those there are, you're prob'ly the only one with any
real
schoolin'. Some o' these quacks just bought a mail-order doctor's bag and hung out their shingle."
"Be that as it may, I'm still not really a doctor! Where I come from I'm actually a deputy sheriff and I thought, a good one."
"That's even better! This country can use more good lawmen. Since this damn gold rush, these hills'r full of no-goods, robbers, gamblers, renegades and murderers. Things are just getting worse with the Indians, too. A year ago there was about 800 white men in the Black Hills. The Indians didn't like it, but most of those whites were considerate and didn't cause much problems. Now we got more then
10,000,
and more pouring in everyday thinkin' they will strike it rich. Damn fools! Most of them will either starve to death or be killed! Can't they see the main ones to get rich are the ones selling to the miners β the storekeepers, saloon owners, gamblers, and whore houses?"
"Speaking of gold, I know where some can be found right here on this land. When I was ten, I went poking around in a old mine and found a small nugget. Dad found out and took a pine switch to my ass. I couldn't sit right for a week."
"Just leave that alone! We work for our money here and we don't need the trouble it would bring. Your Pa was right. Sounds like he knowed the trouble gold could bring and tried to stop it from happening."
"Well, how can I make a living here then?" I asked.
"Hell, you're a doctor and you seem to know your way around the ranch pretty well."
"I was born here and lived here till I joined the military. Except for a couple real short visits, here and gone the same day, this is the first time I've really been back since."
"What! This is family land! Why didn't you ever come back?"