This is a work of fiction and any resemblance to any real person is just amazing. All characters are eighteen years and older.
*
Ryan sat high up on the hill behind the old cabin. He had hauled the horses from the ranch to the cabin earlier in the morning and then had returned with hay and feed for them. Even though his uncle told him that it worked, Ryan was still surprised when, with just a few pumps on the handle, water flowed into the trough from the old cast-iron pump.
He had almost forgotten what quiet, real quiet, was like. No man-made sound was audible. He strained his ears for the sound of anything mechanical and was pleased that none could be heard. The rustle of the leaves moving in the breeze and the buzz of insects were the only sounds. The hands of time seemed to have moved backwards by a hundred years and more.
The horses were gathered around the trough where Ryan had placed their feed and seemed to be enjoying a leisurely lunch. At least that's what it looked like from where Ryan was sitting.
Ryan's thoughts turned to Jessi. Something had happened just before Jessi and Becky had left for Missoula. He had tried to get Jessi to tell him what it was, but all she would say was that when the time was right, she would tell him, and that it had nothing to do with their relationship.
They hadn't had much time together since Ryan got out of the hospital. It seemed lately that there was always something going on to keep them apart. He missed the early days of the summer when there always seemed to be time for them.
He plucked a piece of dry grass and began to tie it into little knots. When he was done, he looked at the once-straight piece of grass and thought it resembled his life in a way, what had been something fairly simple had slowly complicated itself as the summer rolled by. He still had no idea how to approach his uncle and aunt with the possibility that he and Jessi were not related in any way.
The sound of a laboring truck engine broke into Ryan's thoughts. He looked down the hill and towards the road. He recognized the sound of the motor before the truck became visible. Ryan stood up and brushed the grass from his jeans and made his way down the mountain.
If there was one bright spot, it was that Jessi and Becky should be home this evening. He had missed Jessi. It was more than just the sex, a lot more. It was just being around her and being with her that he missed. He missed her smile, hearing her laugh. He missed seeing her come downstairs in the morning for breakfast and having her wink and blow him a kiss. He missed the way she would reach under the table and squeeze his knee.
The truck emerged as Ryan got down to the cabin. Long wooden poles were stacked in the bed of the truck and hung over the cab and Walter's old horse trailer was hooked onto the. The truck pulled to a stop in front of the corral and Walter and Charlie got out and stretched..
"We made it!" Walter announced.
Ryan shook both Walter and Charlie's hands. "I'm glad you did." He pointed at the corral. "I've got feed and water in there for the horses."
"Good." Charlie nodded. "You two take care of the horses and I will look for a good place to set the
tipi
."
Walter shook his head and laughed good-naturedly. "Oh sure, whenever there is work to be done."
"This is serious business." Charlie pointed around the clearing. "One must find the best spot."
Walter rolled his eyes and then directed his comments to Ryan. "And at his age, that means a spot close to the outhouse."
Ryan couldn't help but laugh, and he found the thought of Charlie making a midnight dash to the outhouse somewhat amusing. Hell, it was downright funny.
After the horses had been unloaded, Walter backed the horse trailer next to the corral and unhitched it. They looked around for Charlie and found him staring at a piece of ground in the far corner of the clearing.
"I wonder if that's the spot?" Ryan asked.
"I dunno," Walter replied. He then yelled down at his father, "Is that where you want to put it?"
Charlie looked up from the ground and waved Walter and Ryan over.
"Guess that's it," Walter stated. "Hop in the truck and let's get this thing set up."
"Look." Charlie pointed at the ground. A ring of rocks was visible on the ground beneath the grass. "It looks like someone set up camp here once before."
Ryan stared at the rocks that Charlie had found. "Do you think that was before or after the cabin was built?"
"After," Charlie replied. "If it was before there would be more than just one
tipi
set up here."
"Would you mind giving me a hand unloading the truck?" Walter asked.
"No, not at all," Ryan replied.
They unloaded the long poles first, and then the bundles of canvas that had been carefully folded and bound with rawhide laces.
Walter pointed to three poles that were tied together at the top. "This goes up first."
Once the poles were vertical, Walter told Ryan, "Hold on to this one and I'll spread the other two out."
Walter set the two other poles so they were equal distance apart, and formed the diameter for the base of the
tipi
. A long rope hung from where the poles were tied to the ground. Walter pointed to the remaining poles. "Okay start placing them about the same distance apart."
Ryan followed Walter's lead and began to set the other poles in place. After the last pole was set in place, Walter grabbed the rope that was hanging and began to slowly walk around the base of the
tipi
pulling it taut with each step. He made three trips around the base before he stopped.
Charlie had been busy getting the lift pole attached to the canvas. He walked around the poles and inspected each one.
Once he was satisfied, he looked at his son. "Okay, I'm ready."
Ryan watched as the father and son lifted the canvas into position and began to cover the pole frame. A sudden gust of wind threatened to carry the canvas sailing.
"Ryan," Charlie called out. "Get in the middle and see if you can't hold the canvas down."
Ryan laid himself against the
tipi
with his arms spread wide and tried to keep the material flat against the poles. Several times the wind threatened to take both Ryan and the canvas for a ride.
"Come around front," Charlie called to Ryan. When Ryan got to the front of the
tipi
Charlie pointed to where the canvas joined. "Pull tight on that as high as you can reach. Walter is going to put in the lacing pins."
Walter was inside of the
tipi
, standing on a stepladder. He started from the top and inserted the lacing pins one at a time. Once that was complete, he emerged from the interior of the
tipi
and admired his work.
Two poles remained on the ground and when Ryan asked what they were, Charlie replied, "Those are for the smoke flap. See how the ends of the pole are tapered and smooth? There are pockets sewn into the canvas for the poles."
With an expert eye, Walter guided the pole into the pocket and set the pole into the correct position. Last came the medicine pole and once it was set in place Ryan stood back and looked the
tipi
over. The bottom two feet of the canvas had been dyed a dark red, and the top was covered with stylized drawings of hunters on horseback chasing buffalo, and of other scenes of traditional Lakota life.
"Who did the paintings?" Ryan pointed at the
tipi
.
Charlie grinned. "My wife and Walt's wife."
"Wow!" Ryan shook his head in admiration. "They did a good job." This was the first time Ryan had been up close to a
tipi
and he was surprised at how large it was.
"I'm gonna put the interior up," Charlie remarked. "You can help Walter stake it down."
Ryan looked at the edge of the canvas and wondered how they were going to stake it down as there were no grommets or holes of any kind along the bottom of the
tipi
.
Walter saw the look on Ryan's face and chuckled as he carried a sack of rocks and a bag with wooden pegs and ropes.
"Come here." He motioned to Ryan, opened the sack of rocks and pulled one out.
From what Ryan could see all of the rocks were about the same size and very smooth. He watched as Walter wrapped the rock with the canvas and then tied one of the ropes around it. Walter then drove one of the wooden stakes into the ground and lashed the rope to the stake. He looked up at Ryan. "See, Lakota technology at work."
Ryan nodded. "I'm impressed!. Do you want me to give you a hand?"
"Sure," Walter replied. He took another one of the rocks and showed Ryan how to tie the knot. "We want two of these between each pole. Try to space it out so they are even."