Hawken Fury (Giant Wilderness Book One) Read online




  “Nate spun to confront an enormous Blackfoot bearing down on him like a berserk buffalo bull. The brave swung his tomahawk at Nate’s face. Ducking, Nate pointed his flintlock and fired.

  “Struck in his left shoulder, the Blackfoot jerked with the impact. Spurting blood like a fountain, he grimaced, but otherwise ignored the wound. Nothing would stop him from sending the hated white man into the spirit realm.

  “Crimson drops sprinkled Nate’s cheeks and chin as he lunged to one side and tried to stab the Blackfoot in the ribs. Even though wounded, the brave was able to dodge nimbly out of harm’s way. For a heartbeat they faced one another, the Blackfoot crouched, ready to strike.

  “Growling like an animal, the Blackfoot sprang forward, his tomahawk aimed straight for Nate’s head …”

  Although he frequently had to battle savage Indians, wild beasts, and hostile elements, Nate felt the freedom he’d gained was worth it. But when an old love arrives, Nate learns that the deadliest foe can come in the guise of a trusted friend, and his hard-won freedom can be traded away for a few pieces of gold.

  WILDERNESS GIANT EDITION

  HAWKEN FURY

  By David Robbins Writing as David Thompson

  First Published by Leisure Books in 1992

  Copyright © 1992, 2016 by David Robbins

  First Smashwords Edition: January 2016

  Names, characters and incidents in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead is purely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information or storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the author, except where permitted by law.

  This is a Piccadilly Publishing Book

  Series Editor: Ben Bridges

  Text © Piccadilly Publishing

  Published by Arrangement with the Author.

  Dedicated to Judy, Joshua, and Shane,

  and the memory of Albert Lawrence Robbins.

  A boy never had a better father.

  Chapter One

  The bear was near.

  Nathaniel King halted at the base of the towering mountain and tilted his head back to survey the dense forest above. A big man who was broad of shoulder and narrow of hip, he wore the typical attire of those hardy breed of men who lived in the remote Rockies in the year 1836: buckskins. Moccasins covered his feet, while crowning his mane of long, dark hair was a buffalo-skin cap. Slanted across his muscular chest were a powder horn and a bullet pouch, both used when loading the powerful Hawken rifle clutched firmly in his brawny right hand. A butcher knife hung from a beaded sheath on his left hip, and wedged under his wide leather belt above his right hip was a tomahawk. Tucked under that same belt, one on either side of the big buckle, were two matching flintlock pistols.

  Nate’s green eyes turned to the ground at his feet and he studied the clear tracks left in the soil by the black bear he had spent the better part of the morning tracking. Only last night the bear had paid his cabin its third visit in as many days, badly frightening his horses. Worse, the bear had torn down a buck he had hung up to bleed the day before, and managed to rip off a haunch before Nate roused from a heavy sleep and rushed out to confront it. But in the dark the bear had fled before a shot could be fired.

  Now Nate hefted his Hawken and started up the slope. He wished he had brought his dog, Samson, a brute of a canine able to hold its own against any wild animal in the mountains, but he’d left Samson at the cabin because he felt his wife and seven-year-old son were safer with the dog around.

  It was rare that a black bear gave him any trouble. Quite often he had to contend with prowling grizzlies, marauding wolverines, or packs of hungry wolves. Black bears, though, were more timid than grizzlies and by and large left humans alone.

  From the size of the tracks Nate knew he was after a large male, one weighing upwards of five hundred pounds. Since he’d never seen its spoor in the vicinity of his cabin before, he surmised the bear had recently moved into the area and established itself in a convenient cave or cavity in a large tree. All he had to do was find the lair and he wouldn’t have to worry about any more nocturnal visits from this particular bruin.

  The tracks skirted thickets and trees in a meandering course that gradually climbed higher and higher. As with most bears, this one had been following its nose to whatever interested it, which most of the time happened to be rotting logs it tore apart to get at beetles, crickets, and grubs. Standing trees also drew its interest; the bear peeled off the outer bark to get at the sweet layer underneath.

  Nate knew the beast had not been in any great hurry. Obviously, it did not expect to be pursued. With luck, he would find it sleeping and dispatch the nuisance with a single shot to the head. While black bears were not as ferocious as grizzlies, they would fight when cornered and their teeth and claws could easily slice a man to ribbons in no time flat.

  He heard the flapping of wings and paused to watch a pair of ink black ravens soar overhead. The regarded him with curiosity, then swerved and swooped out over the valley below, their twin shadows flowing over the terrain beneath. If they kept going the way they were, in another five miles they would fly over his cabin.

  Ahead appeared a clearing. Nate slowed and examined the tracks. They angled to the right and he did the same. Minutes later he reached a section of the slope where massive boulders dotted the earth, and the tracks led into the very heart of the monoliths.

  Frowning, he pressed on, holding the rifle close to his chest. The press of the boulders didn’t allow much room for movement, and should the bear burst on him suddenly he must be ready to employ the gun instantly.

  For over fifty yards he wended deeper into the maze. At times the boulders were so closely spaced that his shoulders brushed on each side and he marveled that the bear had squeezed through. Animals never ceased to amaze him. They were routinely capable of feats he would have considered improbable if not impossible. Mountain sheep could traverse sheer cliffs with ease. Panthers could cover twenty-four feet at a bound. Grizzlies could scoop out a hole in the earth large enough to contain a man in the span of seconds as they burrowed for rodents.

  Nate walked into a circular gap ten feet in diameter and stopped to scan the boulders in front of him. No sooner had he done so than a harsh growl arose to his left. A tingle ran down his spine as he spun and leveled the Hawken, his thumb cocking the hammer before he completed the turn.

  Barreling out of a space between two vertical slabs of rock was the black bear, a massive bundle of sinew and flesh capable of matching the speed of a galloping horse. Its dark eyes blazed fury and its mouth gaped wide, exposing its tapered teeth.

  There was no chance to take deliberate aim. Nate could only point the rifle and fire. The Hawken belched flame and lead and the ball smashed into the black bear’s head just above the left eye. But the bear had gained too much momentum to be stopped by the impact. Snarling, it closed.

  Nate had a horrific vision of the bear’s wide maw, and then the bear slammed into him with the force of a steam engine, catching him on its right shoulder. Teeth bit into his arm and he was lifted bodily from his feet and rammed into a boulder. Jarred to his core, Nate felt the breath whoosh out of his lungs and he lost his hold on the rifle.

  The bear, snarling louder, drew back and opened wide to bite again.

  Dazed though he was, Nate knew he must move or die. He frantically hurled himself to the right and heard the bear’s teeth snap shut on empty air. Landing hard on his shoulder, he rolled and scrambled to get away, feeling a
damp sensation where the bear had bit him.

  He inadvertently bumped into the bottom of another boulder, and wound up flat on his back with the enraged bear padding slowly toward him. His hands closed on the smoothbore single-shot .55-caliber pistols, a matched set he had purchased years ago in St. Louis. Whipping both out, he extended his arms, cocked both hammers, and took hasty aim on the bear’s head. It was no more than a yard off when the pistols boomed, the sound of their blasts magnified by the encircling boulders.

  One of the balls struck the bear in the right eye. The other caught it in the nostrils. Staggered, the bear halted and tossed its head from side to side as if warding off annoying flies. Blood poured from both wounds. It growled and stepped back, then reared onto its hind legs

  Nate dare not try to reload. He let go of the pistols and drew his knife in one hand, the tomahawk in the other. Rising, he sprang in close and buried the tomahawk in the black bear’s chest. It swiped at him, its heavy paw striking him on the side of the face and knocking him to the ground.

  The world swirled as if in the vortex of a tornado and Nate lay still, stunned and helpless. He heard the bear snort, heard its footsteps, and then something lightly touched the sole of his left foot. Dreading the worst, he braced for the sharp pain of the bear’s teeth ripping into him, but nothing happened.

  After what seemed to be an eternity but couldn’t have been more than thirty seconds, the dizziness abruptly ceased. Nate rose on an elbow and stared at his bestial adversary. The bear’s nose was less than an inch from his foot, its lifeblood already forming a puddle. It was dead.

  Nate rose unsteadily, a pounding in his ears from the blood rushing in his veins. His limbs trembled slightly and he leaned against a boulder for support. That had been much too close for his liking. If the bear had been a shade quicker it would now be feasting on his entrails.

  It often disturbed him how a man could lose his life in a twinkling if he wasn’t supremely careful, especially in the vast mountains where beasts and hostile Indians alike conspired to make every day an exercise in self-preservation. A man had to always be alert, had to always be on watch for those little things that frequently meant the difference between continued life and death. A bent twig, a patch of crushed grass, or the smudged mark of a print in the dirt might be all the advance warning a man had that enemies lurked nearby. Thankfully, Nate’s years in the Rockies had endowed him with razor-sharp reflexes, or he would long since have become food for worms.

  He took a deep breath and straightened. With the bear disposed of, he should get back to his family. First, though, he must tend to the butchering. Since bringing a packhorse into the maze of boulders would be impossible, any meat he wanted to take out must be carried on his shoulders. He set to work skinning the beast, first by rolling it over and then slicing his keen knife into its thin summer coat. After removing the hide he placed it to one side, flat on the ground with the hair underneath. Next he fleeced off the fat, then carved off an estimated ninety pounds of prime meat, which was as much as he could comfortably carry over five rugged miles. He carefully wrapped the meat in the hide.

  Before venturing out of the boulder field he took the necessary time to reload all three guns, wedged the pistols under his belt, and cradled the Hawken in the crook of his left arm. Then, with the bundle of meat held at waist height so he could see clearly in all directions, he retraced his path down the mountain.

  After the close call he felt invigorated, imbued with an enhanced appreciation of life, a reaction he knew many of his fellow mountaineers like-wise experienced after similar situations. Facing the Grim Reaper made a man realize how sweet and precious simply being alive was, and he gazed about him as if viewing creation for the very first time.

  Chipmunks scampered on nearby rocks. A squirrel ran from limb to limb in a high tree. Perched on the limb of a pine was a mountain jay. And to the south a solitary eagle soared, seeking prey.

  The sky was a striking sea of blue through which floated pillowy clouds. A refreshing breeze from the northwest rustled the leaves and tall grass.

  He strode briskly along the valley floor. In the distance, situated past where his cabin was concealed in the trees, lay a large lake, its surface shimmering in the sunlight. He had planned to go fishing that afternoon for their supper, but now juicy bear steaks appealed to him more.

  His thoughts strayed to the upcoming Rendezvous and he grinned in anticipation. The annual gathering of mountaineers, both the company men and the free trappers, was the big social event for every white man living west of the mighty Mississippi. According to the word he had received from his aged mentor, Shakespeare McNair, this year the Rendezvous was to be held at the mouth of Horse Creek on the Green River, in the vicinity of Fort Bonneville.

  Nate had three hundred and twelve beaver pelts he was anxious to sell. The money would buy much-needed supplies and finery for the cabin. He hadn’t told Winona because he wanted to surprise her, but he’d ordered a pane of glass to be brought in with the supply train. For years they’d covered their window with a leather flap that barely kept out the blistering cold wind in the winter and did little to deter the flies and mosquitoes in the warmer months. The glass pane would be a rare treat, one of the few luxuries they permitted themselves.

  When he’d initially arrived in the Rockies, he’d been amazed at how simply the Indians and mountaineers lived. If they ate regularly and had a shelter to protect them from the elements, they were satisfied. How different it was back in the States! Particularly in the East, where the people were so caught up in making as much money as they could and living in fancy homes with servants at their beck and call to handle those chores disdained as menial labor.

  In New York City he’d seen all too much of that avarice and the attendant lust for luxury. His own family hadn’t been rich by any means, but they’d associated with the powerful and the prominent and circulated in elevated social circles because of his father’s business and personal contacts. It was through his father that he’d met the Van Buren family and the woman he had almost married.

  It was odd, he reflected, that after so much time had elapsed he still thought of Adeline now and again. Not that he regretted having left her to seek his fortune on the frontier, but he often wondered what had become of her. Surely she had found another man and was happily married, probably with five or six children and a fine mansion in an exclusive section of the city.

  In a rush of memories he recalled how his Uncle Zeke had written him from St. Louis, urging him to come west and share in a treasure Zeke had found. He remembered his secretive departure from New York, and the letters he had written his parents and Adeline explaining the reason for his leaving and detailing his promise to return one day a rich man.

  In a sense, he owed Adeline a debt of gratitude. It was due to his desire to give her the kind of life to which she had grown accustomed, a life of wealth and ease, that he’d taken Zeke up on the offer. If not for Adeline, he would have stayed in New York and gone to work for her rich father. He never would have met Winona, never known true happiness.

  Of course, he reflected wryly, if he had known that Zeke’s so-called treasure was actually the gift of untrammeled freedom, he might not have been so eager to set forth into the strange and dangerous realm beyond the borders of civilization. He’d expected to share in a gold strike or become partner in a fur company. Never in his wildest imaginings would he have expected to become a free trapper with an Indian wife.

  So he owed Zeke a debt too. A debt he could never repay. Which reminded him. He needed to put fresh flowers on Zeke’s grave.

  Suddenly he halted and stiffened, anxiety blossoming at the sound that came from the direction of the cabin, a sound that carried far in the clear mountain air.

  The sound of a shot.

  Chapter Two

  He broke from the forest to the south of his cabin and raced around the corral containing his horses, the Hawken leveled for immediate use. Expecting to find his loved on
es under attack by Utes or a marauding grizzly, he drew up in surprise on seeing the two visitors, a man and a woman, who stood chatting with his wife near the cabin door.

  The grizzled man turned and beamed, his lake-blue eyes and lined features radiating genuine friendliness. Fringed buckskins covered his powerful frame. A brown beaver hat crowned his head of bushy gray hair, while a beard and mustache the same color as his hair adorned his face. Like Nate, he wore a powder horn and an ammunition pouch. On his right hip rested a butcher knife, under his belt a single flintlock.

  He held a rifle in the bend of his left elbow.

  “Hello there, Nate,” the mountain man greeted him, his eyes twinkling. “You look right tuckered out. What have you been doing?”

  “Running my fool head off, Shakespeare,” Nate responded, lowering the Hawken and advancing. “I thought my family was in trouble.”

  “Why would you think a thing like that?”

  “I heard a shot.”

  Shakespeare, the perfect picture of innocence, took his rifle in both hands and said, “Why, that must have been me. I shot a big duck for our supper,” he said, and nodded at the west shore of the lake forty feet away. “It never occurred to me that you would come on the run.”

  Winona took a step forward, her concerned brown eyes roving over Nate’s clothes and fixing on the tear in his sleeve. “The bear?” she asked in her precise English.

  “He won’t bother us ever again,” Nate informed her, and inadvertently winced when she reached out and touched the bite.

  “It is not deep but you have bled a little,” Winona said. She stepped to the doorway, her beaded buckskin dress clinging to her shapely body. “Come in. I will tend your wound.”

  “Don’t tell me you’ve tangled with another grizzly?” Shakespeare inquired.

  “A black bear this time,” Nate revealed, motioning for them to precede him. Shakespeare’s wife went first, a lovely Flathead woman named Blue Water Woman whose long raven hair was every bit as luxurious as Winona’s and whose smooth, oval face might be that of a woman half her age. “Hello, Blue Water Woman,” he said.