Prologue
- Iron
Ties
June 1880
If
there’s
a heaven on
earth,
I’ve
found it here,
in Colorado.
Standing
at the edge
of a snow-pocked
rocky slope,
Susan
Carothers
set down the
canvas-covered
box holding
her small
view camera,
three glass
plates, and
black hood,
and topped
it with the
folded tripod.
She examined
the landscape
and let out
her breath
in a long,
contented
sigh.
High-mountain
grasses rippled
alongside
the Arkansas
River. A few
spindly aspen
and fir that
had escaped
the axes of
prospectors
and loggers
hugged the
riverbanks.
Meadows beyond
raced across
wide spaces
to bow at
the toes of
Massive and
Elbert, the
tallest peaks
in Colorado.
The
new train
track glinted
below. Silent.
Untraveled.
It
paced the
base of the
slope at a
cautious distance
and sent out
a splinter
of a side
track where
two railroad
cars waited
their turns
to travel
on. A trestle
carried the
main line
across the
gulch and
river, from
east to west.
Several miles
up the valley,
out of sight
beyond the
bend of the
ridgeline,
laborers toiled
over wood
ties and steel
rails. Foot
by foot, they
were building
the road of
the iron horse,
bringing it
ever closer
to Leadville.
Susan
turned to
the north,
squinting
at a cluster
of abandoned
charcoal kilns
nestled at
the mouth
of the gulch.The
morning sun
cast their
elongated
beehive-shaped
shadows toward
the river.
With a professional
photographer’s
eye, Susan
translated
the scenery’s
greens, blues,
and browns
into the blacks,
whites, and
grays of a
photograph.
Perfect!
She
turned her
back on the
kilns and
trestle, eyeing
an abandoned
shack and
mining portal
situated on
a ledge halfway
across the
steep terrain.
The ledge
would yield
panoramic
views of the
mountains.
Views that
would sell
well at her
studio in
Leadville.
She
scowled, thinking
of the saddle
horse and
burro she’d
hired, now
tied off on
the brushy
bench behind
her and sheltered
in a copse
of scraggly
firs. All
the coaxing
and tugging
in the world
hadn’t
convinced
the burro,
burdened down
with photographic
equipment,
to take so
much as a
step onto
the talus.
Where the
loose rubble
ended and
the slope
steepened
to near vertical,
she could
see a well-defined
trail, cut
into the rock,
leading to
the shelf
and cabin.
She
brushed at
the knee-length
skirt covering
the bloomers
of her Reform
dress and
pondered her
next move.
I’ll
cross the
slope and
set up the
camera in
the cabin
so that it
looks out
the window.
If it rains,
the equipment
will stay
dry.
Susan
glanced up
at wispy clouds.
A year and
a half of
living
and working
in Leadville
had impressed
upon her how
fickle
weather could
be in the
Rocky Mountains.
Over the course
of an hour,
the innocent
blue sky might
transform
into a thunderstorm
of Wagnerian
intensity.
She
bent down,
gripped the
tripod and
the handle
of the
heavy camera
box with firm
resolve, and
stepped forward,
trying not
to think what
would happen
if she lost
her footing
on the loose
rocks.
By
the time Susan
arrived at
her destination,
she was out
of
breath in
the thin mountain
air.The
shack squatted
on the dusty
bench, facing
a mine portal
shored up
with timber.
She wondered
if the former
occupants
had had any
luck or whether
Disappointment
Gulch had
lived up to
its name.
Ah well. I’m
prospecting
for scenery,
not ore.
She
entered the
shack and
looked around.
Hard-packed
dirt
floor. Rough
timbered shelves
along one
wall. A window,
long emptied
of glass,
framed a mountain
vista that
echoed her
vision. Susan
smiled and
lowered tripod
and box to
the floor.
Eager to get
to work, she
removed her
coat and hung
it on a crooked
nail in the
wall.
It
took an hour
to set up
the camera
at the window.
Satisfied
at last with
the placement
and the light,
Susan knelt
on the
dirt floor,
rustling through
the box for
a replacement
to a plate
holder’s
stripped screw.
The wind paused,
and the river’s
whisper was
broken by
the sharp
clip-clop
of a horse.
Resting
a hand on
the rough
timbered window
frame, Susan
looked down
at the railroad
track, nearly
a hundred
feet below.
A man dismounted
and, reins
in hand, glanced
up and down
the track.
Susan noted
his ramrod
straight bearing,
and his military-style
cap and greatcoat—faded
blue? Or gray?
A soldier?
He
walked to
the siding
and the cars,
examining
the rolling
stock. He
then headed
away toward
the trestle
and the kiln
field. Susan
considered,
then shrugged,
deciding that
he was probably
on railroad
business.
She
turned her
attention
back to her
camera, removed
the
lens cap,
made the exposure,
and replaced
the cap. Before
she could
remove the
plate, the
soldier reappeared
without his
horse, cradling
a box in his
arms.
He
crossed to
the siding.
Susan debated
whether to
call out
and make her
presence known.
He opened
the box and
extracted
a tube, the
length of
a man’s
forearm. And
red as danger.
Susan sucked
in her breath
and retreated
a step into
the shadows.
She’d
lived long
enough in
the mining
town of Leadville
to
know what
that tube
held.
Giant
powder.
More
powerful than
black powder,
by far. So
dangerous
that
the railway
companies
refused to
transport
it, leaving
muleskinners
to haul it
by freight
wagons over
the high mountain
passes to
Leadville
and the other
mining towns.
The
soldier methodically
placed two,
four, six
cartridges
beneath the
railroad cars
and attached
blasting caps
and long fuses.
Susan watched
in horror.
He’s
going to blow
up the cars!
She
ran to the
shack’s
entrance and
stopped. There
was no
way to retrace
her steps
across the
slope without
being visible
from below.
The best course
of action,
she told herself,
was to wait
until the
fuses were
lit and then
to run for
the mine portal.
When the giant
powder exploded,
there was
no guarantee
the shack
would survive
the flying
debris. Heart
pounding,
Susan returned
to the window
to see another
rider approaching
from the north,
from the direction
of Leadville.
The
soldier must
have seen
or heard the
rider as well.
He
stepped between
the two cars,
hidden from
the rider’s
view, but
still visible
to Susan.
After some
scrutiny of
the approaching
horse and
rider, he
looked up
in Susan’s
direction,
removed his
cap, and waved
it.
He’s
seen me! Panic
curdled in
her stomach.
She
shrank against
the cabin
wall before
logic whispered
that the friendly
wave was not
meant for
her. For whom,
then? A vision
of the ridge
above her
rose in her
mind like
an image materializing
on a photo
plate—steep
slope topped
by a jagged
assembly of
outcrops,
protrusions.
Many places
to hide.
Feeling
trapped between
the men below
and possibly
more
above, she
peered around
the window
frame to see
horse and
rider ease
into a trot,
finally stopping
by the soldier.
The soldier
replaced his
cap and stepped
out from between
the cars.
He sketched
a perfunctory
salute to
the newcomer,
who nodded
back and leaned
forward over
the saddle,
examining
the half-full
box and the
fuses snaking
across the
dirt.
The
wide brim
of the rider’s
slouch hat
flapped in
the breeze
like the wings
of a buzzard
trying to
take leave
of the ground.
His nondescript
clothes and
horse were
dirt-brown.
Man and mount
seemed nearly
invisible,
calculated
to blend into
the landscape.
The
two men talked.
Distance and
the river’s
murmur hid
their words.
The
soldier turned
away, gesturing
at the train
cars.
The
rider pulled
his revolver,
aimed it at
the soldier.
Susan
stifled a
gasp.
The
soldier turned
back to the
rider. Froze.
Holding one
hand up in
surrender
or supplication,
he reached
slowly to
the inside
pocket of
his jacket,
pulled something
out. He held
it out, wadded
in his fist,
as his voice
rose in anger,
vying with
the river’s
relentless
song. “Damn
you, Eli!The
oath…years
ago. Kill
the general…for
this!”
The cloth
in his hand
unfurled into
a long strip.
The
rider, Eli,
shouted back,
“…turn
you in or
kill you,
your choice!”
The
soldier’s
ramrod posture
dissolved.
He slumped,
lowered his
hands as if
defeated.
The cloth
fell from
his grasp
in a rippling
wave to the
ground and
he crouched,
the flicker
of sun on
metal, a revolver
now in his
grip.
The
two guns fired,
nearly simultaneous.
Eli
fell from
his saddle
in a scuffle
of dust.
His
horse turned
tail.
The
soldier also
crumpled to
the ground.
Eli shot him
again
and again,
until the
twitching
stilled.
The
soldier’s
dropped cloth,
pushed by
the wind,
tumbled
along the
siding into
the grass,
colors flashing
red, blue,
white.
Eli
sat up slowly,
holding his
leg, attempting
to stop the
flow
of blood.
Another
gunshot boomed
through the
shushing wind.
Not
from below,
but from the
ridgeline
above.
Eli
clutched his
jacket, the
brown cloth
blooming with
red.
His shout
rang clear:
“I won’t
tell, I swear!
Don’t—”
His
yell was cut
off by a second
report from
the ridge,
a thread snapping
under a scissors’
blades.
Susan
sank to the
dirt floor,
hand to mouth,
fighting nausea
and fear.
The wind briefly
gained the
upper hand,
rattling the
shack, mingling
in her ears
with her terrified
sobs and the
staccato pounding
of her heart.
Suddenly,
a new voice
sounded from
the direction
of the
tracks. “Je-sus!
What happened?”
The
response floated
down from
above her,
full of anguished
rage. “You
were on lookout,
dammit! He
died because
of you!”
Again,
from the ground:
“I was
tryin’
to catch his
horse. Fool
animal got
away. Je-sus.
This is Eli,
from town!”
“We
gotta finish
the job! The
way he planned!”
“Finish
it? There’s
no reason
now—”
“He’d’ve
wanted us
to!”
“Wait!
Wait! I’ve
got to move
them. We can’t
let anyone
tie
this to us.”
Susan
rose, trembling.
I’ll
stick to my
plan. Should
I peek out
the window—?
“On
three!”
shouted the
man below.
Her
breath caught.
“One!”
His voice
was moving
away.
There’s
no more time!
The certainty
of it chilled
her in the
dank cabin
air.
“Two!”
His voice
had retreated
further still.
She
moved to the
door, gathered
herself for
the last-second
sprint.
“Three!”
The
explosion
from the tracks,
she expected.
But
not the one
from above.
The
ridge top
ruptured with
a roar.
The
sound buried
Susan’s
scream as
she raced
for the mine
portal. Rocks
and dirt thundered
down around
her. Mere
steps from
the portal,
pain—instant,
intense—blasted
through her
head. She
fell. Crawled
the last few
feet into
the mine entrance.
Collapsed
into darkness.
Below,
the dead men’s
horses, wandering
by the river,
bolted and
ran.