Shadow
Rated:
G (kind of DF)
Summary:
Adam left home, and his family is wondering why. It’s only much later that
they find out.
Author’s
note: This was written after I heard that later on in the series Ben said that
he had only two sons. I wondered what made him say something like this...
~
~
Ben
closed his eyes and swallowed hard. Then he took a deep breath to calm himself,
opened his eyes and looked around the great room.
It
was empty, as empty as his heart at this moment. His son was gone. His son had
left.
He
was gone? Fine then. Life would go on. But even as Ben tried to harden his mind
against the unwelcome thoughts he could feel the terrible loneliness creep up to
engulf him, to drown him. His son was gone. And perhaps he would never return.
Ben
glanced around the room. There was nothing here that indicated the loss, nothing
that proved that in fact four people had been living here just yesterday. There
was nothing that gave a hint that a dark young man had lived here.
He
sighed and sat in his big red chair next to the fireplace. He was wrong, though,
he thought. Looking back at him as he stared was the blue chair on the opposite
side of the table, lonely reminder now of days long gone. His son´s favourite
chair it had been, where he had used to sit down many an evening after a hard
day´s work, reading, playing the guitar,...
Ben
got up. It was too much. He had to get out of here, where memories seemed to
flow from every corner of the room.
After
one step, though, he stopped and shook his head. No, he wouldn´t back down.
This was his house after all, his house for more than thirty years, and here he
would stay.
Turning,
he cast a quick glance up the stairs and smiled ruefully. He doubted he could
find sleep this night, there...in his bedroom, right next to the room where his
son used to...
Adam.
The
thought of Adam left him trembling with suppressed emotions. All day long he had
tried to shut out HIS name from his mind. The farewells at the coach station had
been cool and formal on both sides, the arguments not yet forgotten. Ben had
stared down the road, long after the stagecoach had been gone, swallowed by a
cloud of hot dust. He had stared after his firstborn son, with dry eyes and
empty mind, trying to feel – anything.
~
It
had been a winter full of arguing. Adam, confined to the ranch, had acted like a
cougar in a trap. His moods had gradually become darker as winter proceeded and
heavy snowfall stopped all outside activity. And with the withdrawal of fresh
air and vast spaces, he shut out anything that might have broken through the
wall he had erected.
He
didn´t speak for days. When spoken to directly he answered in one-word
sentences, his clipped cold tones telling everyone just what exactly he was
thinking. He wanted to be left alone. He didn´t want to be addressed. He wanted
privacy.
Dozens
of evenings Ben had found him in the barn, lying on a pile of hay, staring up at
the ceiling, oblivious of the cold. Awoken to the unwelcome presence he had
snarled at him, then locked all emotions behind an inscrutable mask of
indifference. Ben´s kind words were ignored as Adam brushed past him and
escaped to his room. After that he brought a blanket with him every time he
sought solitude, and Ben, weary of trying to talk sense into him, let him be. He
suspected that Adam took to sleeping in the barn in spite of the cold, for he
never came back to the house before Ben went to bed. And Ben, sick at heart not
knowing what was wrong and not daring to confront Adam in the knowledge they
would end up shouting once again, had hoped that spring would bring release.
He
was wrong. Adam, restless as ever, had taken to long rides, in the middle of the
night, for days on end, never telling them where he went, or how long he would
be gone. His work lay neglected, his drawings forgotten. He hadn´t sung in
months, hadn´t laughed in weeks. On rare occasions his brothers could steal a
smile from him that barely touched the corners of his lips.
They
had worried at first when he rode out, but the relief they all felt every time
when Adam was gone was obvious to all of them, and the shame they experienced
couldn´t subdue it.
And
now he was truly gone. His things packed, his room cleaned out, he had
disappeared from their lives like a shadow. They didn´t have more than a week
to prepare themselves for what could well be a good-bye forever. The last time
Adam had come home, he had presented them with the news, and no heated
discussion, argument or temper tantrum could change his mind. Everyone’s
nerves were lying blank when he left the house for the last time, and Adam didn´t
look back.
Ben
had come to his room the night before he left. Adam had been asleep, the deep
lines in his face softened by sleep. Ben had stood and looked down at him,
seeing for the umpteenth time the child behind the handsome features. He left
then, and sitting by the window in his own room, had stared at the stars all
night.
Adam
hadn´t allowed his brothers to take him to town. He had reluctantly hugged them
good-bye and turned, his desire to be gone pouring from him like rain from the
sky. He hadn´t been able to convince Ben to stay at home, and so they had
shared a half hour of uncomfortable silent waiting in front of the coach
station. When the coach finally arrived, Ben looked at his son. The truth was,
he could no longer figure out what kind of behaviour to expect from Adam, and so
he waited. Adam turned to him then, but neither did he step closer for an
embrace nor did he reach out his hand. He had stood and looked at his father,
his eyes giving away his emotions for once. Then, he had softly said
“Good-bye, Pa” before he stepped into the coach. And Ben, feeling rejected
and betrayed, had stared after him long after the carriage had disappeared.
~
He
had come home to see the melancholic faces of his other sons, and the sight made
him harden his heart. Fine then. Adam had chosen to leave this family. Fine. But
he wouldn´t let his other sons suffer because of him. He knew his own face was
set, and he had forced himself to smile at them before he sent them out to the
barn. He had called out to Hop Sing after they were gone, and had set to pack
Adam´s things away, everything that might remind them of him: books, drawings,
his guitar and – after hesitating a long time – pictures of him.
Now
there was no trace left that another Cartwright son had ever lived here. No
trace that he had ever had another son. A son with darkly handsome features,
unruly as the summer wind and lovingly gentle, stubborn as a mule and charming
as larks in the field.
He
just made it to his room before he broke out down. Kneeling on the floor, he
sobbed, hot angry tears burning his cheeks, until the overwhelming flood of
emotions made him pound the ground in frustration. Damn him. Damn him.
~
When
he came down to dinner, the stony silence that greeted him could only just cover
the depressed mood in the house. Hoss and Joe were already seated at the dinner
table. Slowly he made his way through the living room and tried not to notice
the emptiness descending from all corners, the subtle changes in the air.
Hoss
looked up when he took his seat and gave him a tiny encouraging smile. Joe´s
gaze stayed on his plate, but he asked the question that hadn´t had an answer,
yet.
“Did
he say where he wanted to go to?”
Ben,
his eyes staring at the vacant chair in front of him, felt his insides turn to
stone when he remembered the scene at the coach station. “No”, he answered
shortly. “Let´s eat.”
But
neither Hoss nor Joe moved. They stared down at their plates, and after what
seemed like an eternity, Hoss spoke softly.
“He
said he wanted to go to the sea...a long time ago...wanted to see
countries...”
Silence
greeted his words. Of course they all knew that, had always known his thirst for
knowledge.
Finally
Ben cleared his throat. “Let´s eat”, he whispered.
~
After
dinner he went out to the porch and sat down. Above him, the starry sky with its
familiar constellations greeted him as it always had, steady and calm. He sighed
and crossed his arms over his chest, trying to find out what bothered him so
much.
The
thing was, he couldn´t picture Adam on a ship. He couldn´t picture him sailing
away. But neither could he picture him staying at the ranch. Or in Boston, that
was. Try as he might, he couldn´t find a place in his mind where his restless
son might find peace. And he wondered whether he himself was to blame. God, he
wished Adam could somewhere find the peace he didn´t seem to find here. He
wished he would find rest for his soul.
~
After
that, neither of them spoke of Adam again. They tried to settle into their daily
routine and cope with the vacant chair at the dinner table, the horse in the
barn and the empty room on the second floor.
It
took them weeks to get used to the changed roles in the family, but Ben thought
they had coped better than he could have wished for. The time before Adam had
gone had been marked with arguments, but he knew both of his sons missed their
brother dearly.
Joe
was almost his usual energetic self by now, running and bouncing where he
shouldn´t. Between Hoss and him, they had taken over Adam´s tasks and did
well. Hoss, too, had adjusted well to the new condition of being the eldest
brother, but then, Ben had not expected different. And now indeed, it seemed
that there never had been another Cartwright, and he was glad about it. Seeing
their lost and desperate faces every morning at breakfast was more than he could
stand. All traces of the oldest son had been wiped out.
It
was a good thing.
~
*~
It
had been a dry summer. The cattle had trouble finding water, and Ben, Hoss and
Joe worked all day – every day – to get the much-needed fluid up to the
meadows, or find new water holes, dig new wells. By evening they were completely
exhausted, their faces were burned, their minds empty. Hop Sing did his best to
revive them, but even he couldn´t do more than send them to bed.
This
evening was different, though. Loud and desperate shouting woke them from their
stupor, and they didn´t need to run to the front door to know that the barn was
aflame. Angry crackling flames greeted them, blazing with heat that made them
stumble back. It hadn´t rained in weeks, and the wood was dry, the piles of hay
a wonderful nourishment.
Crouching
low, they entered the building that was one blur of orange and red, and within
seconds they choked, gasping for air that wasn´t there. The horses were frantic
with fear, but with the help of the hands they got them out, unharmed, then
stumbled out after them, coughing their lungs out. It was too late to safe the
barn, impossible to try and put out the flames in that heat, and all they could
do now was wait and watch until all wood had been consumed by the hungry
firestorm.
Ben
felt his sons next to him, trembling with exhaustion. He laid a hand on Hoss´
back, only to feel him flinch and tighten under his palm. Surprised he looked at
him, but the expression on Hoss´s face was only one of shock as he stared at
the blazing barn.
Ben
took his arms, shaking him hard to bring him back from wherever his mind had
been. Hoss gulped, then turned pleading eyes on Ben.
“His
journal...his journal’s up there...I´ve gotta go...” He shook himself free and turned towards the barn, headless
of the danger. Ben grabbed his hand, shaking with anger.
“What
do you think you´re doing? Stay here, you fool! Do you hear me? Do you want to
kill yourself?“ He yanked Hoss´ arm, but his son´s eyes were full of fear
and desperate pleading.
“I
gotta go, his journal’s up there...Pa...his journal...” Hoss was fighting to
get free now, and the harder Ben tried to hold him, the harder Hoss fought. Then
all of a suddenly, a part of the roof came down, sending red-hot sparks towards
the sky.
Hoss
froze. All fight went out of him, and when Ben released him, he slumped to the
ground. Tears left white streaks on his soot-covered face as he stared at the
barn. Ben knelt next to him, stroking his back. He was confused, but already an
idea formed in his mind, one he was afraid to voice.
“His
journal....Adam´s...journal?” he asked hesitantly, not really wanting to know
the answer.
Hoss
caught a sob and nodded absently. “Found it after he left...he´d
forgotten...” He couldn´t seem to pull his eyes from the burning barn that
suddenly had devastated more than just wood. Ben continued to stroke his
shoulder in a reassuring way, but his mind was racing.
Sharp
shouts roused him from his thoughts. Glancing around, he suddenly noticed that
one familiar figure that should have been with them was missing. And looking
towards the barn where all the other hands were heading, he saw a lonely person
stumble from the remains of the blazing building and break down before anyone
could reach him.
~
Damn
him, Ben thought. Hadn´t Adam done enough damage to this family?
He had left his family three years ago without caring whether he broke
their hearts, and Ben had believed he had gone forever from their lives. Until
now. His other foolish sons had
tried to get themselves killed because of him. Damn him. What more damage would
he wreak upon him?
Of
course it had been Joe who had stumbled from the barn, his face burned, his
clothes almost aflame with heat in spite of his soaking them, the journal of his
oldest brother clutched tight to his chest. They had needed one hour to bring
him around, and he coughed his lungs out for a whole day after that. His
eyebrows had been burned clean off, and his hair was singed in more than one
place. And yet, he had smiled when he had woken. As had Hoss, for that matter,
and not just because Joe hadn´t been harmed.
The
journal lay on the table in front of him. The writing on the cover was burned
beyond recognition, but the pages were still readable enough. He had considered
burning it, but somehow couldn´t bring himself to do it after Joe had risked
his life to get it. Now it lay in front of him, and Ben felt betrayed that after
all his efforts to live his life without Adam he had left something that
important behind. He reached out a hand and opened the soot-stained cover, but
once his eyes fell on the name written inside, he closed it with a snap. No, he
wasn´t ready for that, yet.
Wearily
getting up, he climbed the stairs and made his way down to Joe´s room, Adam´s
journal in hand. Cautiously he opened the door to gaze inside, but Joe was
awake, and staring out of the window. Strange enough, Hoss was perched on the
bed, looking downcast. Ben could tell they had been speaking about Adam.
Hoss
got up when he entered and after spying the journal in his father´s hand, sat
on a chair in a corner of the room farthest away from Ben. Joe, his head still
turned towards the window, shortly glanced at his father, then closed his eyes,
but not before Ben had seen the betraying marks of tears in his lashes.
Slowly
he sat down on the other chair, book held loosely on his lap, and tried to
access the silence in the room. Neither Hoss nor Joe would meet his eyes, but he
couldn´t make out their mood. Did they blame him for pushing Adam away from
them?
“How
long since you found it?” he asked quietly.
Hoss
lifted his head. “One year after he left. When I changed the boards...It was
...it was hidden under one of the loose ones...” His eyes were clear as he
looked back at Ben.
“It
helped me... To understand, I mean...what he felt. And to live...without him.”
Ben
felt his heart squeeze as he thought back to the first days after Adam had gone.
The days when Joe and Hoss had been walking around like ghosts, lost in a
stupor, completely beside themselves. He didn´t want that to happen again just
because they had dug up Adam´s journal.
“Didn´t
I tell you I had only two sons in this family? Those who are here, beside me, in
this house?” His hard gaze took in his sons, averting their eyes, looking
miserable. He sighed.
“Pa...”,
Joe´s reluctant voice floated up from the pillows, “...I wrote him
letters.”
Ben´s
head spun around at that, but Joe steadily went on. “I ...wrote to him...I
knew of course I couldn´t send them, I didn´t know where he was; so I kept
them in my drawer. I just...couldn´t forget.”
“I
see.” He looked down to his hands that still held his oldest son´s journal.
“What
does it say?”
Nobody
answered, though, and when he looked up in surprise it was just in time to see
Hoss cast down his eyes.
“Hoss?”
he questioned.
His
son swallowed before answering, but his voice was calm enough.
“Perhaps
you should read the first page, Pa.”
Honouring
the request in spite of how strange he thought it, Ben opened the old book,
trying to avoid the signature on the first page, and leafed to the first entry.
Wetting his lips, he started to read, and tried to ignore the rising swirl of
emotions inside him:
´
“I love my family. But, God help me, I must go. I´m suffocating, and the pain
I see on my family´s faces is too much to bear. I have to go...” ´
His
voice trailed off.
“He
loved us, Pa. Every single day.” Hoss´ voice broke through Ben´s thoughts.
“He wrote about us, what we did, what we said, how it affected him. He wrote
about everything.”
Ben,
his momentarily speechlessness overcome, glared at Hoss with fire in his eyes.
“Did he write about how he treated you? How he argued with you, with me? About
how he couldn´t stand to be in the same room with us? Have you forgotten what
it was like? Speaking to him, not knowing whether he would just leave or cut
your throat first?”
Breathing
heavily and trying to calm down, he could see Joe´s appalled face. His anger
disappeared, only to be replaced by weariness. He was so tired of this.
“I´m
sorry”, he said. Absently he jumped through the pages, noting how worn they
were.
“How
often did you read it? Hoss?” He could sense the mood in the room now,
although he couldn´t understand it. Hoss was calm, content with a deep-down
peace that Ben couldn´t trace. Joe was calm, too, but his calm was overshadowed
by sadness. Why? Because of him? Because of Adam?
“Every
day. When I could...When I needed to...feel him...near me...To remember him.”
Ben
sighed. “I understand. Joe?” He wanted to know what his sons were thinking.
Joe´s
answer took longer to come. When he spoke, Ben had to strain himself to hear
him.
“I
didn´t know it was there”, he whispered. “Only when I heard Hoss speaking
of it, I learned it was there. I just had to get it.” Joe´s eyes shone with
tears again as he looked at Ben. “It was his...”
Ben
took a deep breath. So, here it was, the thing he had been afraid of all the
time. He didn´t know what to make of his own feelings. He remembered a time
when he had been so proud of his sons, all his sons, so proud of Adam. But a lot
of time had passed since then, and he had tried to forget what had once been; he
had tried to forget the hurt, and the betrayal he felt, and the one who caused
it.
His
feelings must have shown on his face, for he heard Hoss´ low voice from across
the room, frightening him.
“Why
do you hate him so much?”
Did
he, then? Ben wasn´t sure. Did he hate Adam for leaving him? Did he hate him
for never coming back? He didn´t know, but he just had to know what was on his
sons minds.
“Why
don´t you?”
“I
sometimes did. Until... Until I read how it was like for him. And then
later…” Hoss almost stumbled on the words; and Ben could just barely make
out the hint of sorrow in his voice.
“What
was it like for him?” Ben was curious, no matter what his feelings were. He
had prided himself once that he knew what was on his sons` minds, but that
confidence too had been gone, with Adam.
“He
choked here. We were here, his family, but it wasn´t enough. It wasn´t life,
not for him, not his life. He...he said he felt like running with his head
against a wall, day by day; that he had to break from the prison before his
restlessness made him kill him and us. Couldn´t you see it, Pa? The unhappiness
in his eyes every time he looked at you, at us? Could you see he was lost
here?”
Hoss
must have seen the angry look in Ben´s eyes when his head snapped up, for he
hurried to continue, his eyes a silent prayer to Ben that he would listen.
“Pa,
you were always around people you loved, and even when you lost them, you always
knew where your place was. Can you imagine what it felt like for Adam to live
here with us, thinking he had finally found his home, and then wake up one day
and realize it wasn´t? Realize he was outside; that he was different, that his
place and heart would never be fully here, on this ranch he had worked so hard
for? It didn´t matter how much he loved us, Pa. His place wasn´t here.”
Ben
had closed his eyes while Hoss talked. He pictured Adam in his mind, as he
remembered him, and knew in his heart that Hoss was right. Adam had always been
different. Ben knew how much they were alike, thinking along the same lines in
regard to injustice and equality. But somewhere inside Adam had always been a
different side, one he had rarely seen but which made him think that Adam was in
fact nobody’s son but a child of the winds, free-spirited and independent.
“I
know.” He whispered the words more to himself than to anyone else in the room,
but Joe heard them anyway.
“Do
you love him, Pa?” he asked quietly, his green eyes surprisingly lucent in
spite of the tears in his lashes.
Was
that the question? Ben swallowed the sobs that caught in his throat. Whether he
loved him or not? God, he had always loved him, but it had been hard to live
with that love – when it should have been simple. He almost smiled. Nothing
concerning Adam had ever been simple. But he had loved him. He remembered. But
now?
“Yes”,
he said, and when he lifted his eyes to meet Joe´s he could see the relief on
his son´s face.
Hoss
stood up. He crossed the room until he was in front of Ben and gently took the
old journal from his father´s hands. Ben didn´t miss the look that Joe sent
Hoss, and willingly followed Hoss outside, knowing there was still something
left unsaid.
Hoss
didn´t go far. He opened Ben´s own bedroom door and motioned him to sit down
on a chair, then sat down himself. Cautiously he held the journal in his hands,
gently, almost lovingly, caressing the surface. When he finally looked up, Ben
was surprised to see tears glittering in his eyes.
“I
couldn´t...I couldn´t understand him...then”, Hoss´ voice was barely
audible. He smiled sadly. “I thought he left us.”
Ben
opened his mouth to reply, but the look on Hoss´ face stopped him. His son got
up then, and placed the book on the table between them, stroking the cover once
more before he turned back to Ben.
His
voice was gone with the tears that silently ran down his cheeks.
“You
said you had only two sons. You were right.” He gripped Ben´s shoulder and
reassuringly let his hand stay there for a moment. A tiny smile lifted the
corners of his mouth.
“He
loved you so much, Pa”, he said. Then he left and softly closed the door
behind him.
Ben
sat frozen. He didn´t dare to move. Finally, with the evening sun shining
through his window, he opened Adam´s journal at the last entry, his hands
shaking and his heart about to well over at the sight of Adam´s bold and
distinctive hand.
´
“February 28th ...have been to see Doc Martin this morning. One
year.“ ´
The
entries stopped there, almost two months before Adam had left. Ben leafed
through the pages, but they were blank. All life had ended that day.
Pressing
the book to his heart, Ben buried his face in his hand and wept.
~
The end
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