The
wagon tipped, rolled over on its side, catching Richard Comity beneath a front
wheel and a large rock jutting from the ground, crushing his chest.
Bit
held her breath. It couldn’t be happening. Yet it did. And Richard lay beneath
the wheel of their wagon and needed help. She ran, the
long skirts and tall grass holding her back. It seemed an eternity before she
was beside her husband.
"Mrs.
Comity," the leader of the wagons said. "Mrs. Comity, he will not
live through the day."
"No
he will not. The same thing, I am thinking," Bit said quietly. There was
no sorrow in her voice, no strain on her face.
"We'll
stop the night here while he dies. Then we'll bury him before we go on,"
the man said.
"Aye,"
she said. "We stop the night, then bury
him." Her voice was as soft as the wind drifting quietly across the land.
They
laid Richard Comity out on a smooth place above the south side of the stream,
above the place they had already crossed. Bit sat beside him, laying her hands
in his hair, letting the curls turn about her fingers. An ache lay deep inside
her, an ache she was sure would never pass.
"I
am dying," Richard said softly and his body heaved and though he
restrained the cough, blood trickled from the side of his mouth. Bit wiped the
blood away gently.
"Aye,"
she said. "It is dying you are, I think. Yet, I would not have it
so."
“When
I am gone, do not let them take the horse, nor the oxen nor the wagon.. You must keep them by, save them for yourself and Morgan.
You will need everything we have brought for the new land."
*****************
Martin
appointed four men to take up shovels and prepare a place for burying
"I
want him buried there above the trees. Perhaps he will hear the wind when it
blows and the water when it flows. It is not so far as it seems. And there is
time. Long the day is yet. There is time," Bit said.
The
men looked at each other, then looked at her standing
there, her arm about her son's shoulders, she so tiny and he so young yet so
tall.
They
turned and without a word walked down the stream to the clump of cottonwoods
standing beside the stream with willows below dipping into the water and dug
the grave and laid away Richard Comity..
The
next morning, the men gathered the cattle, yoked the oxen to the wagons, and
tied the horses behind the wagons, and prepared for the next march.
When
they came to Bit Comity's wagon with her oxen, she came and stood by.
"No,"
she said. "No. You take not my wagon, nor my oxen, nor my horse, nor my
two cattle. Here with me they remain."
"No,
ma'am," said Martin. "We can't allow that. Come along with us proper,
as any woman should. Your man is in the ground and you are a comely woman. You
will find another in the valley to take his place."
"Wrong
you are, sir," Bit Comity said. "I choose where and when I go or
stay. You will take neither me nor any of my things. The wagon will remain here
with my oxen my horse, my two cattle, and me. Remove my cattle from the herd
and turn them back upon the grass beside the water. Neither I nor mine will
leave this place."
*****************
The
next day, Bit said to Morgan, "We will first lay out the place for
building."
She
walked about a shallow depression that lay between two of the rolling
undulations of plain looking at each part of it. The depression ran north and
south, rising a bit at the south and dropping off into the river at the north.
At the top of the rise on either side, the rolling of the grassland became
indistinct, seeming to level off into a vast flat.
"We
will build here," she said finally
Bit
chose a place back from the river some twenty yards. The talus at the bottom of
the broken rise was easy at hand, as were the stones of the river. It was
almost level with some drop off toward the river and some rise to the south.
The whole was lightly rounded and they would have to build up the outside
edges, especially the corners, to create a flat floor approximately fourteen
feet square.
Bit
Comity went about her building in an unhurried way, and thereby doing more each
hour of each day than one watching would have expected.
Bit
Comity laid the walls some eighteen inches wide or more at the base for that
was how she remembered the walls of the cottage in Wales. The result was