Date: Mon, 21 Mar 2005 12:18:19 -0500 From: carl5de@netscape.net Subject: HIGH PLAINS DOCTOR - 2 HIGH PLAINS DOCTOR - 2 Copyright 2005 by Carl Mason and Ed Collins All rights reserved. Other than downloading one copy for strictly personal enjoyment, no part of this story may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, except for reviews, without the written permission of the authors. However based on real events and places, "High Plains Doctor" is strictly fictional. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. As in real life, however, the sexual themes unfold gradually. If you would like to read other Mason-Collins stories, you might turn to "Out of the Rubble," "Castle Margarethen," and "The Priest and the Pauper" which are archived in Nifty's "Historical" section. Comments on the story are appreciated and may be addressed to the authors at carl5de@netscape.net This story contains descriptions of sexual contact between males, both adults and teenagers. As such, it is homoerotic fiction designed for the personal enjoyment of legal, hopefully mature, adults. If you are not of legal age to read such material, if those in power and/or those whom you trust treat it as illegal, or if it would create unresolvable moral dilemmas in your life, please leave. Finally, remember that maturity generally demands that anything other than safe sex is sheer insanity! CHAPTER 2 (Revisiting Chapter 1) Not surprisingly, Ben found the last leg of his journey to be by far the most exciting. As the Union Pacific train passed through eastern Nebraska, the overwhelming impression was that of tall, waving grass. Yes, there were signs of slowly growing civilization, but they tended to be around the towns on the railroad. He even saw one wagon train, though Ezra assured him that before long, train travel would completely replace this hallowed form of transportation. As they began slowly to climb onto the high plains, however, the land became more dry - a land that would someday be devoted to alfalfa, corn, winter wheat, potatoes, and sugar beets. In 1872, however, it was still dominated by wild grass, cattle being driven to railheads and the native buffalo. They even saw a few small Indian bands and a couple of cavalry patrols. The railroad towns were fewer now - and much smaller - but the sheer beauty of the land absolutely brought their hearts into their mouths. Looking over at Ben, who was obviously as taken by the land as he, Ezra smiled confidently. Eventually, the conductor called "Shiloh...next stop...Shiloh," and Ben realized that his journey of nearly 1800 miles was nearing its end. (Continuing Our Story - A Western Welcome) Ben could scarcely believe his eyes - or his ears - as the train pulled to a full stop in front of the small, wooden station. The six-piece town band was enthusiastically pounding out "The Battle Cry of Freedom". Perhaps 40 citizens - about half of the town's population, he would later learn, not counting homesteaders, pony soldiers, and transients - were gathered in their best Sunday-Go-to-Meeting dress, cheering wildly as Ezra and he detrained. (Ezra grinned, realizing that his wire from Omaha had done its job.) Harry Parsons, Shiloh's unofficial mayor and proprietor of the largest saloon in town, the Crystal Palace, stepped forward to be introduced by a proud Ezra Matthews to "Dr. Benjamin Cabot of Boston." After the mayor had read a short proclamation of welcome, he suggested that inasmuch as the hour was already late and they must be weary from the long trip, further festivities had been postponed until the next evening. "You will be Shiloh's honored guest at a reception to be held at the Crystal Palace," he proclaimed. Ben was generous with his praise and thanks for the warm welcome. As youths took their luggage, Ben and Ezra passed through the friendly, welcoming crowd, receiving smiles, pats on the back, and handshakes on every side. "Not much like Boston," Ben murmured to Ezra. "I like it already!" Indeed, it wasn't "much like Boston." A few railroad facilities were clustered along the tracks fairly close to the train station. To the south, there were holding facilities for cattle and rough bunkhouses for the cowpokes. The main part of town seemed to be laid out on either side of a relatively short dusty street that ran north from the station. It included the Crystal Palace (by far the largest building in town), a smaller, rougher-looking saloon called "Kitty's Place," a small white community church, a blacksmith's shed, Ezra's Emporium (a good sized retail store that looked as if it carried everything under the sun), a small food store, a small bank, two medium- sized unoccupied buildings, and several tents, one of which housed a laundry operated by Chinese workers. A few small houses lined two even shorter streets, also unpaved, that intersected "Main Street." On reaching Ezra's small frame house, the men found their luggage already placed on the porch. After the long trip and the emotional welcome, neither man was worth much. Ezra warmed up a good stew and placed some sliced bread and butter on the table. It was more than enough. The dishes washed, Ezra showed Ben to a comfortable guest room where he slept like a rock! Ben didn't stir until mid morning. When he staggered sleepy eyed into the kitchen, he found a note from Ezra telling him where he could find breakfast makings (including, thank God, coffee). After his Omaha trip, he simply had to go into work. Ben was invited to stop by...whenever. After washing, shaving, and dressing, Ben did in fact wander downtown...such as it was. Several townspeople greeted him on the street, wishing him a good visit. Not finding much to see, he finally wandered into the Emporium. Frankly, he had never been in a Boston store, even a department store, that offered such a wide assortment of goods - linens, shovels, lanterns, work clothing, dress clothing, dishes, fabric, patent medicines, false teeth, a few pieces of inexpensive jewelry, books, and on and on. Almost dizzy from the wild variety, he was glad to see Ezra coming down the crowded aisle towards him. "Impressive," he managed to choke out. "Yep," Ezra laughed. "When I go into a big city department store, I find it pretty dull. Nothing like the Emporium! Come on, it's time for lunch!" The two men, fast becoming friends, walked up Main Street towards the Crystal Palace. Ben veered toward the free lunch on the giant bar that dominated the downstairs, but Ezra pulled him over towards the tables. "Hi, Sheila," he greeted the waitress who immediately appeared at their table. "What's good today?" "Well, honey, there's a great venison stew. Or, how about some nice antelope chops? There's always Max's good sandwiches, of course - and we had a big order come in on the train yesterday. Several guys have already raved about a new beer that was part of it." After the men had ordered and Sheila had quickly delivered their lunches, they dove in with but a minimum of comment. As far as Max was concerned, Ben thought, the Crystal Palace had a first rate cook. He had eaten chops not half as well prepared in Boston and New York! At one point, Harry Parsons had wandered over to the table. "May I offer you another beer, gentlemen?" he asked. Happily accepting, Ezra asked Harry to join them. "Oh, yeah," he mumbled collapsing into a chair. "When the trail hands are coming in, this place's a three-ring circus!" "When?" Ezra asked. "A few days," the proprietor moaned. "Dr. Cabot, I hope you are enjoying our little town." "Mr. Parsons, I have never received a welcome as warm as yesterday's - and (raising his glass) your new beer is great! Thank you. May I ask one favor? I would really be more comfortable if you called me 'Ben" or "Doc' rather than 'Dr. Cabot'." "Goes both ways, young man," Harry wheezed and stuck out his hand. "I hope both of you are ready for a real shindig tonight. Everybody's coming - even the Army brass and homesteaders from way out. They want to meet the new doc and see if they can convince him to stay 'round these parts." Ezra coughed politely, whereupon Harry remembered he had a emergency in the kitchen and took himself off. "You know what's up," Ezra murmured apologetically, "but people 'round here can be a bit...direct. They mean well." Ben quickly replied with a smile, "I'm finding that out. New places...new ways. Besides, it doesn't bother me." After a quiet nap, Ben awoke feeling thoroughly refreshed. "A real shindig, eh?" he murmured to no one in particular. "Well, bring it on!" As Ben and Ezra approached the Crystal Palace at dusk, it was fully illuminated. The Victorian exterior sparkled in the light of 100 ornate kerosene lamps. The great Bohemian crystal chandelier in the main downstairs bar seemed to be ablaze with light. Unlike a similar affair in Boston, however, the dress of those inside was extremely varied. A few men and women were dressed formally, though most were either dressed in their Sunday best...or as cleanly and neatly as their budgets allowed. The blue uniforms of the Army officers with their wide crimson sashes and yellow accents contrasted with both the more somber colors of the men's attire and the more joyous colors of their women. The small town band, augmented by several musicians from the cavalry post, played softly in the background. Ben deemed it a splendid scene - not that he had too long to enjoy it. Guided by Ezra and, at times, Harry Parsons, Ben was introduced to local citizens until faces and names alike seemed collapse into an utter blur. The common elements were the warmth of their greeting and their unconcealed desire for him to establish his practice in the area. Captain Samuel Culpepper who commanded the cavalry outpost, for instance, lamented that five of his men had died during the year past fighting "hostiles," men whose lives could have been saved had "professional" medical attention been available. Two wives of homesteaders, clad in simple dresses that Ben recognized from the Emporium, bemoaned the loss of babies in childbirth, as well as the high death rate among very young children. The boss of the trail hands who would shortly bring their cattle into the stockyards was no less emphatic. Every drive, he repeated sadly, saw young men - men who usually hadn't reached their twentieth birthdays - lost unnecessarily through infections that followed sometimes minor accidents. Clearly, the townspeople and those living and working in the area were doing their duty in a carefully orchestrated plan to bring a medical doctor to Shiloh! After a formal introduction by the mayor and several toasts, the "reception" rather quickly transformed into a dance. Ben took a few turns around the floor, finding it, for instance, difficult to shake off the attentions of Miss Matilda Sommers, the teacher of Shiloh's one-room grammar school housed at the train station. He talked for a bit with Captain Culpepper and his wife, discovering that the Captain had also fought at Gettysburg, though as a Colonel in a Confederate cavalry unit. Soon, however, he found himself guided into Harry Parson's office where he joined several citizens. Over good whiskey, the mayor placed an attractive offer on the table. Two half-way decent building were available on Main Street. He could have either of them free of charge for five years. Further, experienced carpenters would make any changes desired by the doctor, both downstairs and upstairs where a comfortable, two-bedroom apartment (with the only indoor plumbing in Shiloh other than that at the Crystal Palace) could be created. He would also be given a carriage with a nice horse and a small, smooth-riding wagon with stable facilities at the blacksmith's. Food and drink at the Crystal Palace would be free for one year, as would laundry at the Chinese tent facility. Finally, a generous allowance was promised to help set up both his medical office and his apartment. Just about anything that modern life allowed could be had in either Omaha or Chicago and brought quickly to Shiloh by train. Ben looked over at the banker who smiled encouragingly. For a moment, before speaking, he stared into the whiskey through the beautiful crystal glass held in his hand. "Gentlemen," he finally said, "I am grateful beyond words for your generosity and the warmth of your welcome. It seems that Shiloh has a new physician." As might be expected, Ben returned to the main room to find that everyone already knew that he had accepted the town's offer. Although the homesteaders left rather early for their long rides home and their early rising, the merriment continued late into the night. (A Doctor's Life - Year One) (Home and Office) The morning was still young when Ben and Ezra inspected the two potential home and office buildings, made a choice, and met with an itinerant carpenter and his brother who had agreed to make desired changes. Ben devoted the rest of the day to diagraming floor plans and making lists of essential equipment and furniture that had to be ordered. Between the carpenters, who really knew how to work, the magic of the telegraph, the Union Pacific, and an especially generous budget, Ben's surgery and apartment came together faster than he had ever hoped. When all the basic work had been done and basic furniture was in place, Mrs. Parsons and Mrs. Culpepper came over with piles of parcels from the Emporium and transformed the upstairs into a pleasant and livable home. Beyond hanging his shingle outside the front door and his Harvard diplomas on the wall of his office, Shiloh's new doctor was happy to leave such matters in the hands of those who knew what they were doing! (On Mrs. Culpepper's suggestion, a young Chinese girl came in twice a week to keep both the surgery and the apartment in order.) The first dinner that he hosted - with the sterling assistance of Max and one of his assistants from the Crystal Palace - was for Ezra, the Parsons, and the Culpeppers. It featured thick aged steaks from Omaha and bottles of a superb French wine from Chicago. No dinner at the Boston mansion had ever tasted better - or been more enjoyed by honored guests. (Public Health) Ben's Civil War experience, including his time in hospitals in both the Army and in Boston, had suggested so much that he did not know. He attempted to learn much about infectious diseases at Harvard Medical School, for instance, but he found the lack of scientific information to be discouraging. In Europe, the work of Koch and Pasteur was just beginning and American physicians had little knowledge of the cause and prevention of disease and infection. During the late 1860s and early 1870s two-fifths to one-half of children in major American cities died before reaching the age of five. The major killers included measles, scarlet fever, smallpox, diphtheria, whooping cough, bronchitis, pneumonia, tuberculosis, and dysentery. Beginning in the 1870s, the discovery that infectious diseases were caused by specific microorganisms made it possible to control them through vaccination, antibiotics, better sanitation, water purification, and elimination of carriers such as rats and mosquitoes. At the same time, improvements in nutrition and living conditions increased resistance to infection. Unfortunately, Ben did not bring this knowledge to Shiloh when he arrived in 1872. What he did bring was a commitment to sanitation that he had developed through his Army hospitalization plus a sense of great caution when he examined a patient for signs of infection. He talked at length, for example, with Harry Parsons and Sal (who owned and ran "Kitty's Place"), attempting to increase their commitment to cleanliness in both their "hostesses" and their bordello facilities. If a girl were showing signs of being sick or had a strange skin condition, he encouraged them to "keep her off the line" for a few days. He also recommended that no customer be allowed to "go upstairs" unless he had bathed. Inadequate? Yes, but one must start somewhere. In his first year in Shiloh, he was clearly fighting an uphill battle. Kitty's Place, in particular, was a pretty rough operation, both in terms of the people who frequented it and their expectations of how their needs would be met. At first they were monumentally disinterested in anything other than liquoring up, grabbing a girl, and pushing her upstairs. Ben's efforts had a more salutary effect with the homesteaders. Given the number of babies who were pushed out during his first year, he swore that he didn't see how they got much other work done on their small farms! In his carriage or on horseback, he became a frequent visitor in the upland country around Lodge Pole Creek. Given their rude dwellings made chiefly of sod and brush wood, given the fact that they were barely eking out an existence, cleanliness and a reasonably adequate diet were not easy to maintain. The rats and the mice had to go? The outhouses had to be located away from drinking water? Nevertheless, the frightening rate of infant mortality and the death rate among their youngest offspring caused them to listen - and slowly, ever so slowly, the death rate dropped. (In later years, he could scarcely believe how many kids he met who were named "Benjamin," Benji, or even "Benjamina" - kids who generally referred to him as either "UncDoc" or "Uncle Ben," depending on their age. "Well," he thought, "at least he knew it hadn't been HIS doing!") Everyone seemed to be having babies! One of the saddest events came only a couple of months after his arrival. Rousted out of bed by a wild pounding on his apartment door in the wee hours of the morning, he opened it to find a rough cowpoke nearly speechless with excitement. Mary, one of Sal's girls, was having a baby and she was in trouble! "Come quick, Doc, please!" Grabbing his medical bag and breathlessly rushing over to Kitty's Place, he found that Mary was in the most serious kind of trouble. Somehow the fetus had become lodged in the birth canal. Washing up and ordering clean cloths, Dr. Ben went to work, but nothing that he did had the slightest effect. He quickly delivered the baby by a Cesarian section...a healthy baby boy. Cleaning the infant and wrapping him in a clean towel, he handed him to Sal and turned to his mother. Ben never knew whether it was due to an infection or simply the stress of the birth, but Mary failed rapidly. After four hours, the young woman gave up her struggle for life. He was about to roundly criticize Sal for not having him see Mary some time before the birth - until he found them in Sal's apartment. The baby was already being breast-fed by a young woman. Sal stood over them with a look on her face that said that the baby had found a new mother. "Meet Paddy," she whispered. "You will help me take care of him properly - not like the way I failed Mary?" Ben kept his words of criticism to himself, offered a few words of advice on newborns before he left, and became a frequent visitor at Kitty's Place. Although she remained a pretty "rough diamond," Sal became much more receptive to his pleas for better health procedures at the bordello. (Chip, a.k.a. "Rawhide") Another potentially serious incident occurred before the summer sun departed from the high plains. The hour was late. As Dr. Ben made ready to close up his office and climb the stairs towards another lonely meal, a heavy wagon rumbled to a halt outside the front door. Three young cowpokes rushed in, carrying a fourth. None of them could have been much more than 18. The boy's body was covered with blood; he was almost unconscious. "This here's Rawhide," one of the youngsters growled. "He's our buddy. Take care of him good, heah? Our trail boss, who's several days out with the Circle J herd, said that he'd take care of your money." "Ok, boys," the doctor replied, "carry Rawhide into the next room, put him on the table, and get his clothes off. Gently now! Cut 'em off if you have to." "Looks worse than it is," another youngster exclaimed. "He shot himself in the leg goofin' off." "Thanks, men," Ben replied as he washed up and quickly gathered some medical gear. "You can get back to the herd now. I'll take good care of Rawhide and get him back to you as soon as possible." The flow of blood had already lessened to a slow trickle by the time Doc turned to him. In any case, he had no difficulty in stanching the flow, pouring a healthy amount of whiskey into the wound and examining his body for other injuries. "A good body it was - even though he couldn't be more than 17. Handsome, lad...nice equipment... A strawberry blond, the kid was almost hairless, other than for the thick shoulder-length locks on his head. Although thin, he was anything but emaciated. In fact, his body was well covered with muscle, sinewy muscle. "'Rawhide'? A good name for him..." Ben thought. Pouring some of the whiskey over his own hands, the doctor sewed up the gunshot wound. "Dear God, less than a half-inch to the right, and he would have been dead before his friends ever got to him!" Instinctively, he felt a surge of affection for the youngster. Covering the boy's body with a light blanket, Ben dozed on a cot beside the padded table. Around 3:00 a.m. the boy began to come to. While the kerosene lantern didn't allow an accurate analysis, his color appeared to have improved and the wound looked good. After having his face sponged off and accepting a teaspoonful of cool water, the lad fell into a quiet sleep. Chip actually woke Ben up in the morning with his calls of "Doc? Doc?" Awaking with a start, Ben was all business. The lad looked fully awake and aware; there was no temperature, his heart beat strongly, and the wound was already beginning to heal nicely. "What in hell did you do to yourself, Rawhide?" the young doctor growled as he ruffled the boy's long hair. "Call me 'Chip,' doc? Please?" the lad mumbled, responding to the affection he sensed in both the man's hand and voice. "Ok, Chip, what in hell did you do to yourself?" "Man," the youngster groaned, "it was so stupid. I was practicing fast-drawing my Colt out of the holster - and I didn't get it out in time!" "Well, Chip," Ben replied, "if that bullet had entered your thigh another half- inch to the right, you would have had no further worries." "Yeah, doc...stupid. (Pause.) Doc, I'm starving! Is there any grub around?" "There sure is, my boy. You stay right there and I'll see what I can rustle up." With than, Ben went upstairs into the kitchen and threw together a nice breakfast of eggs, ham, toast, and coffee. Sitting beside the boy as he wolfed down the rations, he decided that his young patient just might live. What was that saying about God and teenagers? Over a second cup of coffee, he asked the boy if everything else were ok. "Dunno, doc... If I told you something - and, maybe, asked a few questions - would it stay just between you and me?" "Yep," Ben answered, "just between you and me. Shoot." "I'm kinda wondering if there's something wrong with me...sexually," the boy muttered, blushing deeply through his heavy tan. "I'm still a virgin," he added, his face, neck, and upper chest turning even redder until he looked like a sunset over the North Platte. "You know, doc, I've gone into a LOT of saloons," he added with a touch of adolescent bravado, "but," he added, his bravado dissipating, "the girls just don't turn me on. Maybe something's not working. Is there any way to check out something like that?" "Yeah, Chip, there are ways, but, hey, they can be a little embarrassing. Are you sure you wouldn't like to wait until you get home and have your dad or your regular doctor check it out?" "No, sir, I'd rather have you do it. I'm a man; I can take it." "Ok," Ben agreed, moving over to the table and removing the blanket. The boy's cock, a respectable 7-incher, was already rock-hard, the reddened upper parts were nearly the same shade as his face, and precum had already coated the glans and was beginning to trickle down the sides towards his light thatch of strawberry pubes. Dr. Ben stopped in his tracks and growled, "CHIP! We're both men, we respect each other, and we're involved in a medical check-up. Kindly, lose the embarrassment!" "Yes, sir!" Chip replied strongly, gulped, and set his jaw determinedly. Ben softly stoked his nicely sized scrotum and fingered the large, heavy testes. "Oh-h-h-h-h..." the youngster moaned. "You're doing fine, Chip," Ben murmured. With that, he began to titillate the boy's shaft, working upwards until he was able to play with the flange, brush the frenulum, and circle the glans with a finger richly coated in the boy's precum. "AGH-H-H-H-H!" Chip groaned as the fires built. As the young man writhed on the table, Ben gently worked a well-lubricated finger through his anal sphincter and softly stroked his prostrate gland. With the other hand, he vigorously manipulated Chip's penis. "HA! OH, SHEE-EET--T!" the boy screamed and literally exploded! The initial column of pearlescent cum climbed about four feet in the air before returning to earth and coating EVERYTHING! Continuing explosions added to the goo on Ben's startled face as well as Chip's hair and the floor that bordered the table. An enormous globule of cum even hung stickily from his spasmodically twitching big toe! Ben had all he could do to resist bursting out in raucous (if admiring) howls of laughter. "I'd say," he commented dryly, "that your sexual equipment is working...just fine." "Yeah...I guess," the boy responded. "Ahem, sir... Are there any other tests...to make sure?" "Yeah, Ben answered just about breaking up, but they're REALLY embarrassing. Are you sure?" "How long do we have to wait?" the boy inquired. "Well, for me, about 40 minutes or so - unless that is, I had put out as much cum as you did. Then, I'd say, about a year. For you? Oh, give it a few minutes!" "SUPER!" Chip enthused. "Let's do ALL the tests and make sure!" While they both enjoyed soft drinks, Ben took at look at a slide coated with Chip's cum. Thank God for his father's graduation present from the Harvard Medical School, a magnificent microscope crafted by the world renown Charles A. Spencer himself! Thank God he had suffered and lugged it all the way from Boston - even though it had displaced a goodly supply of clothes! "Heh...heh!" he cackled as he examined the wriggling spermatozoa. The slide resembled nothing less than shark feeding time in Botany Bay! "Good thing you never got into a girl, Chip. She'd have had sextuplets, at least!" Not quite sure of what the doctor was cackling about, Chip asked eagerly if it were time. "Yes, my boy, it IS time. Lie back now and let me do all the work. You just relax and enjoy!" With that, he began at Chip's knees and tongued his way up the boy's body, paying particular attention to the warm flesh of his inner thighs. After nibbling for a moment on his scrotum, he skipped up to his eyelids, kissed the tip of his nose, and sucked lightly for a moment on the lad's Adam's apple. Moving to the youngster's nipples, he alternately lathed, sucked, and nibbled until the moaning boy just about wiggled off the table. Moving to the muscled, but absolutely flat stomach, he used his tongue as he would use his hands in massage. The boy's cock was now hard, dark red, and flowing...rather than dripping. Surprising the young pup, he covered his partially open mouth with his own, extending his tongue deep into the orifice, touching, demanding, dueling, challenging. Both men were on the verge of cumming, their passions enflamed beyond control. Quickly, he returned to his target, licking up the seam on the scrotum and the cock, to the frenulum itself. After probing it for a moment, he calmly deep throated the boy and began swallowing, applying his throat muscles against the substantial head and shaft. The good-looking 17 year-old didn't stand a chance! Within less than a moment, he propelled a rich supply of cum deep into his companion. As they lay on their sides, facing each other, on the narrow table, Chip moaned lightly and said, "Oh man, I love you so." Dr. Benjamin Cabot let that one pass. He knew (and deeply appreciated) both mid and late teens, but he knew that they had to grow at their own rates. He contented himself with simply nibbling on Chip's earlobe. "Got to get you back to your herd tomorrow," he whispered. "Yeah," the lad said sadly. "I promised my dad and the trail boss that I'd give it everything I had. Will I see you again?" "Lawdy...lawdy...lawdy," Doc mumbled, echoing the rich accents of his black Massachusetts troops. "Of course! I've got to take those stitches out before you return to Texas. Besides, you might like the third part of my sex tests!" "Oh, yeah," the boy chortled, returning to his happy, sleepy descent from the highest peak he had ever climbed. "Besides, I owe you!" They took the carriage early the next morning in order to cushion and carefully protect Chip's leg. As they turned onto Main Street, a moody youngster said, "I guess I like men, don't I?" "Maybe," Ben carefully answered, "but a lot of us do - and we live happy lives doing all kinds of jobs. It's not the worst of all possible worlds, even though we do have to be careful." "Man, I believe that!" Chip exclaimed. Continuing, Ben asked, "Would you take a couple of words of advice from a guy who would like to be a friend?" "I'd really appreciate that, sir," answered the youngster. "Don't make any moves on anyone until we have had time to talk when we meet next. I think I can give you a few hints on handling yourself that might save you some grief and give you some good surprises. Promise?" "Yes, sir," Chip replied. "Besides, I want that third lesson!" Ben broke into laughter and threw his arm around the lad's shoulders as they approached the Circle J camp where the cowpokes were making ready to break camp for the final drive into Shiloh. (Pony Soldiers) The snow had already been falling for several weeks when a Pony Soldier appeared at his office door, entered, snapped to attention, and barked, "Sir, good morning, sir!" "Relax, soldier. I'm no longer in the Army," Ben responded, grinning a bit and wondering how in hell a mustered out First Lieutenant still rated military courtesy. "Sir, Captain Culpepper sends his respects and asks if you would be so kind as to accompany me to the Post." "There's a problem, Sergeant?" Ben asked. "Sir, yes, sir! One of our patrols got chewed up pretty good by the damned Indians...sorry, sir! Captain Culpepper said they could use your help!" Doc Cabot immediately slipped into his action gear and murmured, "Hold on a minute, Sergeant, while I get my bag, and I'll be right with you." The two-mile ride to the cavalry post seemed to take forever in the bitter cold, the heavy snow, and the biting wind. On arrival, Ben was escorted immediately to the infirmary where the Troop's medic, a young Sergeant, approached him with a worried frown. "Sir, I took care of two of the men who had minor wounds, but there are two more who are just not responding. Would you be so kind as to take a look." "Of course, Sergeant. Please provide hot water, strong soap, and clean cloths, if you will. A bottle of real rotgut would also help." The Sergeant grinned knowingly and departed to collect whatever the doc wanted. "An OFFICER would drink that crap?" he wondered silently to himself. Ben's initial examination suggested that he didn't have anything like smallpox on his hands. On the other hand, the arrow wound had become infected, and a deep side wound from a lance showed no sign of healing. Within a relatively short time, Ben had operated on the lance wound, opening, cleaning, and irrigating it with the alcohol. As he went along, he talked with the medic about sanitary needs, suggesting ways in which the Post medical facility could be made less likely to spread trouble. "Some of our older troopers would be surprised to learn the uses to which rotgut can be put," the young noncom grunted. "Yeah," Ben answered, "but that stuff is best used out in the field...at the time of the injury," he added with a lopsided grin. In truth, Ben was more worried about the arrow wound. Beyond cleaning it up a bit, there was very little else that he could do. God knows, there was no way that he wanted to amputate the lad's arm. On the frontier in January of 1873, he still had to depend on the strength of the youngster's body, and his will to live, to throw off the infection. Beyond keeping the boys clean and warm, it was now a matter of waiting. It was touch and go for several days, though each trooper finally passed his crisis, his fever dropped, and he began to recover. As the good doctor of Shiloh, now lightly bearded, stepped outside Captain Culpepper's quarters - after a superb breakfast cooked by his good wife - he looked at the pony soldiers drawn up in a double line between him and the main gate. After saying goodbye to his host and hostess - and sharing a quiet, affectionate word with the young medic - he mounted and passed between them. As if he were one of them, they broke out in wild cheers. Not only had he gained their respect, but it seemed that Barry and Kyle, the young troopers who were on their way back to health, were great favorites. An honor guard of four troopers escorted him back to Shiloh. (Personal Notes) In the early spring, Ben finally...reluctantly...joined the local "Community Church." At best, he was a "cultural Christian;" at worst, he could mount a high degree of contempt for clergy and their "magical" ideas that impeded the growth of science. There was another element. Eziekiel Long, the pastor, was a firebrand, a rabble-rouser of the worst sort. After the War, he had migrated north from "Bloody Kansas," a "violent abolitionist temporarily without a cause." He didn't trust the man and, more, hated the brand of hate that he spewed from the pulpit. "Rotgut!" he mumbled to himself on several occasions. Nevertheless, the church was the center of social life in Shiloh - even more in many ways than the Crystal Palace where he never saw many of his most valued patients. Slowly, Ben was becoming thoroughly integrated into the community. Yet, he was also increasingly lonely and felt himself at cross-purposes. The occasional trysts with Ezra Matthews, his best friend in Shiloh, continued, but neither man was "in love" with the other. At best, Ben found their sweaty grappling to be little more than a band- aid on a gaping open wound. How poorly it compared with his second meeting with young Chip where he advised him on strategies for making gay contacts (without losing his teeth in the process!) and introduced him to the glories of anal sex. Wow...what an evening! Had Chip ever "paid off his debt" - and proved beyond the shadow of a doubt that all of his equipment was REALLY working. Oh, yeah! Parenthetically, he had also removed the boy's stitches before he headed back to Texas. Dressed in his best suit, clean shaven - for he had come to the conclusion that a beard made him look about ten years older than his 32 years, a fact that did nothing for his ego or his professional status - he even attended the spring dance in the basement of the church. All things considered, it was a disaster. Pastor Long buttonholed him and extolled the love of Christ while warning him of the foulness that lurked in the cesspool that was the human heart. He couldn't have been happier that some of the younger homesteaders had spiked the insipid punch! His "duty dances" with several of the homesteader wives and a few of the younger shopkeepers who had moved into the growing town weren't so bad...but there was Matilda Sommers, the town's schoolmarm! He had found her a bit "sticky" at the reception that had attended his arrival, but she had evidently decided that only a full frontal attack would land the most eligible bachelor in Shiloh. A full frontal attack? Yes, that was exactly what it was! "That woman has to have an icebreaker or two in her family tree," he groaned to himself as he tried to breathe. There were surely things that he enjoyed feeling as they pressed into his body, Ben decided, but a woman's breasts just didn't make the list! She had recently been to Omaha and kept up a steady stream of conversation about what Aunt Hattie had said, and why she couldn't possibly wear the newest Paris creations that she had tried on...for hours, my dear, for hours... in the finest stores. When she wasn't babbling about relatives and hats, she was babbling about first graders, her idea of perfect human beings. "Don't you just love them?" she inquired sweetly...for the fifth or sixth time. Leaving her babbling...with a cup of spiked punch...he escaped to the privy "out back" where he sat on a low wall, wiping his brow and waiting his turn. "You're damned if you do, and you're damned if you don't," a very tipsy young man slurred as he staggered out of the privy. "Good luck, brother!" "I think I need more than luck," Ben moaned as he quietly crept away from the church...and Matilda Sommers. (A Note from the Future) On one of his trips to check on Baby Paddy at Kitty's Place, Ben spied a circular posted on a message board at the entrance. An "orphans train" would make its very first stop in Shiloh on the 19th. Thirty-one children from the East Coast, mainly from the immigrant slums of New York City, aged four months to 16 years, were advertised as available "free to good homes on a ninety days trial." "June 19, 1873," Ben muttered, "just about a year since I arrived in this country." Shrugging his shoulders, he grunted, "At least they aren't all first graders!" and entered Kitty's. (To Be Continued)