The Witness
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Daniel Knott lives quietly as a bookkeeper for Amos Burch, the leading citizen of Paradise, Colorado. Burch is famed for his generosity and civic virtue. But one day, Knott finds himself witnessing something that jeopardizes his employer's reputation. Soon Knott is in grave danger. He can lie in court, and continue to live comfortably, or he can tell the truth, and find himself in prison, without a job, his reputation ruined, and his family destitute. It is the hardest choice the young bookkeeper ever had to make. What will he do?
Richard S. Wheeler
Richard S. Wheeler (1935-2019) wrote over fifty novels and several short stories. He won six Spur Awards (for Fool's Coach, Sierra, Masterson, Drum's Ring, Vengeance Valley, and The Canyon of Bones) and the Owen Wister Award for lifetime achievement in the field of western literature. His series include Skye's West and The Witness. Before turning to fiction he was a newsman and book editor. Wheeler lived in the literary and film community of Livingston, Montana.
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The Witness - Richard S. Wheeler
THE WITNESS
Prologue
I am going to tell you about heroes. Call me an observer. Call me a frontier philosopher. Call me a crank. Or call me Horatio Bates if you prefer. That’s a grandiose name to hang on a village postmaster. My parents had designs upon my future that didn’t include becoming a minor government employee.
They had other things in mind, such as a professorship at Harvard, or a stint as secretary of state, or becoming the Edward Gibbon of the American republic and recording its history. I never spent a day in public school, but was tutored so fiercely that by the age of eighteen I knew everything, or thought I did. Fortunately, about then I grew weary of books and tutors and knowledge.
At that point, my ambitions and my parents’ ambitions for me parted company. I headed west, full of adventure and armed with a sinecure as a postmaster of a border town in Kansas. They grieved. I regretted disappointing them, but was determined to make my own life.
There are heavy responsibilities that come with managing the posts. There is money in those envelopes, and love letters, and bills, and word from long lost loved ones, and notices of death. But a postmaster is also the town sage and often an astute observer of the character of a town’s inhabitants. Many has been the time when I’ve been asked to recommend some citizen or other, and on occasion I have quietly declined.
And that brings me to my real vocation. Postmastering has never been anything more to me than a means to put bread on my table. I am a philosopher and scholar, probably no different from a thousand such village savants who dot the American landscape, save for the fact of my education.
My real vocation is the study of character. On the frontier, where I dwell, it is more visible and valuable than back in settled areas of the country, which is why I drift from one border town to another, on the rim of settlement. I am endlessly fascinated with the way people conduct themselves under pressure. I tell myself that I am studying all this because I believe in a strong and virtuous nation. But that’s just my rationale. I esteem moral courage for its own sake.
Show me an incorruptible man and I will write his name upon the sky. Show me a man who doesn’t cave in to evil and I will exalt him above kings and presidents and popes and savants. Show me a man of moral courage and I will shout his name from the mountaintops and preserve his name for posterity, so a hundred generations of Americans will know and revere his greatness.
I honor an incorruptible man for his own sake and have made a life work of collecting stories about such people. That’s why you may call me the Observer if you choose. I have taken, recently, to scribbling these stories for posterity. You will see me in many of them, playing some minor role or other, sometimes being nothing more than a listener or counselor. And you will discover that I am a rootless man; every little while I hie myself to a new frontier town after arranging a transfer with my superiors in Washington. They gladly send me along; good frontier postmasters are hard to find.
Now, after years of collecting stories, I am ready to publish my findings. What I have in my collection is nothing less than heroic conduct by all sorts of people. They have surprised me, these people. Sometimes the timorous soul I would least expect to show some backbone turns out to be the only man in town willing to stand up for what is right and good. And sometimes the reverse is true; the man most versed in moral niceties is the man who fails under pressure.
I have seen great things, awesome courage, amazing strength under pressures, and I delight in telling you about them. These stories will lift your spirits and make you proud as punch to be an American. I will light bonfires on the mountaintops, compose ballads, carve in granite the names of the anointed. I will show you what it means to be a man or woman of honor. They are the stuff of ballads, the soul of legends.
My job at the mail window is well nigh perfect for this odd vocation. Everyone in town eventually picks up mail, buys stamps, and visits with me. And it is a postmaster’s luck–or curse—that some also confide in me, so that I know what lies in the souls of half the denizens of one of these frontier towns. I have discovered obscure heroes. If I were a balladeer, I would sing their songs.
That’s all you really need to know about old Bates. You’ll find me wandering through these little yarns, and maybe even drawing some conclusions at the end. For I am the Observer.
Chapter 1
There it was! Daniel Knott, bookkeeper for the Merchant Bank of Paradise, spotted the entry in the ledger and knew the little mystery had been solved. He felt exceedingly pleased, not just because he had figured out a curious transaction, but because the discovery made him proud, oh so proud, to be employed by such a nobleman as Amos C. Burch.
Knott was aglow. Once again, Amos Burch had shown himself to be a generous and compassionate man, worthy of the high esteem he had garnered in Paradise, Colorado. Mr. Burch had spared the widow the foreclosure, and that kindness would rest well with the citizens of Paradise.
Knott enjoyed his detective skills. Little did people realize how much of their private life was bared to the eyes of a good accountant and teller. He figured he knew more about the lives of those in Paradise than anyone else in town.
Just yesterday, Mr. Burch had departed by buggy for the ranch of the widow, Aloise Joiner, about five miles up the valley. His purpose, he explained to Knott, was to break the bad news to Mrs. Joiner. She was four months in arrears on her January 1 mortgage payment, owed $571, the amount overdue on a balance of $2200, and there was no way out but for the bank to foreclose.
After all, Daniel,
Burch had said, it’s not the bank’s money; it’s the depositors’ funds that we’ve loaned, and we must protect our depositors at all costs.
Knott had heard that idea from the first day he had been employed at Burch’s bank, six years earlier. It was sound banking practice. A bank had the obligation and duty to protect the hard-won assets of its customers.
But when Burch returned, he said no more about the foreclosure, and Knott chewed on that in his mind. Then he discovered a $600 deposit in the widow’s account, and a $571 withdrawal obviously intended to make the mortgage current, and the payment recorded on the mortgage ledger. But where had the $600 come from? Ah, that was the mystery.
Mrs. Joiner’s husband Rolf had died the year before and she had struggled on alone, her sole son long gone and living in California. She had rented the pastures, hoping to make ends meet that way, but the tenants had been careless and improvident—Knott could have told her that but there was just so much a teller could say—and had paid her very little. And so the lovely Eloise had slipped farther and farther behind. But a certain someone had deposited enough in her account to stave off the disaster.
A comely woman, Mrs. Joiner. About forty, Knott estimated, with a crown of black hair, a knowing smile, and the vibrant features and form of a much younger woman. It surprised him that she had not remarried. But that, too, was not his business. She had every right to be particular.
And now he had bared the secret. The funds had come from Amos Burch himself. There indeed was the withdrawal from Burch’s own account, and the posting in Mrs. Joiner’s. Ah! So some small tragedy had been averted that day. With typical modesty, Burch had posted the transaction in the great gray buckram-bound ledger himself, not wanting his charity to be obvious to his staff. Mr. Knott’s joy bloomed at the thought. Amos Burch was a sensitive gentleman.
Done with his toil for the day, Knott turned down the wick in the lamp and closed the books, knowing everything was in perfect balance. Twilight was descending and soon the mountain-girt town of Paradise would see the first stars emerge in the clear quiet air. He could think of no more perfect place on earth than the aptly-named Paradise. This was where he was bringing up his family; where he and his wife had put down deep roots and won the esteem of the community. This was a town with a future, a town with broad avenues, spacious white-clapboard homes, and a bustling red-brick business district.
Paradise was quietly guided by Amos Burch, and every citizen had benefitted because of it. Mr. Burch actually owned much of the county. He possessed several large ranches, Rand’s Mercantile, the Clarion Hotel, two stagecoach lines, the water company, the Sally Mine with its rich silver lode, a cordwood dealership, Beck’s Creamery, the Harvest Bakery, Colorado Livery Stable, and numerous lots and tracts. If his hand had rested heavily on Paradise, people might have felt differently about him. But in fact, Knott had never heard a harsh word about his employer.
It was true, of course, that a word from Burch was all it took to elect the judge, sheriff, county commissioners, clerk of court, mayor, councilmen, and other officers of the town and county. It was true that every citizen did business with him, if not at the bank, then in his numerous stores and enterprises. But here, too, his hand rested lightly on Paradise. He did not gouge customers and he went out of his way to make sure everyone was happy.
His charities were a legend. Not an impoverished soul failed to receive a Christmas basket, and those who confronted medical or other disasters found a bundle of cash in an unmarked envelope at their door. Everyone knew that such succor came from Burch, but he never revealed himself.
Nor was that the end of it. He had an amiable and affectionate wife, Myrtle, and adult children who seemed unaware that they were members of the most prominent family in town. The citizens of Paradise would gladly have sent him to the White House if they had the power to do so. Under such leadership Paradise had prospered and bloomed, and no one was left behind.
Knott contemplated all that as he stored the ledger, locked $496.23 in the black safe, turned the battered sign on the bank door to Closed, and donned his old Alpaca coat against a stiff April chill. Lamplight glowed from Burch’s door and Knott decided to let Mr. Burch know, very privately of course, how pleased he was at this new largesse.
He rapped lightly and entered, as he always did, finding Burch doing his own accounts at his massive oaken desk. Burch’s office was not grand, but was tastefully appointed and very much attuned to the man who possessed it. Discreet wealth.
I’m going now, Mr. Burch. You’ll lock up.
Yes, surely, Daniel.
I want to say, sir—I’m glad it wasn’t necessary to foreclose on Mrs. Joiner.
Burch smiled. The bank president had a high forehead, graying hair, extravagant muttonchops, a curiously formed broken nose that suggested a collision with a traveling fist, and a mild-mannered gaze that suggested acceptance of those in his presence. He radiated will and intelligence, and something else: respect for the ancient virtues.
We won’t say anything, will we, Daniel?
No, sir. But I personally wanted to thank you. Those were your personal funds—
Ah, you bookkeepers! A man has no secrets.
Well, I think it was a noble thing to do. I suppose Mrs. Joiner was most appreciative—
Ah, indeed, but I want your word, Daniel. Not a whisper of this to anyone, not your wife, not a soul, right?
You are a modest man, Mr. Burch. This should be celebrated by all of Paradise.
No!
The sharpness startled Knott. He had scarcely ever heard a forceful word from Burch.
No, Daniel, you will keep this secret. You will reveal it at your peril.
Knott stared at a new man. This Burch was not mild of eye, and his tone was not benign.
Yes, sir,
he said. As the Bible says, in matters of charity the right hand should not know what the left hand is doing.
Burch’s imperial glare swiftly vanished. All right, then, Daniel. You’re my right-hand man, and you do...not...know what the left is doing.
He waved Knott out of the room.
The bookkeeper braved the night air, hiking along Cedar Street, the town’s main thoroughfare, past the county courthouse square, and then a block containing a dry goods store, two hotels, a harness shop, blacksmith, bakery, butcher, hardware, law offices, and a greengrocer. He passed the Sweetwater Saloon, the only one in town, and one of Burch’s properties. In the Sweetwater bartenders willingly served two or three beers, or one or two spirituous drinks, but then discouraged additional sales. Burch’s hand rested lightly, but it did shape the mores of the citizens, and Knott had heard of occasions when undesirables had been quietly advised to leave town. There were no drunks in Paradise.
Knott turned left on Juniper Street and walked amiably toward his own white frame house, with its white picket fence and spacious lot. Lamplight glowed in the windows. He knew every one of his neighbors for two blocks in either direction. This was an orderly world, safe as mankind could make it. Four blocks north the street petered out into a grassy hillside, and beyond that lay a vast and lawless hinterland rising toward the snowy San Juans in the distance. He could not imagine a more sublime, secure, or beautiful place on earth. Here, in a new land, was a city stretching its hands upward toward heaven.
He sometimes asked himself how he could be so lucky, and in those moments his thoughts always returned to one vital thing: he considered himself, like his employer, a man of integrity. Each day he handled hundreds, even thousands, of dollars. Each day he made sure that every cent was accounted for. If so much as a penny was missing, he would replace it with one from his own pocket. One time, when seven dollars had mysteriously vanished and could not be found in the cash drawers or books, Knott had quietly placed seven dollars from his own purse in the cash drawer. That was two days’ wages. He earned a hundred dollars a month, which made him one of the better-paid citizens of Paradise.
That integrity was the secret. He was trusted by Mr. Burch, by his neighbors, by his friends and family, by merchants, by ranchers and mine managers and teamsters and by little children who put their pennies into their own savings accounts to get two percent interest. Virtue was its own reward, but it had wrought most of the joys of his life.
His pace quickened with the thought of his wife and children in the house just ahead. He was a lucky man, and knew why.
When he opened the gate in his picket fence, Rascal greeted him, the mongrel’s tail wagging the whole mutt. He could always count on that greeting; within the house his evening arrival evoked differing responses. Hannah could be aglow when he stepped in and kissed her cheek, or she could ignore him. Sometimes the children rushed to greet him; more often they didn’t. He understood that. Life was not smooth. Sometimes he left his wicket at the bank feeling irritable. Sometimes Hannah was weary from her endless chores, or nursing a migraine, or fuming at the children. Peter could be sullen and silent, except when talking about horses. Rosalie, the youngest, could simply ignore her father. She was at an age when mere fathers didn’t exist. And Daniel Jr. sometimes stared at his father, obviously weighing whether fathers were useful commodities, more valuable than a baseball mitt.
He understood all that. Not even Paradise could make life go smoothly.
But this evening everything was fine. Hannah smiled as she whipped butter into the mashed potatoes.
You had a good day; I can tell,
she said.
Yes I did. I was inspired by something I discovered today, and I’ve felt good ever since.
That’s what you should say to me when you learn I’m expecting.
He gaped. Good God, Hannah.
She laughed. I’m not expecting. But that’s what you should say. Women like compliments.
He knew that later on she was going to tease him about the look on his face, and he would laugh with her. Children were welcome in Paradise, Colorado.
Chapter 2
Amos C. Burch knew himself to be an honorable man, and that was what was deviling him as he steered his lacquered ebony barouche around the quagmires of the Alamosa Road.
He could not and would not turn back now. He had not known what paradise was until recently, but now he knew. True paradise was breathtaking, but it had complicated his life. He loved simplicity in all his affairs: simplicity in business. Simplicity in theology. Simplicity in domestic life. Even simplicity of name. His middle name was Cash, and he wished it had been his surname, so that his initials would be ABC instead of ACB.
His powerful jet-haired gelding, El Morocco, drew the carriage easily through the springtime slop, enjoying the outing. In recent weeks the horse had enjoyed a dozen outings, each of them along the same road up the valley; each ending at the modest shake-roofed board-and-batten ranch house owned by Eloise Joiner—and the Merchant Bank of Paradise.
Of these frequent spring jaunts he had said almost nothing to his employees. Once he announced that he was looking at ranch properties, a perfect truth beyond reproach. On one other occasion he had announced to Knott that he was going out to counsel Mrs. Joiner on the management of her spread because the woman was not gifted in such matters.
That too was a truth beyond cavil. She had leased her pastures to the Jaekels, narrow-eyed, low-browed father and son bachelor neighbors, who were systematically mulcting her of grass, cooking the books, and paying her a quarter of what they ought to be. Burch considered it a duty to enlighten Eloise about matters once handled expertly by her late husband. She was an apt student, eager to learn everything, yes everything, he had to teach her.
Amos Burch counted himself a successful man, and knew it had little to do with luck. His flair for business had been built upon the simplest of all precepts: keep customers happy. He did not regard his customers as cows to be milked, nor did he try to squeeze the last cent out of a transaction. Quite the contrary. The various managers of his enterprises had been carefully trained to be accommodating and helpful to everyone. It had paid off. He was