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Deets sat with him, looking at the river thoughtfully. It had long represented the northern boundary of their activity. The land beyond the rusty sands was new to them.
"Do you think we ought to wait and let it go down?" Call asked.
"It ain't going down," Deets pointed out. "Still raining."
Dish came over to watch as Deets probed for a crossing, several times checking his horse and moving to the side to seek firmer footing.
"I guess this will spoil Jasper's digestion," he said, for Jasper's sensitivity on the subject of rivers was becoming more p.r.o.nounced. "We bogged sixty head of Mr. Pierce's cattle in this very river, although that was over toward Arkansas. I must have had a hundred pounds of mud on my clothes before we got them out."
Deets put his horse into the surging water and was soon across the channel, but had to pick his way across another long expanse of sand before he was safely on the north bank. Evidently he didn't like the crossing, because he waved the others back with his hat and loped away downriver. He was soon out of sight in the rain, but came back in an hour with news of a far better crossing downstream. By then the whole crew was nervous, for the Red was legendary for drowning cowboys, and the fact that they had nothing to do but sit and drip increased general anxiety.
But their fears were unfounded. The rain slowed and the sun broke through as they were easing the cattle across the mud flats toward the brownish water. Deets had found a gravel bar that made the entrance to the river almost as good as a road. Old Dog led the herd right in and was soon across and grazing on the long wet gra.s.s of the Oklahoma Territory. Five or six of the weaker cows bogged as they were coming out, but they were soon extracted. Dish and Soupy took off their clothes and waded into the mud and got ropes on the cows, and Bert Borum pulled them out.
The sight of the sun put the men in high spirits. Hadn't they crossed the Red River and lived to tell about it? That night the Irishman sang for hours, and a few of the cowboys joined in-they had gradually learned a few of the Irish songs.
Sometimes Po Campo sang in Spanish. He had a low, throaty voice that always seemed like it was about to die for lack of breath. The songs bothered some of the men, they were so sad.
"Po, you're a jolly fellow, how come you only sing about death?" Soupy asked. Po had a little rattle, made from a gourd, and he shook it when he sang. The rattle, plus his low throaty voice, made a curious effect.
The sound could make the hairs stand upon Pea Eye's neck. "That's right, Po. You do sing sad, for a happy man," Pea Eye observed once, as the old man shook his gourd.
"I don't sing about myself," Campo said. "I sing about life. I am happy, but life is sad. The songs don't belong to me."
"Well, you sing them, who do they belong to?" Pea asked.
"They belong to those who hear them," Po said. He had given Deets one of the little women figures he whittled-Deets was very proud of it, and kept it in the pocket of his old chaps.
"Don't give none of them to me," Pea Eye said. "They're too sad. I'll get them nervous dreams."
"If you hear them, they belong to you," Po said. It was hard to see his eyes. They were deep-set anyway, and he seldom took his big-brimmed hat off.
"I wish we had a fiddle," Needle said. "If we had a fiddle, we could dance."
"Dance with who?" Bert asked. "I don't see no ladies."
"Dance with ourselves," Needle said.
But they didn't have a fiddle-just Po Campo shaking his rattle and the Irishman singing of girls.
Even on a nice clear night the sad singing and the knowledge that there were no ladies was enough to make the men feel low. They ended up talking of their sisters, those that had them, most nights.
Call heard little of the talk or the singing, for he continued to make his camp apart. He thought it best. If the herd ran, he would be in a better position to head it.
Gus's absence depressed him. It could only mean that something had gone wrong, and they might never find out what.
One night, cleaning his rifle, he was startled by the sound of his own voice. He had never been one to talk to himself, but as he cleaned the gun, he had been having, in his head, the conversation with Gus that there had not been time to have before Gus left. "I wish you'd killed the man when you had a chance," he said. "I wish you'd never encouraged Jake to bring that girl."
The words had just popped out. He was doubly glad he was alone, for if the men had heard him they would have thought him daft.
But no one heard him except the h.e.l.l b.i.t.c.h, who grazed at the end of a long rope. Every night he slipped one end of the rope beneath his belt and then looped it around his wrist, so there would be no chance of her taking fright and suddenly jerking loose from him. Call had become so sensitive to her movements that if she even raised her head to sniff the air he would wake up. Usually it was no more than a deer, or a pa.s.sing wolf. But the mare noticed, and Call rested better, knowing she would watch.
61.
AUGUSTUS FIGURED THAT two or three days' ride east would put them in the path of the herds, but on the second day the rains struck, making travel unpleasant. He cut Lorena a crude poncho out of a tarp he had picked up at the buffalo hunter's camp, but even so it was bad traveling. The rains were chill and it looked like they might last, so he decided to risk Adobe Walls-the old fort offered the only promise of shelter.
They got there to find the place entirely deserted and most of the buildings in ruins.
"Not enough buffalo," Augustus said. "It wasn't two years ago that they had that big fight here, and now look at it. It looks like it's been empty fifty years." The only signs of life were the rattlesnakes, of which there were plenty, and mice, which explained the snakes. A few owls competed with the snakes for the mice.
They found a room whose roof was more-or-less intact, and whose fireplace even worked once Augustus poked loose an owl's nest. He broke up the remains of an old wagon to make a fire.
"This weather'll slow Call up," Augustus said. "I expect they all think we're dead by now."
Lorena still had not spoken. She found her silence hard to give up-it seemed her best weapon against the things that could happen. Talk didn't help when things were worst-no one was listening. If the Kiowas had got to do what they would have liked to do, she could have screamed her voice out and no one would have heard.
Gus was perfectly patient with her silence. He didn't seem to mind it. He just went on talking as if they were having a conversation, talking of this and that. He didn't talk about what had happened to her but treated her as he always had in Lonesome Dove.
Though she didn't talk, she couldn't stand to have Gus out of her sight. At night she rolled in his blanket with him-it was only then that she felt warm. But if he stood up to do some errand she watched him, and if the errand took him outside she got up and went out too.
The second day the rains still poured. Gus poked around the fort to see if he could find anything useful and came across a large box of b.u.t.tons.
"There was a woman here during that fight, I recollect," he said. "I guess she took off so fast she left her b.u.t.ton box."
There were all sizes of b.u.t.tons-it gave Augustus an idea. He had a pack of cards in his saddlebags, which he quickly produced. "Let's play a few hands," he said. "The b.u.t.tons can be our money." He spread a blanket near the fireplace and sorted the b.u.t.tons into piles according to size. There were some large horn b.u.t.tons that must have been meant for coats.
"Them'll be our fifty-dollar gold pieces," he said. "These here will be tens and these little ones can be fives. This is a high-stakes game we're playing."
"Don't you cheat, Gus," Lorena said suddenly. "If you cheat I won't give you no pokes."
Augustus was so pleased to hear her talk that tears came into his eyes. "We're just playing for b.u.t.tons, honey," he said.
For the first hand or two Lorena made mistakes-she had forgotten what the cards meant. But it quickly came back to her and she played avidly, even laughing once when she won a hand. But the playing soon tired her-it seemed anything tired her if she did it long. And she still trembled at the least thing.
When Gus saw that she was tiring he made a pallet for her by the fireplace and sat by her while she napped. Her bruises were healing. She was much thinner than she had been when Blue Duck took her away-her cheeks had hollowed. Outside, the rain pelted the long prairies. The roof had a leak in one corner and a little stream of water dripped down one wall.
They stayed in the Walls for two days, comfortably out of the wet. That first evening, by good luck, Augustus happened to see a deer grazing just outside the wagon yard. That night they had venison and Lorena ate with real appet.i.te for the first time.
"Eat like that, and you'll soon be the most beautiful woman in Texas again," Augustus said.
Lorena said nothing. That night she woke up crying and shaking. Augustus held her and crooned to her as if she were a child. But she didn't go back to sleep. She lay on the pallet, her eyes wide open. An hour or two before dawn the rain stopped, and soon a bright sun shone above the wet prairie.
"I wish we could stay here," Lorena said, when she saw Gus making preparations to leave.
"We might not last long if we did," Augustus said. "Every mangy renegade that's left loose knows about this place. If a bunch of them showed up at once we'd be in trouble."
Lorena understood that, but she didn't want to go. Lying on the pallet and playing cards for b.u.t.tons was fine, so long as it was just Gus who was there. She didn't want to see other men, for any reason at all. She didn't want them to see her. There was a strong feeling within her that she should stay hidden. She wanted Gus to hide her.
"I don't want them," she said, looking at Gus.
"You won't have to have 'em," Augustus said. "I'll see you're let be. But we can't stay here. Game's skimpy and there's no telling who'll come along."
Lorena began to cry when she got on her horse. She could no longer control her tears. They were apt to come at any time, though, like talk, they did no good. Things happened, no matter how hard you cried.
"Now, Lorie, don't you fret no more than you have to," Augustus said. "We'll get over to where the cowboys are and then we'll be fine. You'll get to San Francisco yet."
Lorena had almost forgotten what San Francisco was. Then she remembered: a place with boats, where it was cool. It was where Jake had promised to take her. Jake had gone out of her mind so completely, while she was confused, that it was strange to think of him. It was like thinking of someone who had died..
"Where is Jake?" she asked.
"I don't know," Augustus said. "He wanted to come with me but I didn't want to put up with the scamp."
They rode until the afternoon, keeping close to the Canadian, which was high from the rains. Toward evening they topped a ridge and saw a surprising sight: four great herds of cattle, spread as far as one could see across the plain.
"River's stopped 'em," Augustus said. "They're all waiting for it to go down."
The cowboys were still a mile or more away, but Lorena began to shake at the sight of them. They were just more men.
"They won't hurt you, honey," Augustus said. "Likely they'll be more scared of you than you are of them. Most of them's probably forgot what a woman looks like."
Lorena fell back into her silence. She had nowhere else to go-As they approached the nearest herd, a man galloped out to meet them.
"My lord, it's the man from Yale college, the one who read that Latin on my sign," Augustus said. "I recognize the horse. It's that nice bay we stole back from old Pedro just before he died."
Lorena didn't look at the man.
Wilbarger was as surprised as Augustus. He had seen two riders and supposed they were scouts for yet another herd. "By G.o.d, McCrae, you're a surprise," he said. "I thought you was three weeks behind me, and here you are attacking from the west. How far back is your herd, or do you have one?"
"As you can see, I ain't brought a cow," Augustus said. "Call may still have a herd of them if he ain't lost them or just turned them loose."
"If he would do that he's a fool, and he didn't act like a fool," Wilbarger said. "He wouldn't trade me that mare."
He tipped his hat to Lorena. "I don't believe I've met the young lady," he said.
"This is Miss Lorena Wood," Augustus said. "She had the misfortune to be abducted. Now I've abducted her back. We're short of grub and would like to purchase some if you have any to spare."
Wilbarger glanced once more at Lorena, who sat with her head down.
"I am not such a scoundrel as to sell grub," he said. "You're welcome to come to camp and eat with my tough bunch, if you can stand them."
"I doubt we could," Augustus said quietly. "We're both shy."
"Oh, I see," Wilbarger said, glancing at Lorena again. "I'm d.a.m.n glad you don't have a herd. You'd think there'd be room enough for everybody on these plains, but as you can see, the view is crowding up. I was going to try a crossing today but I've decided to wait for morning."
He was silent a moment, considering the problem of their shyness.
"We're about to eat," he said. "It's a free country, so my advice to you would be to make camp where you choose. I'll borrow a pot from our cook and bring you some grub once you get settled."
"I'm much obliged," Augustus said. "Noticed a tree in these parts?"
"No, sir," Wilbarger said. "If there was a tree in these parts I'd be sitting under it."
They made camp on the plain. Wilbarger was as good as his word. In an hour he returned with a small pack mule. Besides an ample pot of beefsteak and beans he brought a small tent.
"I scarcely use this tent," Wilbarger said, dropping it by their campfire. "You're welcome to borrow it. The young lady might like a little privacy."
"I guess it's your training in Latin that's given you such good manners," Augustus remarked. "The sky's unpredictable and we would enjoy a tent."
"I also brought a bottle," Wilbarger said. "I seem to remember you're a drinking man."
As soon as the tent was up, Lorena went in. Gus spread her a pallet and she sat where she could watch him through the open flap. The men sat outside and drank.
"Had an easy trip?" Augustus asked.
"No, sir," Wilbarger said. "My foreman died, south of Fort Worth. I have another herd somewhere ahead of me, but I can't leave to go check on it. I don't know that I'll ever see it again, although I may."
"What'd he die of?" Augustus asked. "It's a healthy climate down that way."
"He died of a horse falling over backwards on him," Wilbarger said. "He would would test the broncs." test the broncs."
"Foolish," Augustus said. "A grown man ought to have sense enough to seek gentle horses."
"Many don't," Wilbarger pointed out. "That mare Captain Call wouldn't trade me didn't look that gentle, yet he's a grown man."
"Grown, but not what you'd call normal," Augustus said. "I put it down to lack of education. If he'd been trained in Latin he'd most likely have let you have that horse."
"Do you consider yourself normal, then?" Wilbarger asked.
"Certainly," Augustus said. "I never met a soul in this world as normal as me."
"And yet here you sit, far out on the naked plain, with a shy woman you had to rescue," Wilbarger pointed out. "How many skunks did you have to kill in order to rescue her?"
"A pa.s.sel," Augustus said. "I got the peons but the jefe jefe got away. A bandit named Blue Duck, whom I'd advise you to give a wide berth unless you're skilled in battle." got away. A bandit named Blue Duck, whom I'd advise you to give a wide berth unless you're skilled in battle."
"You think he's around? I've heard of the scamp."
"No, I think he's headed for the Purgatory River," Augustus said. "But then, I underestimated him once, which is why the lady got abducted. I'm out of practice when it comes to figuring out bandits."
"She's a little peaked, that girl," Wilbarger said. "You ought to take her back to Fort Worth. There's not much in the way of accommodations or medical care north of here."
"We'll ease along," Augustus said. "Where shall I return this tent?"
"I have business in Denver, later in the year," Wilbarger said. "That's if I live, of course. Send it over to Denver, if you have a chance. I don't use the dern thing much, but I might next winter, if I'm still out where it's windy."