Chapter 4
The woman wore a long skirt and long-sleeved shirt,
like most of the women from the wagon train, but unlike them, she
wasn’t wearing a bonnet at the moment. The late afternoon sunlight
shone brilliantly on the reddish-gold curls that fell around her
lovely face. The drab attire wasn’t enough to completely conceal
the womanly curves of her body.
Preacher and Uncle Dan still sat on their horses.
The woman came to a stop a few yards away, smiled up at them, and
said, “Hello. Welcome to our little community on wheels. Ned tells
me that you’re going to be staying with us tonight.”
Preacher recovered his wits with a little start,
hurriedly swung down from the saddle, and motioned for Uncle Dan to
do likewise. He plucked the wide-brimmed brown felt hat from his
head and gave the woman a polite nod.
“Yes, ma’am, I reckon that’s right, although I
don’t rightly know who this fella Ned is.”
“My husband, Ned Donnelly,” she said.
“Oh.” Preacher tried not to appear too crestfallen
at the discovery that this fine beauty was married. “Yes, ma’am,
we’re acquainted. Seems like a right nice fella.”
“He is.” The woman extended her hand. “I’m Lorraine
Donnelly.”
Preacher gripped her hand. He could tell from the
calluses on her palm that she must be handling the team attached to
one of the wagons. Reins left marks like that on a person’s hands
when you used them all day, day after day. Despite that, her touch
had a womanliness to it that affected him, as it would any man who
spent most of his time on the frontier, far from the presence of
any female.
“They call me Preacher. This is Uncle Dan
Sanderson.”
Lorraine Donnelly smiled again. “Oh, you’re uncle
and nephew.”
“No, ma’am,” Uncle Dan said as he shook hands with
her, too. “I ain’t related to this here tall drink o’ water. Folks
just call me Uncle Dan ’cause I was trap-pin’ partners with my
nephew Pete. He got hisself kilt a while back, though.”
Lorraine’s smile went away. “Oh, I’m sorry.”
“So am I.”
Looking slightly uncomfortable now, Lorraine
changed the subject by saying, “Ned tells me there may be hostile
Indians close by.”
Preacher nodded. “Yes, ma’am.”
“Do you know what Mr. Buckhalter intends to do
about it?”
Preacher and Uncle Dan exchanged a glance, then
Preacher said, “I ain’t sure Mr. Buckhalter believed us. He seems
to think this ain’t Pawnee territory.”
“But you believe it is.”
“We kilt half a dozen of the varmints yesterday,”
Uncle Dan said.
Lorraine’s eyes widened, and although her face had
a healthy tan from being outside most of the time, Preacher thought
she paled a little. “Killed . . . half a dozen of them?” she
repeated.
“They ambushed us,” Preacher said shortly. “We’ll
be tellin’ the whole bunch about it directly. I think your husband
wants everybody to hear about it.”
“Yes, that sounds like Ned. He thinks everyone
should have a voice in any decision.”
That was an admirable goal, thought Preacher, but
sometimes it wasn’t practical. Too many people didn’t know enough
about a particular situation and didn’t have enough experience to
make a wise decision. And some were just damned fools to begin
with. When it came down to life and death, it was usually better to
let somebody who knew what he was doing make the decisions for
everybody, and save the dithering for later.
Lorraine recovered her smile and said, “You’ll have
dinner with us tonight. No arguments.”
Uncle Dan gave her a gap-toothed grin. “I wasn’t
plannin’ on arguin’, ma’am. Was you figurin’ on givin’ the lady an
argument, Preacher?”
“Nope,” Preacher said.
“Fine. We’ll eat about sundown.”
“Yes’m,” Uncle Dan said.
Lorraine nodded and turned to go back to the
wagons. When she was out of earshot, Uncle Dan said quietly, “That
there is a mighty handsome woman.”
“Yeah . . . and a mighty married woman, too,”
Preacher reminded him. “I reckon you can forget any ideas of
courtin’ her, Uncle Dan.”
“Me? Hell, boy, I thought you might try to find out
how she’d feel about doin’ a little sparkin’. I’m too old for such
foolishness.”
“See this gray in my hair? I ain’t no spring
chicken, neither.”
“No, but it’s still summer for you. I’m closin’ in
on winter in my life!”
“Let’s just go tend to the horses,” Preacher
said.
While they did that, the pilgrims finally succeeded
in maneuvering their wagons into a reasonably tight circle, which
was then tightened up even more as each team was unhitched in turn
and the wagons backed closer to each other, leaving only one fairly
wide gap where the first team could be hooked up the next morning.
Preacher and Uncle Dan brought their saddle horses and pack animals
into the circle and picketed them where they would be out of the
way.
The guides led their mounts into the circle, too,
and Preacher spotted Buckhalter again for the first time in a while
as the bearded man unsaddled his horse and rubbed the animal down.
Buckhalter might be a prickly son of a bitch, Preacher thought, but
at least he was taking good care of his horse. That had to count
for something in Preacher’s book.
Preacher could tell which wagon belonged to Ned and
Lorraine Donnelly, because he saw Donnelly tending to the team and
Lorraine taking supplies from the wagon to start preparing the
evening meal. She set up a cook pot while two boys about eight and
ten years old took wood from the wood box and began building a fire
under the pot. The youngsters had the same reddish-gold hair as
Lorraine, so it was obvious they were her sons.
Preacher nodded toward the wagon and told Uncle
Dan, “I’m gonna go talk to Donnelly.”
“You wouldn’t be goin’ over there to be around Miz
Donnelly, now would you?”
“No, I wouldn’t,” Preacher said. “I got an eye for
a pretty gal, same as the next man, but I don’t mess with married
women, Uncle Dan.”
“Never said you did. Nice just bein’ close to one,
though, ain’t it? A pretty gal, I mean.”
Preacher didn’t answer that. He walked over to the
wagon where Donnelly was putting out buckets of grain for his
oxen.
“Preacher,” the man said with a friendly nod. “I
figure I’ll gather everybody after supper, and then you can tell
them what you told us about the Pawnee.”
Preacher hooked his thumbs in his belt and leaned a
hip against the wagon. “And what good’s that gonna do?” he
asked.
Donnelly turned to him with a frown. “What do you
mean?”
“I been thinkin’ about it. Buckhalter’s got his
mind made up. He’s not gonna believe me and Uncle Dan now. To him,
that’d look like backin’ down. Anyway, what can you do except push
on? Buckhalter’s right about one thing. You’ve come too far to turn
around and go back to St. Louis. The rest of the folks would never
go along with it.”
“So what do you suggest?”
“I already told you, and you’re doin’ it already.
You need to be ready for trouble all the time, day and night. Just
because things seem quiet and peaceful, don’t never take that for
granted.”
“But what if Mr. Buckhalter says that everything is
all right and there’s no reason to worry?”
Preacher started to say that Buckhalter would be a
blasted idiot if he thought that. He bit back the harsh words and
said instead, “You hired Buckhalter and those other fellas to get
you to Oregon. I reckon you either have to have some faith in him .
. . or not. Maybe he knows what he’s doing and where he’s
going.”
“Maybe?” Donnelly laughed humorlessly. “That
doesn’t sound very comforting.”
“There’s nothin’ comfortin’ about takin’ a wagon
train clean across this wild country, mister. Sooner you get that
notion out of your head, the better.”
Donnelly thought about it for a moment, then
sighed. “So you’re saying that you don’t think we should
have a camp meeting tonight?”
“Wouldn’t serve any purpose. Do you believe me
about that war party?”
Donnelly looked steadily at him. “Yes, I think I
do.”
“Then talk to the other men you can trust. Spread
the word that you’ve all got to be more careful and more
responsible for your own safety, instead of just leavin’ it all to
Buckhalter. Keep scouts out durin’ the day, and fort up like this
at night. Keep your guns clean and loaded and your powder dry. If
there’s trouble, circle the wagons and fight. Fight like the very
devil was tryin’ to get his hands on you.” Preacher paused.
“Because with the hostiles out here, that’s just about what it
amounts to.”
After another moment, Donnelly nodded. “All right.
I see your point. There’s no reason to panic all the women and
children.”
“That’s right. Your wife knows about us runnin’
into them Pawnee yesterday, so you might want to tell her to keep
it to herself. Are those guides, Moran and Stallworth,
married?”
“No, they’re single men. They don’t have wagons in
the train.”
“Tell them not to be flappin’ their jaws around
camp, too.” Preacher paused. “You said there are two scouts up
ahead now?”
“That’s right. MacKenzie and Jennings.”
“What time do they usually come in?”
Donnelly frowned again. “About this time. They’re
always back before nightfall, and it’s almost sundown.”
Preacher rubbed his jaw and didn’t say anything.
There was a chance those two fellas had run into Stalking Elk and
the rest of the war party. If their horses weren’t faster than the
Pawnee ponies . . .
No use in borrowing trouble, though, he told
himself. They could wait a while longer before they started
worrying about the scouts.
Sure enough, the two men rode in less than ten
minutes later. They looked a little surprised at seeing the wagons
drawn up in such a defensive posture. Preacher made it a point to
be close by when they dismounted and Buckhalter strode over to talk
to them.
“Any signs of trouble up ahead?” the wagon master
asked.
One of the men shook his head. From his lantern jaw
and rusty hair, Preacher figured him for MacKenzie, the Scotsman.
“The way is clear,” the man reported.
“No hostiles?”
“No people at all.”
Buckhalter shot a sneering glance at Preacher, who
paid no attention to it. He didn’t put a whole lot of stock in what
Jennings and MacKenzie said, either. If the Pawnee were out there
and didn’t want to be seen, chances are the scouts wouldn’t have
seen them.
Preacher felt a tug on the sleeve of his buckskin
shirt and looked down to see one of the boys who’d been helping
Lorraine Donnelly earlier. The youngster said, “My ma told me to
tell you that supper’s ready, Preacher.”
“Much obliged, son. You see the fella who was with
me around anywhere? Old-timer with long white hair and a white
beard?”
“You mean Uncle Dan?” The boy grinned. “He’s
already over at the wagon talkin’ to Ma.”
Preacher chuckled. Uncle Dan might be old, but he
wasn’t dead. And being around a pretty woman would make him feel a
mite younger for a while.
Preacher followed the boy over to the wagon.
Lorraine smiled at him and said, “Ned will be back in a few
minutes, and then we can eat.”
“Where is he?” Preacher asked.
“Going around the wagons talking to some of the
other men.”
Preacher nodded. Donnelly was proceeding as he had
suggested and discreetly spreading the word among the other men.
That would improve the chances of these pilgrims making it all the
way to Oregon.
The two boys went over to Uncle Dan. One of them
asked the old-timer, “Will you show us your fiddle?”
“Why, I’d be plumb happy to. I put it back here on
the tailgate. Figure on scrapin’ out a tune or two after we’ve
et.”
The three of them wandered off to the back of the
wagon. Lorraine turned to Preacher and said, “Would you mind
helping me with something for a minute?”
“Nope. What do you need?”
She led him over to the front of the prairie
schooner, where she said, “Do you know anything about wagons like
this?”
“A little. I ain’t never traveled much in one,
though. I’m more of a horsebacker.”
“This brake lever keeps sticking . . .” She tugged
on the lever as if to demonstrate. “And I can’t seem to figure out
what’s wrong with it.”
“Has your husband taken a look at it?”
Lorraine laughed softly. “Ned was an attorney
before we came west, Preacher. He doesn’t know any more about such
things than I do.”
Preacher stepped closer to the vehicle and reached
out to grasp the brake lever. Lorraine was still holding it, too,
but he was careful not to touch her hand.
“I’ll take a look at it, but I ain’t promisin’ I
can—”
He didn’t get to finish, because at that moment, a
hand came down hard on his shoulder and jerked him around roughly,
and then a fist smashed into his face.