Chapter 9
More convinced than ever of the need to remain
vigilant at all times, Donnelly doubled the usual number of guards
for the rest of the night, but the hours passed peacefully and the
sun rose the next morning without any more trouble having broken
out.
Preacher and Uncle Dan were up more than an hour
before sunrise, as usual, getting ready to ride as soon as it was
light enough.
As they were having breakfast at the Donnelly
wagon, Ned Donnelly asked them, “I don’t suppose there’s any way I
could talk you men into coming to Oregon with us?”
Preacher shook his head. “I reckon not. We got
business elsewhere.”
“It’s mighty temptin’, though,” Uncle Dan added.
“That wife o’ yours is one hell of a cook, Ned.”
Donnelly laughed. “I know. She’s brave and
beautiful, too. I’m a lucky man, gentlemen, and don’t think for a
second that I don’t know it!”
Preacher rubbed his bearded jaw and frowned in
thought. “You’re gonna need a wagon master and chief guide to
replace Buckhalter. Let’s go talk to Stallworth. He strikes me as a
good man.”
Preacher let Donnelly do the talking. Pete
Stallworth listened for a few minutes, then said, “I’m flattered,
Ned, but I’ve never been all the way to Oregon.”
“Buckhalter probably hadn’t been there, either,”
Donnelly pointed out. “You can do a better job than he would have,
Pete.”
“Yeah, but he never intended to take the wagons all
the way across the Rockies.”
MacKenzie stood nearby. He spoke up, saying, “I’ve
been through South Pass and on to the coast several times,
Donnelly. I know the way . . . but I don’t want the job of wagon
master.” The Scotsman gestured toward Stallworth. “Give that part
of it to Pete, and I’ll be your chief guide. Sound fair enough to
you?”
Donnelly turned back to Stallworth. “What do you
say, Pete?”
Stallworth shrugged, but then his friendly grin
broke out over his face. “I say it sounds like a good deal to me.
We’ll need a few volunteers from the men with the train to serve as
scouts and outriders, though. Three of us aren’t enough.”
“I’m sure that can be arranged,” Donnelly agreed
with a nod. He stuck out a hand. “It’s a deal, then?”
“Between us, we’ll get you folks to Oregon,”
Stallworth replied as he gripped Donnelly’s hand.
Under the circumstances, Preacher thought that was
the best arrangement the immigrants could have. He said as much to
Donnelly a few minutes later as he and Uncle Dan were about to
mount up.
“With a little luck along the way, you’ll make it
just fine,” he said. “Keep your eyes open, listen to Stallworth and
MacKenzie, and don’t forget why you’re doin’ this in the first
place.”
Preacher nodded toward Lorraine Donnelly and the
two little boys, who were packing some of the family’s gear in the
wagon nearby.
“I know,” Donnelly said. “Thank you for everything,
Preacher. If not for you and Uncle Dan, those robbers would have
taken us completely by surprise. They probably would have wiped us
out.”
Preacher nodded. “More’n likely.”
“We’ll have the wagons rolling as soon as we’ve
taken care of the burying,” Donnelly went on. “I don’t know what to
do about those other men who were killed. The robbers and the
Indians, I mean. I suppose we could dig a mass grave . . .”
“Leave ’em where they fell, and I reckon the
scavengers will take care of that problem for you.”
Donnelly shook his head. “It doesn’t seem right to
just leave them.”
“They wouldn’t have wasted any sympathy on you
folks. Anyway, you don’t have to worry about the Pawnee dead. The
ones who lived took all the bodies with them. I can tell you that
without even lookin’. They’ll be laid to rest the Pawnee way, the
way they would have wanted.”
“Well, that’s good, I suppose. It still bothers me
about those others, though.”
“It’s a harsh land,” Preacher said bluntly. “Men
die, and the ones who live move on. That’s the way of it, and
nothin’ you can do will change that.”
“I suppose you’re right. I can’t help but think
about what those men would have done to my wife and children . . .”
Donnelly took a deep breath. “But I’m not going to think about
that. I’m going to think about the new life that’s waiting for us
in Oregon instead.” He held out his hand. “Good-bye, Preacher. And
good luck on whatever mission it is the two of you are on.”
“Much obliged,” Preacher said as he shook hands
with Donnelly. He thought about the odds facing him and Uncle Dan
in St. Louis, where they would try to destroy a beast of prey in
his own lair. “Chances are, we’re gonna need all the luck we can
get.”
For the next few days as they traveled eastward,
Preacher kept an eye out for Buckhalter or any of the other members
of the gang that had attacked the wagon train. As far as he knew,
Buckhalter was on foot, and Preacher halfway expected to come
across the renegade’s scalped and mutilated body. He and Uncle Dan
didn’t see any sign of the man though.
As they drew closer to St. Louis, Preacher did a
lot of thinking, and he let Uncle Dan in on some of it.
“If Beaumont’s put a bounty on my head, he’s got to
be a mite worried about me comin’ after him,” Preacher mused as
they rode along.
Uncle Dan grunted. “More’n a mite, I’d say. He’s
got to be scared plumb half to death. He knows you ain’t a good
fella to have for an enemy, son.”
“As many pies as he has his fingers in, I reckon
he’s got folks scattered all over St. Louis who work for him,”
Preacher went on, thinking out loud. “That means if I just ride
into town right out in the open, somebody’s gonna see me and go
runnin’ to Beaumont to tell him I’m there. It won’t be an hour
before all the crooked varmints in St. Louis are tryin’ to draw a
bead on my back.”
Uncle Dan scratched at his beard and frowned.
“Yeah, that’s a problem, all right. You got any ideas how to get
around it?”
“Maybe,” Preacher mused. He scratched his own
beard. “I been thinkin’ maybe it’s time I got rid o’ these
whiskers.”
“You mean to shave?” Uncle Dan sounded
horrified. “Preacher, you’ve had a beard ever since I’ve knowed
you.”
“Which, as you pointed out your own self a few days
ago, ain’t been all that long. Listen, Uncle Dan . . . when folks
think of Preacher, they think of a rangy fella in buckskins, with a
beard and sort of long hair and a big ol’ wolflike dog followin’
along with him. If I shaved my beard off and cut my hair and
dressed some other way, they wouldn’t be near as quick to spot
me.”
The old-timer thought it over and began to nod
slowly. “You’re right. You could leave Dog with me, too, if’n he’d
go along with that.”
“He’ll do what I tell him. Most of the time,
anyway. And he knows you by now, which’ll help.”
“So you’re gonna pretend to be somebody else when
we get to Sant Looey?”
“I have to start pretendin’ before we get
there,” Preacher said. “I’m gonna come at the settlement from a
different direction, too. There’s a ferry about fifty miles down
the Mississippi. I’m gonna cross the river there, ride north, and
then take one of the ferries at St. Louis like I just got to that
part of the country from back east somewhere.”
Uncle Dan laughed. “Preacher, that is plumb
sneaky! Beaumont won’t have nary a clue that you’re in
town.”
“That’s the idea,” Preacher said with a nod.
“Where you gonna get different clothes, though? You
ain’t got any with you ’cept’n your buckskins.”
“You’ll have to help me out there. They ain’t
watchin’ for you. When we get closer, I’ll make camp, and you’ll go
on into the settlement and pick up a new outfit for me. While
you’re gone, I’ll scrape off these bristles and hack off some of
this hair, so I’ll be ready to pretend to be somebody else when you
get back.”
Uncle Dan grinned. “Don’t cut off too much of your
hair. Remember what happened to ol’ Samson in the Good Book.”
“I don’t reckon I’ll have to worry about that. I
don’t expect to run into any Delilahs in St. Louis.”
Uncle Dan shook his head. “I wouldn’t count on
that.”
Preacher and Uncle Dan made camp about a day’s ride
west of St. Louis. Preacher didn’t want to get any closer than
that, because the closer he came to the settlement, the better the
chances he might run into somebody who worked for Shad
Beaumont.
“I’ll see you in a couple of days,” he said to
Uncle Dan as the old-timer prepared to ride on eastward the next
morning. Preacher had given him money to buy the new clothes,
almost all the coins he had left from the last time he had sold
some pelts. “When you get back, I’ll be a whole new hombre.”
Preacher paused. “I’m countin’ on you, Uncle Dan. Don’t go gettin’
drunk in Red Mike’s or any of those other waterfront dives and
forget to come back out here with those new clothes.”
“Don’t you worry,” Uncle Dan assured him. “I got a
mighty big grudge against ol’ Beaumont, too. There’ll be time to
wet my whistle later.”
With a cheerful wave, Uncle Dan rode off, heading
eastward. Preacher watched him go, then said to the big cur, “Might
as well go ahead and take care of my part, Dog. That’ll give me
some time to get used to not havin’ all this hair on my
face.”
He got a straight razor and a small piece of a
broken looking glass from his pack and went to work. It was a
painful task, scraping off months’ worth of whiskers. By the time
he was finished, he was bleeding from half a dozen nicks and
cuts.
As he looked at himself in the glass, he realized
that his plan had a flaw he hadn’t thought of until now. The part
of his face that the beard had covered was considerably paler than
the rest of it, which bore a permanent tan from the outdoor life he
had led for years.
Preacher grunted. “Reckon until it sort of evens
out, I’ll have to paint my face like an Injun. I ought to be able
to make some paint to darken that part of it.”
He did, using berries and mud. It wasn’t a perfect
solution, but he thought it would do. He wouldn’t wear his hat
during the two days he’d have to wait for Uncle Dan to get back,
and that much exposure to the sun might help a little, too.
He used the razor to cut his hair, and when he was
done, he looked at Dog and asked, “What do you think?”
The big cur stared at him as if puzzled, and after
a moment a deep, rumbling growl came from the dog’s throat.
“What the hell!” Preacher exclaimed. “Don’t you
know me?”
Dog stopped growling and came forward tentatively
to sniff at Preacher’s hand. The mountain man laughed.
“I reckon if I can fool you, Dog, I can fool Shad
Beaumont and his men.”
Preacher was camped in a grove of trees not far
from the river. He laid low when the occasional rider or wagon came
by. Two days passed without incident, but Preacher was glad when
Uncle Dan rode in on the second evening. Sitting around and doing
nothing gnawed at his guts. Always had and, he supposed, always
would. He was the sort of man who liked to stay busy.
Soon he would be busy, all right . . . figuring out
the best way to kill Shad Beaumont.
Uncle Dan had a paper-wrapped bundle tied onto the
horse behind him. He swung down from the saddle and cut the bundle
loose, then tossed it to Preacher.
“Here you go,” the old-timer said. “You’re gonna
look like you’re from back east, Preacher.”
“You didn’t get duds that’ll make me look like some
sort of city fella, did you?” Preacher asked as he untied the cord
holding the paper around the bundle.
“Nope. You said you wanted to look like a farm boy,
so that’s what I got.”
Preacher unwrapped the bundle and found a pair of
brown corduroy work trousers, a butternut shirt of linsey-woolsey,
a pair of lace-up boots, and a funny-looking hat with a rounded
crown. He frowned at the hat and asked, “What the hell is
this?”
“Fella at the store where I bought the duds called
it a quaker hat. He said farmers back in Pennsylvania wear
’em.”
“Stupid-lookin’ thing, if you ask me.” Preacher put
it on his head and looked at Uncle Dan. “What do you think?”
The old-timer’s mouth worked under the white beard,
and after a moment Preacher realized that Uncle Dan was trying hard
not to bust out laughing. He managed to say, “I reckon with that
hat and the rest o’ the getup, and with those cheeks o’ yours bein’
as smooth as a baby’s bee-hind, there ain’t no way in Hades that
Beaumont or his men ought to recognize you, Preacher.”
“Good.” Preacher tapped the quaker hat. “That’s
just what I want.”
“What’re you gonna call yourself? You’re gonna need
a different name, ain’t you?”
Preacher frowned as he pondered that. He thought
about calling himself Arthur or Art, since that was actually his
name. He had even gone by Art for a while, during the early days of
his fur-trapping career in the Rockies. He had been dubbed Preacher
after he’d been captured by the Blackfeet and had to start
preaching for hours on end, the way he had once seen a fella do in
St. Louis, to convince the Indians that he was crazy so they would
spare his life. After the story got around, he had been called
Preacher ever since.
It was just barely possible somebody might remember
that the man called Preacher had once been known as Art, so it
would be better not to use that, he decided.
“Reckon I’ll call myself Jim,” he said after a
minute. “That’s simple and easy to remember. Jim Donnelly, maybe,
after those folks we met with the wagon train.”
“All right, Jim Donnelly.” Uncle Dan grinned.
“Pleased to meetcha.”
“Shad Beaumont will be, too . . . at first.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“I’ve been thinkin’ about it the whole time you
were gone. And here’s what we’re gonna do . . .”