Savage. - Part 23
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Part 23

We went on about our lives, both of us mighty pleased and content. The next couple of weeks were smashing. We bathed in the mornings, and danced in the evenings. Between all that, we ate our meals and cleaned the house, worked on the grounds, took horseback rides, had picnics here and there, went into town for supplies, and generally had a fine time at whatever we were up to. It was wonderful even when we only just talked. Sometimes, we did nothing except sit about and read. Taken all around, we couldn't have been much happier.

But then came the day we returned from town and I settled down for a look at the newspaper while Sarah sat nearby with a book of poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning.

The story I ran across went like this: TOMBSTONE ROCKED BY SAVAGE MURDERs...o...b..tone, Arizona Territory, infamous for its history of gunslinging desperados and marauding Apaches, was stunned on 22 April by the early morning discovery of Alice Clemons (42) and her two daughters, Emma (16) and Willa (18), brutally slain in their room at Mrs. Adamson's Boarding House on Toughnut Street.According to the Tombstone Epitaph Tombstone Epitaph, the three women met their fate at the hands of person or persons unknown sometime during the previous night. They were found by the maid at 9:00 the following morning, whereupon the unfortunate woman swooned at the grisly sight.All who viewed the scene were shocked beyond measure. "The room looked like a slaughterhouse," averred Dr. Samuel Wicker, who went on to say that all three women had been most horribly butchered and dismembered. Said Deputy Marshal Frank Dunbar, "I've seen a few white men who got themselves carved up near as bad by the Apache, but these were ladies. Whoever done this is a monster, pure and simple."In addition to numerous unspeakable mutilations committed upon Mrs. Clemons and her daughters, it has been reported that all three were scalped. This has led some to suspect that they did, indeed, fall victim to one or more renegade savages. Since the surrender of Geronimo to General Miles nearly three years ago, the citizens of Tombstone had experienced little or no difficulty with the redman. They had considered such troubles to have come to an end, and many are filled with dismay at the possibility that murderous Indians may be lurking in the area.Not so Deputy Dunbar. "A white man did this," Dunbar avowed. "He left bootprints in the blood. You don't catch many redskins shod in boots. He had a long stride, too, that puts him around six feet tall. If you don't count the likes of Mangus Colorado, your basic Indian's usually a short fellow."Be he redman or white, the vicious a.s.sailant remains at large and no witnesses have come forward with information about his ident.i.ty. The people of Tombstone, so accustomed to acts of b.l.o.o.d.y violence, remain shaken by the unthinkable nature of this outrage perpetrated in their midst.

When I read that story, I felt like the world had caved in on me. I sat there stunned, my breath knocked out.

"What is it?" Sarah asked, looking at me.

"Whittle."

She shut her book and leaned forward. "What? They've caught him?"

I could only shake my head.

She set her book aside, came over to me, and took the newspaper from my shaky hands. "Which piece...?"

"Tombstone."

She stood there, reading. Then she knelt in front of me, put the paper on the floor, and rested her hands on my legs. "It might have been anyone," she said.

"No. It was Whittle. I know know it." it."

"You can't know for certain."

"He's doing precisely what he planned to do-go out west and cut up women. He even considered that his butcheries might be mistaken for the work of Indians. He hoped he might join up with a band of hostiles. And show them a few of his tricks."

Sarah rubbed my legs gently while she gazed at me. "You're not responsible for him. None of this is your fault."

"I should've gone after him."

"You did what you could, darling. You came here here to save us from him. It would've been foolhardy for you to venture out again that night in the snow, and it was too late to chase after him by the time we found that he'd stolen Saber." to save us from him. It would've been foolhardy for you to venture out again that night in the snow, and it was too late to chase after him by the time we found that he'd stolen Saber."

"That's when I should've left."

"No."

"If I'd borrowed a horse and pursued him..."

"He was hours away by then. It would've been hopeless."

"Hardly hopeless," I told her, feeling just miserable. "The man's got no nose. I could've asked about, tracked him down. I could've got got him. But I didn't even have a go at it. I didn't want to have a go at it. I was safe and comfortable here." him. But I didn't even have a go at it. I didn't want to have a go at it. I was safe and comfortable here."

"Here is where you belonged, Trevor. I know how you feel, but it's never been your duty to stop him."

"I don't know about duty," I told her. "But I had opportunities to kill him and failed. It's my fault he boarded the True D. Light. True D. Light. It's my fault he murdered the folks aboard her. It's my fault he ever came to America at all. Trudy and her family, and those Clemons women in Tombstone, they'd be alive today if it weren't for me. I've no doubt Whittle has killed others, too. Many others. Probably a whole string of gals between here and the Arizona Territory. They likely just didn't make the It's my fault he murdered the folks aboard her. It's my fault he ever came to America at all. Trudy and her family, and those Clemons women in Tombstone, they'd be alive today if it weren't for me. I've no doubt Whittle has killed others, too. Many others. Probably a whole string of gals between here and the Arizona Territory. They likely just didn't make the World, World, or I missed the issues that told of them. Maybe I did read about some of them, but talked myself into thinking it hadn't been Whittle's work. But this time, I can't deceive myself. n.o.body but Whittle could've done this business in Tombstone. I'm afraid I must go after him." or I missed the issues that told of them. Maybe I did read about some of them, but talked myself into thinking it hadn't been Whittle's work. But this time, I can't deceive myself. n.o.body but Whittle could've done this business in Tombstone. I'm afraid I must go after him."

Sarah didn't say a thing for quite a spell. She only just held my legs and gazed at me real solemn. Finally, she said, "It's no wonder that Grandpa took to you. You're so very much like him. Duty. Honor. Set the wrongs of the world aright, or die in the attempt."

"I'm not the one who'll do the dying. That'll be Whittle's job."

"Your mind is set, then."

"I don't want to leave you, Sarah."

"You won't won't leave me. Do you truly think I would let you go journeying off on such a campaign without me?" leave me. Do you truly think I would let you go journeying off on such a campaign without me?"

That was the second time in a couple of weeks she'd thrown astonishment into me.

"You're joking," I said. I knew she'd meant it, though.

She gave my legs a hard squeeze. Her eyes were afire with excitement. "We'll go together. It may take a few days to make preparations. We'll need to close the house...hire a caretaker...set our finances in order..."

"But you're a woman," I pointed out.

"I am indeed. I am also a Forrest, from a long line of soldiers and adventurers."

"It's likely to be quite dangerous."

"Whatever the dangers, we'll face them together."

"I should do this alone."

"Indeed?" She hoisted her eyebrows. "You wouldn't return to England without me. Now you're suddenly eager to journey west alone? Why, the only difference is the direction of travel."

"Going to England would not have put you in harm's way."

"You would rather leave me here to fend for myself?" she asked.

"I'm afraid so. Yes. You'd be safe here."

"I'd be lonely," she said. "I'd be destroyed. There would be nothing here for me except an empty, forlorn house. You are are my life, Trevor. So what if we travel into danger? Better to face any peril, and perish if it should come to that, than to stay here without you." my life, Trevor. So what if we travel into danger? Better to face any peril, and perish if it should come to that, than to stay here without you."

"It isn't that I want want to leave you behind." to leave you behind."

"I know, darling. I know."

Reaching out, I stroked her hair. "I've seen what Whittle does to women. If he should lay his hands on you..."

"We won't allow that to happen."

PART THREE.

Bound for Tombstone

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE.

Westering.

We aimed to travel by rail, as that was the quickest way to cross such a distance.

So on top of making arrangements for the house, Sarah figured she had no choice but to sell off the horses. She knew that her attorney, Mr. Cunningham, might be interested in them, so we went to his office together.

He was a heavy, cheerful fellow who put me in mind of old Daws, the cabman. That made me a bit lonesome for home, but the glooms couldn't stand up against all the excitement I had inside me.

After making up our minds that we'd hunt down Whittle together, Sarah and I had both found ourselves caught up in the thrill of it all. We knew it was a grim mission full of hazards, but that didn't seem to matter near as much as knowing we were about to set off on an adventure together.

Well, she explained to Mr. Cunningham that she intended to escort me to Arizona Territory so I could join up with my father, a cavalry major stationed at Fort Huachuca, which wasn't too far from Tombstone. She could've made him a general, but I reckon she didn't want to lay it on too thick. She told him that she aimed to shut down the house and hire a caretaker. Then she asked if he might like to purchase the three horses.

Well, the upshot was that he offered to look after the horses instead of buying them. That way, they'd still be Sarah's when she got back from the trip. He also said he knew just the fellow to take care of the house, and would gladly handle the matter of hiring him.

Next, we went to the post office. There, Sarah arranged to have her mail forwarded to General Delivery in Tombstone. I mailed a letter to Mother, in which I told her about making a trip west and said she could write to me in Tombstone. I didn't mention that Sarah'd be with me. Nor did I say a thing about going in pursuit of Whittle, figuring she'd only fret if she knew the truth.

Done at the post office, we headed for the bank. Sarah loaded up on money.

That finished our town business. For the next couple of days, we set the house in order. Mostly, we cleaned and covered the furniture and got rid of perishables and such. When that was pretty much taken care of, we packed for the trip.

We wanted to travel light, so we didn't use trunks. I fit all my duds into just one valise. It took a couple more to hold Sarah's outfits. We figured to leave behind everything but our clothes and toilet articles. And weapons. Sarah slipped the single-shot pistol and some extra ammunition into her handbag. I threw the General's army revolver, holster, and a pa.s.sel of spare bullets into my valise. We chose to leave the rifle behind. It wouldn't fit in our luggage. Sarah allowed we wouldn't want to be lugging it about, but I suspect she didn't want it around because of her Grandpa using it to shoot himself.

Mr. Cunningham had hired a fellow name of Jim Henderson to look after the house. Henderson had dropped by a few times to talk with Sarah, and she'd arranged for him to ride us to the railroad depot in town.

It was the first day of May, sunny and warm and breezy, that we set out. At the station, we bid farewell to Henderson. Then we went to a ticket window and Sarah paid our fares to Manhattan. The train hadn't arrived yet, so we waited out on the platform with some other folks. Most of them didn't have any luggage at all. Others had little more than what they might need for an overnight stay. I don't suppose any of them were about to start on a journey as great as ours. I was so excited I could hardly sit still.

By and by, along came the howl of a whistle. I rushed over close to the tracks, and saw our train. It chugged around a bend in the rails, smoke belching from its chimney, just monstrous and wonderful. As it roared closer, I could feel the floorboards shaking under my boots. The engineer waved down at me from his high window, just as such chaps used to do when I was back in England standing by the tracks to enjoy the thrill of a pa.s.sing train. I waved back to him. A moment later, the locomotive rolled by, clanking and hissing steam, followed by the coal car and a string of pa.s.senger carriages.

After they groaned and squealed to a stop, I went back to Sarah. A porter took our baggage, and we climbed aboard. Sarah let me have the window seat. Though I'd ridden many times on the underground and even gone by rail on holidays with Mother, I'd never felt near the thrill that coursed through me when this train commenced to chug along and leave the station behind.

I met Sarah's eyes. With a smile, she gave my hand a squeeze.

"Here we go," she said.

After that, I kept my face pretty much mashed to the window.

It was glorious: the country, the bridge over the East River, the towers of New York City. But my aim here isn't to run along about all that; it's to tell you the story of my adventures.

The way I see it, an adventure is someone else's mishap.

Nothing much happened in the way of adventures for a spell, so I'll scoot along with my narrative and get to it rather quick.

What we did was change trains at Grand Central Terminal, then ride west toward Chicago in a Pullman car. The trip was bully. We spent plenty of time talking, meeting friendly people and such. We ate fine meals in the dining car, and slept at night in berths with hanging curtains. Whenever I could, I watched out the windows.

We sped along through towns and forests and mountains, crossed bridges over deep canyons and river gorges that gave me the sweats with notions of derailing, and raced across valleys where we zipped past farms and villages.

The nights were glorious. I spent many an hour in my berth, hidden away in darkness behind the heavy curtain, peering out at the moonlit land, wondering about the lives of all the strangers out of sight beyond the lighted windows of farmhouses and homes along the tracks. I'd just lay there, watching everything slip by while the train rocked me gently, wheels clickity-clacking over the rails, whistle sometimes letting out long, mournful hoots.

It was awfully peaceful, but it often gave me a peculiar empty feeling. A longing for I didn't know what.

Sarah wasn't the cause of it, I know that. She had the lower berth, directly under me. At night, I'd wait a while and then poke my head out the curtain. When the coast was clear, I'd climb down and join her. We had some smashing times, but we had to be quiet about if for we had let on to the other pa.s.sengers that I was her servant. They would've been mighty shocked to see me sneaking down to her bed.

We never got caught, though. By and by, I'd kiss her goodnight and climb back up to my own berth, where I'd lay awake and gaze out the windows and feel strange all over again.

Before you know it, we arrived in Chicago. We spent the night in a fine hotel on the sh.o.r.e of Lake Michigan, returned to the depot the next morning and boarded a train that would take us south to St. Louis.

After leaving Chicago behind, we went through just the flattest land you'd ever hope to see. Except for a pa.s.sel of small towns with more grain elevators than you could imagine, there was nothing to look at but miles and miles of fields as far as the eye could see. Once in a while, there'd be a farm house and barn and silo off in the distance, but that was about it.

Finally we came to the Mississippi River. It took the breath right out of me. Here was the Mississippi Mississippi! Mark Twain's river! We got closer and closer to it, and then we were above it on a bridge. I'd never seen the beat of it. I couldn't believe I was here, gazing down at the very same river where Mark Twain had been a steamboat pilot, where Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn and Jim had gone swimming and rafting. I couldn't see a paddlewheel, but there were ships aplenty, and I even spotted a couple of kids fishing off a canoe. I just hankered something awful to be down there with them.

Maybe I'll come back someday, I told myself.

And that's when it struck me why I'd been having those strange spells of longing. Because I was only just speeding along on the rails, glimpsing so many new places I'd like to explore, so many strangers I was never likely to meet. Glimpsing them and pa.s.sing by, leaving them all behind.

There wasn't any way around it, though. Not if I wanted to reach Tombstone and track down Whittle.

Well, we stayed one night in St. Louis, so Sarah took me to a restaurant on the sh.o.r.e of the Mississippi. Before returning to our hotel, we roamed along the river bank for a while. We watched boats drift by, all lit up in the distance, the sounds of voices and laughter floating soft across the water, sometimes the wail of steam whistles. It was just grand. I wanted to stay forever, but the wind stiffened and pretty soon a storm came along, chopping up the river and pouring rain down on us as lightning bolts split the sky and crashed all around. Drenched, we hotfooted it back to the hotel.

The next morning, the sky was clear again. We boarded a train that would take us across Missouri and Kansas to Denver, Colorado.

For days and nights, we headed west across the vast plains. Beyond the windows, I saw herds of cattle. And cowboys. cowboys. When I saw my first cowboy riding his horse along a dusty trail near the tracks, I knew we'd reached the Wild West. The notion excited me something awful. But it scared me a bit, too, for it came as a reminder that we were traveling closer each minute to Whittle. When I saw my first cowboy riding his horse along a dusty trail near the tracks, I knew we'd reached the Wild West. The notion excited me something awful. But it scared me a bit, too, for it came as a reminder that we were traveling closer each minute to Whittle.

We were still a long way from Tombstone, though. We hadn't even reached Denver yet, and from there we'd have another few days riding south to El Paso. That would only take us into Texas, and we'd still still need to travel farther west before getting into the Arizona Territory and finding our way to Tombstone. need to travel farther west before getting into the Arizona Territory and finding our way to Tombstone.

Even if Whittle was still there, which I greatly doubted, we wouldn't be arriving for near a week after leaving Denver. So I tried to calm down and not think about him, and just fill myself with the wonders of rolling through the American West.

I saw cowboys aplenty. I kept a sharp lookout for them, and never got tired of seeing more. Now and then, I found myself hoping the train might get stopped and robbed by the likes of Jesse James. He'd gotten himself back-shot by a scoundrel name of Bob Ford six or seven years ago, so I knew we didn't stand much chance of enjoying a run-in with the James Gang. But I reckoned there were other outlaws available to have a go at us, and rather fancied myself plucking the General's revolver from my valise and engaging in some gunplay with them.

While I was on the lookout for cowboys and hoping for a holdup, I caught sight of my first Indian. He sat astride a pony at a crossing, and looked just fearsome, feathers in his headband, face painted red, wearing a blue army jacket and leather leggings. What with all I'd read about the savages, and what I'd heard from the General and Sarah, my insides just squeezed up with fright. I was all set to make a grab for the revolver. But he didn't have a weapon that I could see. And the train was moving along so fast that he was out of sight in just a second or two.

I saw quite a number of Indians as we went along. None scared me like the first one, though. Some were mighty old, and some were squaws, and some were kids. Mostly, they looked rather poor and pitiful. It was hard to picture such creatures on the warpath, ma.s.sacring settlers, taking scalps and torturing their captives.

Well, the Indian wars were over. They'd been beaten. At least that's what the General had led me to believe. He hadn't been quite correct on that score, as I was to find out later on, but that's a matter I don't aim to get into, not here.

By the time we pulled into Denver, I'd gotten fairly used to seeing both cowboys and Indians. They didn't thrill me quite as much as they'd done at the start, but I was still awfully excited about finding myself in the West.

We spent the night at a hotel near the depot. Early the next morning, we boarded the train that was to carry us south to El Paso, Texas.

Whenever we changed trains, we always found ourselves mixed in with a whole new bunch of pa.s.sengers. We'd chat a bit with some of them, Sarah explaining that I was her servant. By and large, they seemed like decent folk.