“Is it you that’s proprietress of this place?” Minerva asked.
“It is,” Mrs. Pierson said.
“Then my daughters and I are wantin baths.”
“Put your parcels down,” Mrs. Pierson said, getting out of the chair. “We’ll find you some tubs and hot water.”
“How much will it be for each of us?”
“Fifteen cents for a bath and clean rinse.”
“Does soap come with it?”
“How else would you get the grime of travel off you?”
“Ah, is it that plain then?” Minerva said.
“Where are you coming from?”
“Virginia. And headin back in the morning.”
“Take your bath first,” Mrs. Pierson said.
In three wooden tubs, they soaked luxuriantly, washing their hair with scented soap, pouring buckets of hot water over their slippery bodies, watching the suds cascade away as frothily as had the Falls of Ohio. To think of even attempting those Falls! No, she was armed with knowledge now; the storekeeper had given her priceless information. Hadley might be stubborn sometimes, but he was never foolhardy or wasteful. It would be senseless to continue on to Independence with no hope of finding a wagon train when they got there. What was the point of risking the Falls and then trekking clear across the state of Illinois, only to reach a town on the edge of nowhere, with nowhere to go from it? Be like getting to a party a day late. Hadley would see the foolishness of it, she was certain of that.
She would talk to him when she got back to the livery stable. He’d made arrangements to spend the night there. Wouldn’t be nothing like sleeping in a fine hotel, but at least it was a roof over their heads, and besides, who but a rich man could afford the prices in this city? She’d seen a sign in the window of an inn, said breakfast, dinner, or supper could be had for twenty-five cents. But it was costing them forty cents to corn and hay each of the animals! Shouldn’t complain, she supposed, since the family would be sleeping there as well, free of charge. Man said it’d be all right to cook their supper in the yard outside, too. Be good to get back home again. Cook inside her own house, take a bath in front of her own fire, have a cup of hot sassafras tea afterward, crawl into bed under quilts Eva Chisholm had made, bless her heart.
The clock on the wall read ten minutes past four; they would have to be hurrying back. Minerva got out of the tub and began drying herself with one of the towels Mrs. Pierson had provided. Bonnie Sue was lying back in her own tub, her knees islands in the water, eyes closed, hair trailing over the tub’s wooden sides.
“Bonnie Sue?” Minerva said. “Got to go now.”
“Mmm,” Bonnie Sue said.
“Come on now, honey.”
Across the room, Annabel had already dried herself and was putting on her underdrawers.
“Bonnie Sue?”
“I could stay in this tub forever.”
“You can take baths aplenty when we get home.”
“Are we really goin home, Ma?”
“You heard that man, didn’t you? Indians’d eat us alive, we got out west there.”
“Mmm,” Bonnie Sue said.
“Out of that tub — come on now.”
From across the room, Annabel said, “Mama, there’s blood in my drawers.”
“Let me see,” Minerva said. She put down the towel, pulled her petticoat over her head, and then walked barefooted to where her daughter was scrutinizing the underdrawers. Minerva took them from her.
“Is it the pip coming?” Annabel asked.
“Looks like the start of it, sure enough,” Minerva said.
“Whooooop-eeeee!” Annabel shouted, and began dancing around the room naked, twirling her towel over her head, and setting the oil lamps to shaking.
“Ain’t nothin but a lifelong chore,” Bonnie Sue said from her tub. “I got mine when I was twelve.”
“It’s nothin to grieve about,” Minerva said, “nor nothin to rejoice in neither.”
“Just a lifelong chore,” Bonnie Sue repeated.
“Get on out of that tub. I’ll find somethin for you to bind yourself, Annabel. You’d best wear the stained drawers till we get back to the livery stable.”
Annabel danced around her sister as she got out of the tub. Then suddenly, she stopped dead still, and looked at her mother, and asked, “Can I have babies now?”
“You ain’t careful,” Minerva said.
“I’ve been guiding parties west for seven years now,” Lester Hackett said. “Made the trip to the coast and back a total of five times. It’s not difficult, if you do it right. You’re planning to do it wrong, lads.”
They’d been drinking steadily for the past hour or more. There was a glazed expression on Gideon’s face, but he still seemed to be listening intently to every word Hackett uttered. Will had lost interest long ago. Across the room, a painted whore had taken a seat with three tough-looking men appeared to be desperadoes. Every now and again, a garter flashed. Made Will wonder when it was he’d last had a woman.
“Are you Irish?” Hackett asked.
“Who?” Gideon said.
“You,” Hackett said.
“Are you?”
“Isn’t everybody?” Hackett said, and laughed.
“By way of Scotland,” Gideon said. “Scotch-Irish.”
“That’s decent, too. Long as you’re not Dutch. Let me buy you another drink. Whereabouts in Ireland?”
“County Antrim.”
Six graves on that ridge now,
Will thought.
Grandma Chisholm from County Antrim, alongside her husband William Allyn; my two brothers born after me who never saw the light of day; and my wife and baby.
“Would you like to know how I happened to miss the wagon trains west?” Hackett asked.
“How?” Gideon said.
“I came to Louisville in pursuit of a poker game heading downriver on a steamboat out of Cincinnati. Came from Carthage with four hundred dollars in cash, hoping to build it into a small fortune I might invest in California. Lost all of it save thirty dollars. Would’ve lost the thirty, too, hadn’t had it tucked in a pocket I rarely use.”
“That’s a lot of money,” Gideon said.
“Lost my pocket watch besides, and a ring my daddy willed to me, not to mention a horse and saddle, a fine Kentucky rifle with brass and silver inlays, and a pair of Spanish pistols.”
“That’s a lot of money,” Gideon said again, as though he’d completely missed Hackett’s listing of all the other things he’d lost.
“I’ve got three dollars and fifty cents to my name,” Hackett said. “Do you know what I plan to do with it?”
“What?” Gideon asked.
“Drink it away in this fine saloon with you two Irish gents from Virginia.”
“
Scotch
-Irish,” Gideon said.
“Aye, after which I’ll wander down to the Falls and throw myself in the river.”
“No, you won’t,” Gideon said, and grinned.
“Yes, I will,” Hackett said, and grinned back at him.
Died when she was eighteen, Will thought, her and his newborn daughter both, the baby gasping out her final breath scarce before she’d taken her first, Elizabeth suddenly raising her head from the pillow to search the room for him, seeing him, reaching out her hand to him — and then falling back again on the pillow, dead. He’d gone to stand alone behind the cabin, shouted his rage to the universe, and then wept in the night till his father came up beside him and, weeping too, put his arm around him, and led him inside, and put him to bed.
“Here’s what I’ll do for you,” Hackett said. “Drink up,” Gideon said.
“Cheers,” Hackett said. “If you’re mad enough or courageous enough to want to continue west after all I’ve told you—”
“Ma wants to go home,” Gideon said.
“And right she is. But what does
Pa
say?
Is
there a father with you here in Louisville?”
“Oh, yes. Yes, indeed. Hadley Chisholm himself.”
“Here’s to Hadley Chisholm then.”
“Here’s to him then,” Gideon said.
“What does he say?”
“About what?”
The question took Hackett aback. He stared at Gideon. Gideon stared back at him. “About
what?”
Hackett said.
“That’s right,” Gideon said, and drank.
In the middle of a chore, he’d remember something he wanted to ask Elizabeth. He’d start back for the cabin thinking to find her there, and remember suddenly that she was dead and gone, he could no more talk to her again than he could move mountains. And he’d start to crying. His hand on the plow or the ax, he’d cry. Annabel was but three years old then; she came up to him in the field one day, blond little thing in a pinafore had been her sister’s.
“Will,” she said, “you has got to stop.” Sobbing, he said, “I know, darlin.”
And she said, “Cause my heart is broke when I hear you weep.”
The whore cut loose with a laugh deep from her belly. Frizzy-haired brunette, he could smell her perfumed tits clear across the saloon. One of the men at the table had his hand on her leg, just below the garter, squeezing her white-powdered thigh. She laughed again, and Will thought suddenly of all the whores he’d fucked from Texas clear back to Virginia when he’d finished fighting with Lamar. Gone there to forget Elizabeth, something he never could have done in a million years anyway. Rode through the Gap and across Kentucky to right here in Louisville, this was in April of ’36 — he’d left home soon as news of the Alamo massacre reached Virginia. Down the Ohio to where it joined the Mississippi, and then on to New Orleans. Caught up with the Texas cavalry on the nineteenth, rode two days with them to the San Jacinto ferry, where Houston was waiting to ambush the Mexicans.
A Georgian was commanding the cavalry. Will almost laughed out loud when he heard the man’s name — Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar. In the grove of oak trees there was the low whinny of horses, the pawing of hoofs, and then a sudden hush. Will heard someone whisper, “There they are,” and then Lamar gave the order to charge. Saw more damn blood that day. Fucked his way back to Virginia. Fucked every whore he ever met on the way back. Couldn’t forget Elizabeth and neither could he forget ten thousand men yelling, “Remember the Alamo!” Sabers slashing. Blood on the neck of his raindrop gelding. Fucked every whore.
“Does your Pa want to continue on west?”
“Oh, yes,” Gideon said.
“Then here’s my proposition,” Hackett said. “I’ll guide you to St. Louis. How’s that sound?”
“Sounds good,” Gideon said.
“No charge,” Hackett said. “Free of charge. Just tuck me in the wagon someplace, and give me a little bit to eat every now and then. How’s that sound?”
“Sounds very good,” Gideon said. “How’s that sound, Will?”
“I’m sorry,” Will said. “I wasn’t listenin.”
“Help you find a vessel to take you down the Ohio, and then guide you to St. Louis,” Hackett said. “I’ve got friends there’ll get me a job. Once I earn myself the price of a good horse, which I figure to be about a hundred fifty dollars including a bridle and saddle—”
“That’s a bit high,” Gideon said. “High by twenty dollars, I’d say.”
“No, that’s the price in St. Louis.”
“Back in Virginia—”
“Well, maybe a hundred forty.”
“A hundred thirty, Lester.”
It seemed to Will that time was their chiefest enemy. He did not want to go back to Virginia; there was nothing for him there but painful memories and tavern whores. But neither did he want to cross Indian territory alone. If the wagon trains had already left or were leaving, then the best they could hope for was to catch up somewhere along the trail beyond Independence. If Hackett could help them save time, then he’d be worth all the food he could eat between here and St. Louis.
“About your proposition,” Will said.
“What proposition is that, Will?”
“The one you just put to us. About—”
“Whatever it was, I’ve got a better one,” Hackett said. “Now you may have noticed that sweet young lady across the room, who happens to have a dozen or more sisters down the line. Why don’t we ask her to take us three little darlins home?”
“Sounds good, Lester,” Gideon said, and clapped him on the back. “Let’s go get some women, Will.”
“Let’s go get some coffee,” Will said.
Last thing on earth she wanted was a fight with her son.
She’d convinced Hadley, told him everything the storekeeper had told her, and of course he’d seen the sense of it, and had agreed to turn back. Now here was Will with a stranger who’d offered to guide them to St. Louis.
Supper was cooking in the yard outside the stable, the rich aroma of frying pork blowing in to mingle with the stench of horses, mules, hay, and manure. It was cold in the stable, but they kept the doors cracked a bit anyway; the stink would have been intolerable otherwise. Lester Hackett was smoking a long cigar, his booted feet up on the watering trough, his hat tilted back on his head.
“What I can get you is a broadhorn,” he said. “Now what she is, she’s similar to a flat-boat, but not quite so crude. She’s got a deck, and a cabin for the ladies to set in, but she’s only got two men handling the long oars — that’s where she gets her name — and the patroon at the rudder in back, and that’s it. The patroon I have in mind is a man named Jimmy Jackson, no relation to the former president. Patroons is what they call these riverboat captains. He owes me a favor; I think I can get him to take the wagon and the entire party for an even twenty dollars. That’s inexpensive, if you know riverboat prices.”
“Would that be all the way to Evansville?” Will asked.
“Yes,” Lester said. “I’ve not talked to him, yet, mind you, but I’m sure that’ll be the destination and the price.”
“That’s very nice, Mr. Hackett,” Hadley said, “but it happens we ain’t
goin
to Evansville. Where we’re goin is back to Virginia.”
“Now who in hell decided
that?”
Will said.
“You cuss one more time in this house—”
“It ain’t but a stable, Ma,” Will said. “Who went and decided we’re turnin around?”