“Now let’s get to work. I see you’ll be awful careful and tender with me. I’ll bet I don’t get even a sprained ankle. You folks get him, and I’ll show you where he said the place was.”
Two hours later Follett came running back to where Prudence lay on the saddle-blanket in the warm morning sun.
“The wagon-train is coming—hear the whips? Now, look here, why don’t we go right on with it, in one of the big wagons? They’re coming back light, and we can have a J. Murphy that is bigger than a whole lot of houses in this country. You don’t want to go back there, do you?”
She shook her head.
“No, it would hurt me to see it now. I should be expecting to see him at every turn. Oh, I couldn’t stand that—poor sorry little father!”
“Well, then, leave it all; leave the place to the women, and good riddance, and come off with me. I’ll send one of the boys back with a pack-mule for any plunder you want to bring away, and you needn’t ever see the place again.”
She nestled in his arms, feeling in her grief the comfort of his tenderness.
“Yes, take me away now.”
The big whips could be heard plainly, cracking like rifle-shots, and shortly came the creaking and hollow rumbling of the wagons and the cries of the teamsters to their six-mule teams. There were shouts and calls, snatches of song from along the line, then the rattling of harness, and in a cloud of dust the train was beside them, the teamsters sitting with rounded shoulders up under the bowed covers of the big wagons.
A hail came from the rear of the train, and a bronzed and bearded man in a leather jacket cantered up on a small pony.
“Hello there, Rool! I’m whoopin’ glad to see you!”
He turned to the driver of the foremost wagon.
“All right, boys! We’ll make a layby for noon.”