Leah
awoke with a start and sat up straight in the cramped train seat.
The conductor was ambling down the aisle announcing in his bored,
flat voice that they had at long last reached the town with the
peculiar name of Horse Flats. She cupped her hands to the rain-spattered
window and peered into the murkiness of the early spring evening.
All that could be seen was a small, clapboard depot and the blurred
movement of a boarding passenger fleeing from the rain.
Leah
bent to tug her heavy valise from beneath the seat dislodging
her stiff-brimmed hat. Mumbling an unladylike word she had learned
while staying with the kindly, but pugnacious Mrs. Cramfy in Ohio,
she jerked the ugly black hat into place and stepped into the
aisle.
The
fat drummer with the greasy smile who had plagued her since he
had boarded the train in Omaha leaned back in his seat with a
smirk. "Goodbye, dearie. Been nice chattin' with ya."
Leah
ignored him as she had for three-fourths the length of Nebraska.
The tired young mother from across the aisle nodded, smiling a
farewell over the head of the infant sleeping against her shoulder.
Outside,
Leah paused on the partially sheltered train steps, a small blond
girl in black. Her home-dyed mourning apparel and the hat did
not hide the fact she was pretty...unusually pretty. Leah straightened
her slim shoulders and breathed deeply of the clean, damp air.
Thank heaven the long train ride from Ohio was over. Her whole
body felt stiff and cramped. As she stood there, her eyes searching
the shadowed platform, she noted a man standing on the lee side
of a stack of freight watching her. Just as their eyes met, he
moved forward.
He
was tall with broad shoulders, perhaps thirty years old, wearing
a rain-shined slicker that slapped at the tops of his boots with
each stride. Water dripped from the wide brim of his hat that
was pulled low to shield his face from the rain.
At
the foot of the steps he halted. Sharp blue eyes glinted up at
her from a face with a certain lean, craggy handsomeness despite
its stern expression. He spoke curtly, "You're Simon Clayborn's
niece?"
"Yes.
I'm Leah Clayborn. Did my uncle send you?"
"Yes,
and no. He's stove up some. Horse fell with him. I was coming
in to town so he asked if I'd pick you up."
"Is
he badly injured?" Leah gasped.
"Nope.
Just cracked a couple of ribs and twisted his knee some. This
all you have to load?" He indicated the valise as Leah nodded.
A callused hand reached out for the handle and indicated Leah
was to follow him. Leah scrambled down the steps to dash after
the retreating back.
A
team and wagon waited behind the depot. The man was shoving the
valise beneath a tarpaulin in the back of the wagon when Leah
caught up. From its depth he pulled a slicker similar to the one
he wore. "Here, put this on."
Gratefully,
Leah wrapped in the bulky raincoat pulling it up over her hat.
Without warning the man suddenly reached out, placed a big hand
on either side of her waist and lifted her into the wagon. He
motioned to the board seat before going to untie the team. "Make
sure you keep that slicker between you and the seat or you'll
get a wet bottom."
Wet
bottom, indeed! Gentlemen didn't say such things to ladies. Not
in Havendale, anyway! However, Leah gingerly arranged herself
as advised.
In
a moment, the man was back and sitting beside her. With quick,
sure movements, he swung the team about, and they were headed
down what appeared to be the main street of the little town. Shadowed
buildings stood huddled, their windows black and glassy like a
row of dead eyes. The trace chains jingled accompanying the clump
of the horses' hooves on the damp earth.
The
horses stepped out with anticipation of going home, chuffing and
snorting at the trickle of rain in their nostrils. Midway down
the street, a bright patch of light poked out into the dark like
a stubby finger, an open door releasing the tinkle of piano music
and boisterous voices. A crude sign above the door could be made
out, its large letters spelling "SALOON". A man wearing leather
chaps and high-heeled boots wobbled out. Why, it's just like in
those dime western novels Mama had forbidden her to read, Leah
marveled as the unsteady cowboy saw the wagon and called out.