Chapter
One: Desperation & Opportunity
(Columbus,
Ohio, January1860)
"Hang her
next. She partnered up with him!"
Taunts from the
restless crowd at Carrie Maguire's back reached her at some level,
but remembering, her husband, Pete's words of love whispered into her
ear as he held her close took precedence. The vision of his handsome
face on their wedding day danced before her teary eyes. She jerked
the lapels of her coat up around her neck against another blast of
arctic air which threatened to freeze her rock solid. If only her
heart could follow suit.
"Where's
our money, Mrs. Maguire?" Her name shouted out in sing-song
fashion by another of the seething crowd at her back eroded what was
left of her dignity.
What happened to
the wonderful man she married a year ago? The stranger she visited
in jail and viewed in the courtroom these past months bore no
resemblance to her beloved as she remembered him. His happy-go-lucky
personality and unflinching devotion to her vanished, replaced by a
detached, uncommunicative man consigned to his fate. After the first
month of one-sided visits, Pete forbade her from coming again.
Before these events, he admired her tenacity. Her jaw clamped
against the chattering of her teeth.
"Yeah, can't
hang her until we get our hands on the money!" Nothing she
said convinced them. If she had their money, they would have it.
Carrie remembered
the way he called her Sweetheart and his tender touch when he would
rub his knuckles across her cheek. And his kisses, oh my, they
turned her knees into jelly and tasted like heaven. Her wedding day
remains the happiest day of her life. Lacking any other family; he
became her whole world.
She fixed her
eyes on her husband's shoes avoiding the crowd, the harsh winter
weather and the sight of the court building behind the gallows where
Pete met his destiny. One gloved hand covered her mouth while the
other crushed the life out of a handkerchief. His feet swayed back
and forth from the momentum of falling through the sprung trap door.
Tears ran down her face unheeded. Rope bound his ankles. One shoe
fell from his foot, revealing the heel of a sock in desperate need of
darning. She cringed with embarrassment by the proof of her wifely
negligence. Good Lord, what's wrong with her? A hole in his sock is
nothing next to bank robbery and the murder of a Pinkerton man.
Not an ounce of
pity spared on his behalf. The tears on her face were ones of
betrayal.
"Sheriff,
make her confess!" Another of Pete’s former banking
customer’s shouted.
Someone pushed
her from behind, and she lurched forward. Her arms shot out to catch
herself, but she recovered. She spun to stare at them--all the
righteous town folk who turned out on this January day in spite of
the near blizzard conditions to witness her husband's hanging.
Several little children, bundled in multiple layers, perched on their
father’s shoulders to better enjoy the view. One pot-bellied
man to her left busily gorged himself on a sausage sandwich. The
stench stung her nose and her stomach roiled as another crowd member
bumped into her while swilling a bottle of whiskey.
So steadfast was
their belief in her guilt, their stares never wavered. The
prosecution failed to provide evidence of a female accomplice. She
had called Columbus home for all twenty-two years of her life, but
these are not the faces of neighbors and friends. The sheer amount
of hate concentrated on her from the crowd sent chills down her
spine.
"Step back,"
the Sheriff ordered as he waded into the crowd pushing the offenders
away from her. "Mrs. Maguire hasn't been charged with a crime."
He glanced over at her and shook his head. "The woman has just
witnessed her husband hang. Show some common courtesy and move along
now."
The Sheriff's
words to the crowd were obligatory. The scowl on his face aimed
toward her meant he had been one of Pete’s customers as well.
"She
shouldn't be allowed to mingle with decent folk." Carrie
recognized her landlady, Mrs. Meade's voice.
The same day the
jury came back with a guilty plea, the landlady, dubbed her persona
non grata. After pleading with the woman on the grounds of Christian
decency, as if the pompous windbag possessed any, she had been
allowed to stay until the day of the hanging.
The doctor
climbed a ladder next to Pete’s hanging body. He placed a
stethoscope on Pete’s chest and listened. He paused to ask the
crowd for silence.
Carrie gasped.
Please just take him down from there.
After checking
with the stethoscope again, the doctor verified Pete's death. At the
doctor's solemn nod, they cut him down and shuffled him into the
utilitarian pine box on the wagon bed.
Carrie walked
over and picked up his discarded shoe. As she stood, her nose almost
touched the cut end of the dangling rope. She leaned away. She
handed the shoe to one of the men standing on the bed of the wagon,
and he pushed it back onto Pete's foot.
As she stepped
back, a rotting head of cabbage hit the frozen ground in front of
her, ruptured and rolled to a stop a few feet away. Little worm-like
insects oozed out in every direction. Sickened she glanced up at the
offender.
"Next time I
won't be a throwing vegetables." A good Irish brogue usually
amused her, but not this time. The Sheriff hassled the cabbage
tosser backward into the crowd.
The undertaker's
assistants reclaimed Carrie’s attention as they pounded on the
coffin lid. She flinched at every hammer strike. Each nail pierced
her heart killing any chance of future happiness. Fresh tears flowed
down her cheeks as she trembled. The driver asked if she would like
to ride with him to the grave site. She declined. The workers
finished sealing her beloved husband into his final resting place and
sat on the tailgate as the wagon pulled away. Why? Why did you
turn to crime? What made you so desperate for $10,000 you’d
rob your own bank? We didn't need the money.
The wind whistled
from behind her toward the cemetery, chilling her to the marrow.
Everything inside continued to be as dead and cold as Pete. Her coat
and skirt flapped like a flag in a hurricane. She closed her eyes
and released the long-held breath.
Carrie put all of
Pete’s affairs in order. Once again, she's all alone and must
leave town for her safety. As of this moment, Carrie Maguire ceases
to exist, and Carrie McCall begins her life. Not many people get a
chance to start over. She'll go west until the mention of the name
Pete Maguire ceases to elicit a negative response.
A hard lesson
learned, and not one she'll soon forget. When she spoke her vows on
their wedding day, she had meant to keep every one of them. Yet,
he'd become a stranger. She swore another man would never give her
mean treatment. To guard against the possibility, she locked her
wounded heart away beneath the betrayal, regret and lies. It felt
like a stone in her chest.
***
Carrie boarded
the paddle wheeler in Cincinnati as dusk approached. One of the
boards in the paddlewheel must be loose or cracked and, as luck would
have it, her economic aft cabin put her next to the contraption. The
bang, bang kept waking her out of a sound. She closed her eyes tight
and held a pillow over her ears, but no use. Since sleep alluded
her, she decided to get up and read for a while. After shrugging
into her night robe and lighting the oil lamp, she turned and froze.
"Don't
holler, lady, I mean no harm." A raggedy boy of about 14 years
of age crouched in the corner of her cramped room clasping his knees
to his chest, not an arm’s length from her. "I won't
steal nuttin'. I swear." He appeared out of place in the
relative warmth and comfort of the riverboat cabin. He wore a shabby
shirt and pants without hat or coat. One toe poked through the worn
out leather of one shoe, and he shook from the cold.
“How did
you get in here without me noticing, young man?”
"I'da
skedaddled before mornin' so's you wouldn't even knowd of me."
“Why didn’t
I feel a blast of cold air when you came in?” Carrie placed
her fists on her hips and glared at the boy.
"I'm a
stowaway, ma'am. If I manage to get on board, I find a cubbyhole of
some kind to hide in, but tonight is colder than a miner's pecker."
He paused to rub his arms.
Pulling the
blanket from the cot, she wrapped the boiled wool expanse around his
thin, shaking frame. "There. Much better." She tucked
the edges in around him. "How did you get in here?" She
couldn't resist pushing his dirty blond hair back away from his face.
"I'm sorry I
picked your lock. I only cracked the door open enough for me to
siddle through real quick so’s it wouldn’t wake you."
Something about
him seemed familiar. "Does the lock still work?"
"Yes'um. I
didn't break it." He kicked off his shoes and began rubbing his
feet.
Carrie relocked
her cabin door then turned to find terrified brown eyes pleading with
her for mercy. "So, young man, what do people call you and when
did you eat last?" She recognized the frightened, deserted look
on the boy's face better than most.
"Billy,
ma'am, and I ain't ate nothin' in days." He swiped his dirty
finger under his runny nose and wiped the wet digit dry on the
blanket.
"Well, I'm
Carrie McCall. And if we can refrain from referring to miner's
peckers again, I'll get us something to eat."
After eating, she
tucked the cold, worn-out boy into her cot for some rest after losing
the argument with herself to scrub him clean first.
"You wouldna
snuff the lamp, would ya, ma'am?"
She thought him
past the frightened night terror stage, but she recognized real fear
in his eyes. "No. I got up to read for awhile. Why?"
"Only babies
oughta be afraid of the dark, but you never knowd what'll happen to a
feller in the devil's own darkness." He punched the pillow into
submission and yanked the blanket up to his chin. "He won't be
catchin' me unawares."
"Don't you
worry about the devil. We've waltzed around a few ballrooms together
before. He'd sooner take on a prairie twister than Carrie McCall
again." He gave her a crooked smile as he rolled away from her
toward the wall. Why did she assure him? He couldn't keep fear and
loneliness from showing all over his dirty freckled face. She used
to be a lost, lonely child like Billy.
She turned the
lamp down low and took two steps to the wooden chair crowded into the
functional, but small cabin. Instead of reading, she thought about
Billy’s daily struggle to survive while watching him sleep.
She kept herself busy by counting the number of thuds from the
defective plank in the paddlewheel.
***
After four days
of questions, conversation and sharing a little trust, Carrie found
herself enjoying the afternoon sun and young Billy on the deck
overlooking the Ohio River in spite of the nip in the air. During
that time, she had arranged Billy’s passage with the captain.
In exchange for passage to Paducah, Kentucky where they would
transfer to a train to St Joseph, Missouri, the Captain put Billy to
work wooding and daily cleaning of the deck. Not enviable jobs since
the boiler consumed enough wood daily to heat a entire neighborhood
back home and many of God’s creatures, accompanying their
respective owners on the trip south, occupied the deck.
Carrie shared her
plans for the future with Billy. Tomorrow morning they would arrive
in Paducah. Decisions needed to be made.
"You cain't
run a Pony Express Station all on your lonesome, Mrs. McCall.”
Billy stood at the boat railing prodding goats out of his way with a
stick. They were secured with rope, but had enough leeway to wander
toward him. “I can pitch in. I'm horse smart and can do chores
around the house or barn. Take me with you. I'll learn you how."
"Do you
think we could make it work, Billy? I wrote Mr. Russell, and claimed
my name was Carl McCall. I'm going to pass myself off as a man.
That's going to be a hard enough hurdle to get past much less having
a boy with me." Right at this moment submitting her application
to run a relay station for the Pony Express seemed ludicrous. When
she read about the new opportunity in The Columbus Gazette, a
lonely relay station somewhere out west sounded ideal.
She needed to get
far away from anyone with knowledge of Peter Maguire, a bank robbery
and murderer of Hank Lipton, a Pinkerton man. She put her faith in
the Lord. Because of her small frame and bust, she hoped to pass as
male. If she tucked all her hair up in a hat and dressed in a work
shirt, denim and boots, she might pull this sham off.
"You said
the horses are gonna be high-grade, not average plow horses. Dem
horses need special care, feedin’, and exercise." Billy
turned toward her. "Mrs. McCall, I been doing stable work
longer than I can ‘member and those riders’ll be coming
in bone tired and starvin'. They’ll be a cussin' and chawin'
tobacco. Men like to scratch and spread out ifn' you get my meanin'."
He demonstrated by scratching at an armpit.
Carrie rolled her
eyes and smiled, but his point held credence. She couldn't complain
about the pay. Caring for the high-quality Pony Express horses would
be a daunting task. Not to mention her biggest stumbling block,
being a member of the fairer sex. She began to doubt her desperate
plan.
What other option
did she have? "What do you think I should do?" Carrie
beamed her answer at him.
Billy smacked the
boat railing in success. "First, we're gettin' to St. Jo early
right?"
"Yes, about
a week early."
"Good, for
seven whole days I'll learn you enough so's you don't make a dang
fool of yerself." He beamed at her like a toddler on Christmas
morning. "How would you like a little brother? I'm
house-trained and don't eat much to speak of."
She liked this
little scamp. "You eat like a wolf." Carrie tousled
his washed and cut blond hair. The raggedy boy had been replaced by
a well-fed, cleaned-up young man. She got off at the next port to
buy some essentials for him. Her funds dwindled fast. She prayed
their ruse would work, and they’d land the job. "I'll
tell you what. You teach me how to run a relay station, and I'll
teach you how to read. Deal?"
You would have
thought she had stolen his last peppermint stick by glare he gave
her. "Aw, all right, if'n I have to learn to read to go, I
will." Billy pushed away from the boat railing and came to sit
next to her. "You don't even give a feller a fair fight."
In four short
days, Billy showed her more compassion than the whole city of
Columbus had in the last year. Like her, he lacked kith or kin which
created an affinity between them. She figured with Billy's help,
they'd make the station hum like a tuning fork. "You're sure
there's no family to send you to? Promise me you're not a runaway.
I would be devastated if I kept a boy from his parents."
"Nobody
ain't never gave a damn about me before you, Mrs. McCall." He
put his hand in hers and squeezed. She squeezed back and smiled.
The hope in his
eyes and the sincere tone in his voice rang as familiar to her as
breathing. What would they do if the Pony Express job didn't work
out? She set out to seek a way to support herself far away from
prying eyes, but now she's part of a family again. God help the
soul who tries to come between her and this boy.
“Maybe you
ought to call me Carl if we’re going to be brothers.”
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