'You can't do that!' Valentine protested.
She looked at Jack Drumm. 'Beulah and I will stay here, with this gentleman, till another stage comes north and we can board it.'
Drumm, who had been silently listening to the argument, could scarcely find his voice. 'You—you can't be serious!' he stammered. 'You can see our situation is serious here! There is no way to tell when the Apaches may mount another attack on us!'
'That's right,' Coogan agreed. 'Not meanin' to interfere, ma'am, but you got to come back to Phoenix with us! Maybe later—'
'We just had an uncomfortable experience in Phoenix,' Miss Larkin insisted, 'and I don't mean to repeat it! No, we will stay here!'
'But we have practically no food!' Drumm protested, annoyed with the arrogant female. 'Most of our supplies were destroyed, and my man and I have been reduced to eating Indian corn!'
Mrs. Glore held up her bulging reticule. 'Since Phoebe and I come West,' she remarked, 'I've found that food is an uncertain commodity. So I've got bacon in here, and eggs—a wheel of cheese —some tortugas or whatever they call 'em—'
'
'Well, whatever. We'll get along all right.'
'I forbid it!' Drumm insisted.
Phoebe Larkin looked at him with a hard blue eye. 'You can't forbid us anything! This is part of the United States, which is a free country. A lady has a perfect right to stop and visit wherever she's a mind to.' She turned to the driver. 'If you will just pass down our valises—'
Coogan looked at Jack Drumm. 'Short of hog-tieing her—'
'You lay a hand on her and I'll turn you inside out and stomp your giblets!' Mrs. Glore promised, holding the parasol like a weapon.
'Be quiet, Beulah,' Miss Larkin instructed. 'I can take care of myself. Always have, and always will.' She picked up a valise. 'Beulah and I will take shelter in that little shack over there until someone is brave enough to see us to Prescott!'
'Now wait a minute!' Drumm insisted, seeing the two females head toward Eggleston's reed hut. 'You can't —'
Disappearing among the reeds, they paid him no attention. The company watched them go. Sam Valentine muttered, 'Well, she's a strong-minded young lady, that's sure! Any Apache would be unlucky to cut
There was nothing more to be done. Valentine shook hands, the legislators climbed back into the stage. Coogan spat again from his inexhaustible supply of amber juice and mounted the high seat beside the driver, long rifle across his lap. 'Meant to tell you,' he called down. 'This is Agustin's old stamping grounds, along the river here; kind of a sacred place. His gods hang out here! Keep a sharp eye out, Mr. Drumm, for him and his coffee-colored bastards!'
Before Drumm could acknowledge the warning, the driver cracked his long whip; quickly the stage disappeared into the reeds, wheels churning in the mossy mud. A moment later it reappeared on the far side of the Agua Fria, heading toward the distant County Road, and Phoenix.
'This,' Jack Drumm muttered, 'is a deucedly peculiar situation, Eggie!'
The valet looked toward the two females, who were waiting impatiently, as if for a tardy innkeeper.
'That is true, sir,' Eggleston agreed, rubbing his battered nose and wincing.
Jack Drumm stood in the middle of the now-deserted Prescott Road. He felt frustrated and ineffectual, a feeling new to him. In sharp contrast to his gloomy mood, the setting sun painted the scene in a manner almost pastoral; a landscape by Constable, perhaps, or Joseph Turner. Eggleston's rude cabin sat on a rise surrounded by verdure, like a ruined crofter's cottage, while the solitary mule grazed along the stream. To Drumm's ear came the sound of the Agua Fria, tributary of the Salt, plashing into mossy pools, gurgling through the matted soil of the river bottom. Even the dark clouds hovering about the peaks of the distant Mazatzals were shot with gold, and a hazy mellow light enveloped all.
'
In the growing dusk they ate supper, supplied for the most part from Mrs. Glore's reticule—slices of cheese wrapped in tortillas, and an apple apiece along with ears of boiled Indian corn. They washed down the scanty fare with river water that Eggleston had poured into a pan to allow mud and ooze to settle. Miss Larkin wanted a fire to make tea, but Drumm forbade it.
'We are in Apache country, ma'am,' he said curtly. 'I am not about to draw their further attentions with a flame that can be seen for several miles.' Inwardly he reproached himself for his coolness; Miss Larkin was a female of some status, apparently, judging from her expensive clothes, and he was hardly acting the gentleman. Still, it was unladylike of her to press herself on them, commandeer Eggleston's reed hut, and place herself and her companion under his protection without so much as a by-your-leave. But Miss Larkin was also a beautiful female. Jack Drumm was conscious of his wrecked mustache, of the ugly blood-caked scar along his cheek, of torn and dirty clothing and a need for a bath, while she smelled of clean flesh and Paris perfume.
'I—I mean—' he amended, 'well, that is to say—we cannot be too careful, ma'am! We are all alone here, on a hostile desert.'
Cross-legged on a blanket Eggleston had spread, she seemed not to notice but went on prattling in her quick decisive way.
'Take some more cheese, Mr. Drumm! Beulah bought it in Phoenix—it's a Mexican cheese, called
At Drumm's nod, Eggleston went obediently to gather blankets and pillows and whatever conveniences he could find around the wrecked camp. Moments later, assisted by Mrs. Glore, he was working in the reed hut by the shaded light of the camphene lamp, preparing couches for the two females.
'You spoke,' Drumm said grudgingly, rolling another piece of the hard cheese in a tortilla, 'of a bad experience in Phoenix, ma'am.'
She sat beside him again on the blanket, sipping at a cup of water.
'I don't want to talk about that! It was too scary.'
Miss Larkin was certainly not like Cornelia Newton-Barrett, not like Cornelia at all. But her presence, the female presence, made him think longingly of Cornelia, of home, of peace and contentment and amenities denied in this inhospitable desert.
'I suppose,' she said brightly, 'you're wondering who I am— how Beulah and I came to be out here, far from everything, traveling to Prescott!'
He inclined his head politely, shifting the position of the needle-gun across his knees. 'You do not need to explain yourself to me, Miss Larkin.'
'Just call me Phoebe,' she said. With a quick gesture she took off the bonnet and China silk scarf and tossed her head, freeing the mane of red hair to flow richly about her face. 'That's what I answer to back in—back in—' She paused, picked up the colorful scarf, worked it between her long fingers. After a moment she said, 'My father is a wealthy judge in New York City, and Mrs. Glore is an old family friend of the Larkins. You see, I always had a lot of young fellows sparking me there—'
Drumm was puzzled. 'Sparking you, ma'am?'