a gun and fight wild Indians.”
“You are still young. I’m sure that by the time you grow up, some occupation other than being a cowboy will strike your fancy.”
While on the train, Winnie continued to write in his journal. He wrote about the Great Lakes and the city of Chicago. But it wasn’t until they started across the great western plains that his writing really came alive.
At one of the train stops, a man got on who was obviously drunk. He staggered down the aisle, then settled in a seat across the aisle from the seat that Winnie and his mother were occupying. Jennie Churchill was an exceptionally pretty woman, Winnie knew that. He also knew that there were disquieting rumors about her, rumors that, though unsubstantiated, were nonetheless believable because Jennie was not only pretty, she was flirtatious.
But she liked to be in control of her flirting episodes, and always made certain that they were most discreet. She certainly had no interest in interacting with a drunken train passenger. He had no such reservations, however.
“Well now, ain’t you a purty thang, though?”
Jennie showed no reaction.
“I’m talkin’ to you, sweet thang. You’re ’bout the purtiest woman I ever seen.”
Jennie continued to stare straight ahead.
“What’s the matter, Missy? Do you think you’re too good for the likes of Dewey Butrum?”
Winnie got up from his seat and stood in the aisle between his mother and Dewey Butrum.
“Mr. Butrum, to answer your question, my mother is much too good for the likes of you.”
“Get out of the way, kid. I’m talkin’ to your mama.”
“I have no intention of getting out of the way.”
“Then I’ll just get you out of the way,” Butrum said. Standing up, he started toward Winnie, but Winnie kicked him hard in his shin.
Butrum lifted his leg and grabbed his shin, then began hopping around on one leg.
“Ow! You little shit, I’m going to teach you how to respect your elders.”
“No, you’re not,” another man said, and, looking up, Winnie saw that at least three more men had gotten up from their own seats. “If that little fella has the courage to stand up for his mama, we intend to see that nothing happens to him or her. There’s an empty seat at the back of the car. You go sit there.”
“The hell I will. I like where I’m sittin’,” Butrum said.
“Mister, you’ll either go back there peacefully, or we will throw you off this train,” the man said.
Grumbling, Butrum walked back to the last seat in the car and sat down.
“I thank you gentlemen for coming to our rescue,” Winnie said.
The spokesman for the group touched the brim of his hat, and smiled. “I’m not sure we did rescue you, son,” he said. “It looked to me like you were doing pretty good on your own.”
The three men returned to their seats, and Winnie returned to his.
“You know who those three men were, Mama?” he asked.
“No.”
“They were knights.”
Winnie’s mother reached over, took his hand, then squeezed it. “No,” she said. “You are my knight in shining armor.”
“Ha! I’m not wearing any armor.”
“Oh but you are, dear. You are girded with the armor of courage and righteousness.”
William Teasdale was sitting at his desk in the office of his house, examining the figures on the paper before him. So far, he had bought almost two thousand head of cattle from Sam Logan and the Yellow Kerchief Gang, paying them five dollars a head for cattle that would bring him forty dollars a head at the market. For now, all the rustled cattle were being kept away from his main herd in a part of his ranch that was the most remote from what people normally regarded as Thistledown. They would be kept there until the brands could be changed. Once that was accomplished, the stolen cattle would be integrated into his herd.
Teasdale chuckled at how easy it was to convert the capital letter F, for Frewen, to his own brand, which was the letter T with two crossbars. That double-bar T, that stood for Teasdale – Thistledown, was not only branded on the cattle but was painted on the side of his coach, as well as on the sign at the entrance to his ranch.
THISTLEDOWN RANCH
William Teasdale,
Of course there was a double advantage to the rustled cattle: it not only increased his herd and profit, but it also decreased Frewen’s herd, and increased his debt. Teasdale was certain that Frewen had not the slightest suspicion that Teasdale himself was behind all his troubles. The only fly in the ointment now was Matt Jensen. But Logan had told Teasdale this morning that Kyle Houston was already in Sussex, just waiting for Jensen to show up.