booted feet.
The wrongest thing of all was Maria herself, cheeks ashy beneath her olive skin-tone, and her usually neat hair tangled and unbound. Susan would have guessed only an earthquake could make her look so, if that.
'Maria, what is it?'
'You have to go, sai. Seafront maybe not safe for you just now. Your own house maybe better. When I don't see you earlier, I think you gone there already. You chose a bad day to sleep late.'
'Go?' Susan asked. Slowly, she pulled the duvet all the way up to her nose and stared at Maria over it with wide, puffy eyes. 'What do you mean, go?'
'Out the back.' Maria plucked the duvet from Susan's sleep-numbed hands again and this time stripped it all the way down to her ankles. 'Like you did before. Now, missy, now! Dress and go! Those boys put away, aye, but what if they have friends? What if they come back, kill you, too?'
Susan had been getting up. Now all the strength ran out of her legs and she sat back down on the bed again. 'Boys?' she whispered. 'Boys kill who?
This was a good distance from grammatical, but Maria took her meaning.
'Dearborn and his pinboys,' she said.
'Who are they supposed to have killed?'
'The Mayor and the Chancellor.' She looked at Susan with a kind of distracted sympathy. 'Now get up, I tell you. And get gone. This place gone
'They didn't do any such thing,' Susan said, and only just restrained herself from adding,
'Sai Thorin and sai Rimer jus' as dead, whoever did it.' There were more shouts below, and a sharp little explosion that didn't sound like a firecracker. Maria looked in that direction, then began to throw Susan her clothes. 'The Mayor's eyes, they gouged right out of his head.'
'They couldn't have! Maria, I know them—'
'Me, I don't know nothing about them and care less—but I care about you. Get dressed and get out, I tell you. Quick as you can.'
'What's happened to them?' A terrible thought came to Susan and she leaped to her feet, clothes falling all around her. She seized Maria by the shoulders. 'They haven't been killed?' Susan shook her. 'Say they haven't been killed!'
'I don't think so. There's been a t'ousan' shouts and ten t'ousan' rumors go the rounds, but I think jus' jailed. Only . ..'
There was no need for her to finish; her eyes slipped from Susan's, and that involuntary shift (along with the confused shouts from below) told all the rest. Not killed yet, but Hart Thorin had been greatly liked, and from an old family. Roland, Cuthbert, and Alain were strangers.
Not killed yet … but tomorrow was Reaping, and tomorrow night was Reaping Bonfire.
Susan began to dress as fast as she could.
Reynolds, who had been with Jonas longer than Depape, took one look at the figure cantering toward them through the skeletal oil derricks, and turned to his partner. 'Don't ask him any questions—he's not in any mood for silly questions this morning.'
'How do you know?'
'Never mind. Just keep your ever-fucking gob shut.'
Jonas reined up before them. He sat slumped in his saddle, pale and thoughtful. His look prompted one question from Roy Depape in spite of Reynolds's caution. 'Eldred, are you all right?'
'Is anyone?' Jonas responded, then fell silent again. Behind them, Citgo's few remaining pumpers squalled tiredly.
At last Jonas roused himself and sat a little straighter in the saddle. 'The cubs'll be stored supplies by now. I told Lengyll and Avery to fire a double set of pistol-shots if anything went wrong, and there hasn't been any shooting like that.'
'We didn't hear none, either, Eldred,' Depape said eagerly. 'Nothing atall like that.'
Jonas grimaced. 'You wouldn't, would you? Not out in this noise.
Fool!'
Depape bit his lip, saw something in the neighborhood of his left stirrup that needed adjusting, and bent to it.
'Were you boys seen at your business?' Jonas asked. 'This morning, I mean, when you sent Rimer and Thorin off. Even a chance either of you was seen?'
Reynolds shook his head for both of them. ' 'Twas clean as could be.'
Jonas nodded as if the subject had been of only passing interest to him, then turned to regard the oilpatch and the rusty derricks. 'Mayhap folks are right,' he said in a voice almost too low to hear. 'Mayhap the Old People
'Whatever you think, Eldred,' Reynolds said.
'I said what I think.
'Still there, pending your word,' Reynolds said.
'No need of em now.' He favored Reynolds with a dark look. 'That Dearborn's a coozey brat. I wish I was going to be in Hambry tomorrow night just so I could lay a torch between his feet. I almost left him cold and dead at the Bar K. Would've if not for Lengyll. Coozey little brat is what he is.'
Slumping as he spoke. Face growing blacker and blacker, like storm clouds drifting across the sun. Depape, his stirrup fixed, tossed Reynolds a nervous glance. Reynolds didn't answer it. What point? If Eldred went crazy now (and Reynolds had seen it happen before), there was no way they could get out of his killing-zone in time.
'Eldred, we got quite a spot more to do.'
Reynolds spoke quietly, but it got through. Jonas straightened. He took off his hat, hung it on his saddle as if the horn were a coathook, and brushed absently through his hair with his fingers.
'Yar—quite a spot is right. Ride down there. Tell Quint to send for oxen to pull those last two full tankers out to Hanging Rock. He sh'd keep four men with him to hook em up and take em on to Latigo. The rest can go on ahead.'
Reynolds now judged it safe to ask a question. 'When do the rest of Latigo's men get there?'
'Men?' Jonas snorted. 'Don't we wish, cully! The rest of Latigo's
Jonas turned and looked toward the lumpy swell of hills to the northwest.
'We have business of our own,' he said. 'Soonest begun, boys, soonest done. I want to shake the dust of fucking Mejis off my hat and boots as soon as I can. I don't like the way it feels anymore. Not at all.'
The woman, Theresa Maria Dolores O'Shyven, was forty years old, plump, pretty, mother of four, husband of Peter, a