to get a thousand miles. Thinking of it in terms of months proved more comforting than thinking of it in terms of miles, so Pea tried that for a while.
'When will it be a month up?' he asked Po Campo one night. Po was another much-relied-on source of information.
'Don't worry about months,' Po Campo said. 'Months won't bother you. I'm more worried about it being dry.'
'Lord, it ain't been dry yet,' Pea said. 'It's rained aplenty.'
'I know,' Po said. 'But we may come to a place where it will forget to rain.'
He had long since won the affection of Gus's pigs. The shoat followed him around everywhere. It had grown tall and skinny. It annoyed Augustus that the pigs had shown so little fidelity; when he came to the camp and noticed the shoat sleeping right beside Po Campo's workplace, he was apt to make tart remarks. The fact that many of the men had come to regard Po Campo as an oracle also annoyed Augustus.
'Po, you're too short to see far, but I hear you can tell fortunes,' he said one morning when he had ridden over for breakfast.
'I can tell some fortunes,' Po allowed. 'I don't know if I can tell yours.'
'I don't want nobody to tell mine,' Jasper said. 'I might find out that I'm going to drown in the Republican River.'
'I'd like to know mine,' Augustus said. 'I've had mine told a few times by old black women in New Orleans, and they always say the same thing.'
'Probably they tell you that you'll never be rich and you'll never be poor,' Po said, whipping at his scrambled eggs.
'That's right,' Augustus said. 'It's a boring fortune. Besides, I can look in my pocket and tell that much myself. I ain't rich and I ain't poor, exactly.'
'What more would you like to know about your fortune?' Po Campo inquired politely.
'How many more times I'm likely to marry,' Augustus said. 'That's the only interesting question, ain't it? Which river I drown in don't matter to me. That's Jasper's interest. I'd just like to know my matrimonial prospects.'
'Spit,' Po said. 'Spit in the wagon here.'
Augustus walked over to the wagon and spat on the boards. The day before, Po Campo had caught six prairie- chicken hatchlings, for some reason, and they were running around in the wagon bed, chirping. Po came over and looked for a moment at Augustus's expectoration.
'No more wives for you,' he said immediately, and turned back to his eggs.
'That's disappointing,' Augustus said. 'I've only had two wives so far, and neither of them lived long. I figured I was due one more.'
'You don't really want another wife,' Po said. 'You are like me, a free man. The sky is your wife.'
'Well, I've got a dry one then,' Augustus said, looking up at the cloudless sky.
The shoat stood on its hind legs and put its front hooves on the side of the wagon. It was trying to see the hatchlings.
'I'd have turned you into bacon long since if I'd have known you were going to be so fickle,' Augustus said.
'Can you tell stuff about a feller from looking at his spit?' Pea Eye asked. He had heard of fortune-tellers, but thought they usually did it with cards.
'Yes,' Po Campo said, but he didn't explain.
Just as they were about to cross into Kansas, some Indians showed up. There were only five of them, and they came so quietly that nobody noticed them at first. Newt was on the drags. When the dust let up for a moment he looked over and saw the Captain talking to a small group of riders. At first he supposed them to be cowboys from another herd. He didn't think about them being Indians until the Captain came trotting over with them. 'Take him,' the Captain said, pointing to a steer with a split hoof who was hobbling along in the rear.
By the time it registered that they were really Indians, they had already cut off the steer and were driving it away, as the Captain sat and watched. Newt was almost afraid to look at them, but when he did he was surprised at how thin and poor they looked. The old man who was their leader was just skin and bones. He rode near enough for Newt to see that one of his eyes was milky white. The other Indians were young. Their ponies were as thin as they were. They had no saddles, just saddle blankets, and only one had a gun, an old carbine. The Indians boxed the steer out of the herd as skillfully as any cowboys and soon had him headed across the empty plain. The old man raised his hand to the Captain as they left, and the Captain returned the gesture.
That night there was much talk about the event.
'Why, they didn't look scary,' Jimmy Rainey said. 'I reckon we could have whipped them easy enough.'
Po Campo chuckled. 'They weren't here to fight,' he said. 'They're just hungry. When they're fighting they look different.'
'That's right,' Lippy said. 'It don't take but a second for one to shoot a hole in your stomach. It happened to me.'
Call had formed the habit of riding over with Augustus every night as he took Lorena her supper. Augustus usually camped about a mile from the herd, so it gave them a few minutes to talk. Augustus had not seen the Indians, but he had heard about the gift of the beef.
'I guess you're getting mellow in your old age,' he said. 'Now you're feeding Indians.'
'They were just Wichitas,' Call said, 'and they were hungry. That steer couldn't have kept up anyway. Besides, I knew the old man,' he added. 'Remember old Bacon Rind?-or that's what we called him, anyway.'
'Yes, he was never a fighter,' Augustus said. 'I'm surprised he's still alive.'
'He fed us buffalo once,' Call said. 'It was only fair he should have a beef.'
They were fifty yards from the tent, so Call drew rein. He couldn't see the girl, but he took care not to come too close. Augustus said she was spooked.
'Look how blue it is toward the sunset,' Augustus said. 'I've heard about what they call the Blue Mounds. I guess those must be them.'
The prairie was rolling, and there were humplike rises to the north as far as they could see. Though the sky was still bright yellow with afterglow, the mounds ahead did have a bluish electric look, almost as if blue lightning had condensed over their tops.
In the dawn the Blue Mounds shimmered to the north. Augustus usually came out of the tent early so he could see the sunrise. Lorena had stopped having so many nightmares and she slept heavily, so heavily that it was hard to get her awake in the mornings. Augustus never rushed her. She had regained her appetite and put on flesh, and it seemed to him her sleeping late was healthy. The grass was wet with dew, so he sat on his saddle blanket watching Dish Boggett point the cattle into the blue distances. Dish always swung the point as close to the tent as he dared, hoping for a glimpse of Lorena, but it was a hope seldom rewarded.
When Lorena awoke and came out of the tent the herd was almost out of sight, though Lippy and the wagon were not far away. Po Campo and the two pigs were walking along looking at things, a hundred yards ahead of the wagon.
Augustus made room for Lorena on the blanket and she sat down without a word, watching the strange little man walk along with the pigs. As the sun rose, the blueness to the north diminished, and it could be seen that the mounds were just low brown hills.
'It must be that wavy grass that gives it the blue look-or else it's the air,' Augustus said.
Lorena didn't say anything. She felt so sleepy that she could hardly sit up, and after a moment she leaned against Gus and shut her eyes. He put his arms around her. His arms were warm and the sun on her face was warm. Sleep had pulled at her so much lately that it seemed she was never fully awake, but it didn't matter so long as Gus was there to talk to her and sleep close beside her. If he was there she could let go and slide into sleep. He didn't mind. Often she would rest in his arms, while he held forth, talking almost to himself, for she only half heard. Only when she thought of coming to a town did she feel worried. She stayed in her sleeps as long as she could, so as not to have to worry about the towns.
Augustus stroked her hair as she lay against him. He was thinking how strange life was, that he and Lorena were sitting on a saddle blanket on the south edge of Kansas, watching Call's cattle herd disappear to the north.
One little shot during a card game in Arkansas had started things happening-things he couldn't see the end of. The shot had ended up killing more than a dentist. Sean O'Brien, Bill Spettle, and the three people who were