Even in a pounding rain, her black curls plastered to her forehead under the hood of her cloak, this girl was breathtakingly beautiful. She possessed a dark, flashing kind of beauty and I thought—treacherously, I admit—that it made Sally Coleman’s blue-eyed, yellow-haired prettiness seem insipid by comparison.
The girl’s eyes were huge and brown, framed by long lashes and her mouth was small but full-lipped and ripe in her heart-shaped face. That was a mouth made for kissing and I had the urge to swing out of the saddle and plant a smacker on her.
Of course I did no such thing, staying right where I was as I said: “I figure you’ve got yourself in a tolerable amount of trouble, ma’am.”
The girl nodded, and from what I could see of her gray wool dress under the cloak, she was slender and mighty shapely. “The wagon tongue just snapped.” She turned and pointed to where the wagon’s front wheels were almost up to their axles in mud. “We got bogged down and when Pa whipped up the oxen to pull us out, the tongue just broke.”
I saw tears start in the girl’s eyes, and being young and ardent and of a chivalrous nature, I swung out of the saddle and stepped close behind her.
“Don’t you fret none, ma’am,” I said. “I’ll see what I can do for your wagon.”
The girl blinked back tears. “You’d do that for us?”
I shrugged. “Name’s Dusty Hannah and since there’s no one else around, I guess I got it to do.”
At that, the man stepped from behind the wagon, saw me and let out a cheer, then yelled:
The man stopped and blinked at me like an owl. “Well, young Lochinvar, are you come to save us or rob us?” He extended the jug. “Here, take a drink.”
I shook my head at him. “I don’t care for any right now,” I said.
The man shrugged. “Suit yourself. More for me.”
Then he put the jug to his mouth and drank deeply, his prominent Adam’s apple bobbing.
“My name is Lila Tryon and that’s my father, Ned.” The girl’s eyes searched my face, as though trying to find the understanding she hoped for. “He . . . he’s not been well.”
Ned Tryon had the same dark brown eyes as his daughter, but what was beautiful in her was weak in him. They were the vague eyes of a dreamer, the eyes of a man unsuited to survive in the hard, unforgiving land that lay around us.
I stepped over to the wagon tongue and Lila came over and stood beside me. “Can it be fixed?”
I nodded. “If you have a hammer and nails in the wagon.”
“We do,” Lila said. “And there’s some sturdy oak wood if you need that.”
I stood there looking at the tongue for a while, then turned to the girl and asked: “Where are you and your pa headed?”
She eased her wet hood away from her face and gave me a dazzling smile that made my heart jump.
“We’ve come all the way from Missouri. We had a farm there”—her eyes slid to her father—“but it didn’t work out. Then Pa’s brother died and left us his ranch down south of the Clear Fork of the Brazos, just a few miles east of Beals Creek.”
I nodded. “Know that country well. It’s right close to my home ranch, the SP Connected.”
“Pa says his brother wrote to him once and described the place, a strong stone cabin on a hundred and sixty acres, all of it good pastureland cut through by creeks.”
“I suppose you could keep enough cows on it to get by,” I said, “though it will take a strong back and some mighty hard work.”
Lila shook her head. “Oh, no, not cattle. Pa plans to farm the place.”
“That’s cow country, ma’am,” I said, my patience fraying fast, unable to believe what I was hearing.
“The soil is too thin and rocky for farming. Besides,” I added, then instantly regretted it, “we don’t take kindly to sodbusters down there.”
“Then you’ll just have to get used to us, won’t you, Mr. Hannah?” Lila snapped, annoyance flaring in her eyes.
That little gal had spirit and I let it go. “You go ahead and do what you must, ma’am,” I said. “But you’ll fare no better at farming in Texas than you did in Missouri and maybe a lot worse.”
Ned Tryon lurched toward us. “Ah,” he said, “the lovers’ first quarrel and all because of the poor, downtrodden farmer.” Tryon tilted back his head and yelled at the uncaring sky: