“Me, either,” another man declared. “I buy it real regular when I’m in St. Louis.”
More laughter caused Jeremiah Blunt to swivel and say, “That will be enough.”
The freighters fell silent.
Arthur Lexington turned to Nate. “How about you, Brother King? Does our style of life appeal to you?”
“I’m married, too,” Nate said.
“Marriage is no obstacle. Bring your wife, if you want. Of course, the two of you could never have relations again, but you’re more than welcome.”
“Marriage without sex?” a freighter blurted. “Where’s the point in that?”
More laughter caused Blunt to say sternly, “When I say enough, I mean enough.” He smiled at Lexington. “I’m afraid my men are too fond of their earthly ways to give them up.”
“Suit yourselves, but we are always open to new members. Keep that in mind should any of you change yours.”
The elder and his shadow went to mingle with the rest.
Blunt leaned toward Nate. “Are you as concerned by this as I am?”
“By the ceremony?”
“No. By this,” Blunt said, and smacked the ground with his calloused hand. “By the damnable tremors.”
As if that were a stage cue, the ground under them shook. Not hard, but enough that the horses in the corral pranced and whinnied and some of the oxen bellowed in fear.
“See?” Blunt said.
Lexington raised his arms aloft. “Did you feel that, Brother and Sisters? It was the Lord affirming our faith. Let us give thanks and praise that we have been led to this holy place.”
“Holy, hell,” a freighter scoffed.
Nate held his own counsel. According to the Indian legends, the ground in the valley had been shaking since any of the tribes could remember. The Shakers were welcome to call it the handiwork of the Lord if they wanted, but in his opinion shaking ground was, well, shaking ground.
“We’ll spend tomorrow unloading,” Jeremiah Blunt said. “I expect to leave by ten the next morning. Are you coming with us as far as Bent’s Fort?”
Nate hadn’t given it any thought, but he did dearly want to get home and be with his family. “I might go with you a short way and then strike off through the mountains.”
The Shakers were dispersing. At Blunt’s command, his men rose and walked toward the freight wagons, now parked near the Conestogas of their hosts.
Nate found himself alone, but he didn’t stay that way. He sensed rather than heard someone come up behind him and went to turn.
“Don’t look back,” Maklin’s voice came over his shoulder. “Wait until I head for the corral so they won’t think I’ve spotted them and told you. Then come join me.”
“They?” Nate said.
“The south side of the valley, the high cliff with five caves. Look at the very top, but don’t let on that’s what you’re doing.”
When the Texan didn’t say more, Nate said, “Maklin?” but got no answer. Rising, he shifted enough to see him walking off. Nate stretched and pretended he had a cramp in his leg and raised it up and down a few times. As he did, he peered from under his eyebrows at the cliff Maklin mentioned. The cave mouths were awash in the red glow of the setting sun. The cliff itself was slate gray.
Nate saw nothing out of the ordinary. Not at first. He had to flick his gaze back and forth several times before he saw what Maklin had seen. He couldn’t make out much detail at that distance but he didn’t need to. He made for the corral.
Maklin was saddling his horse, his back to the cliff. “It will be dark before we get up there.”
“The dark will work against them as much as it does us.” Nate nodded toward a cluster of Shakers. “What puzzles me is you putting your life at risk for people you don’t much care for.”
“We have to do something or it will be my wife all over again, only worse. No one deserves that.”
Nate was careful not to move with undue haste as he slid a bridle on the bay and then his blanket and saddle.
“I can ask Blunt for more men to go with us,” Maklin suggested.
Shaking his head, Nate said, “The more who ride out, the more suspicious they’ll be. Just the two of us, they might think we’re going off to hunt.” He led the bay from the corral, swung up, and poked his heels. No one called out to them. No one wondered where they were going.
“We’ll have to do this smart,” Maklin said as they neared the bend.
“I never do anything any other way if I can help it,” Nate replied. Too often, though, what he took for smart turned out to be less so.
Once out of the Valley of Skulls, they rode straight on into the forest. As soon the canopy hid them, Nate reined to the south. He rode as fast as the terrain and the gathering twilight permitted.
The ground rose in a series of broad shelves to the canyon rim. Forest covered about half. The rest consisted of grassy belts broken here and there by boulder fields.
Nate avoided open ground as much as possible. The climb was steep and arduous, and often they stopped to scan the next stretch to be sure they didn’t ride into an ambush.
“I’m surprised they came all this way,” the Texan commented at one point when they were high up.
Nate wasn’t. In the name of hate men drove themselves to deeds they wouldn’t otherwise do.
“That one you called Kuruk must want you dead awful bad.” Maklin echoed Nate’s thought.
“The feeling is mutual.” Nate wasn’t a killer by nature. He only did it when he had to, when circumstances left him no choice. He had no choice now. He must slay Kuruk not only for his own sake but so that no one else lost their lives. The farmer and his family and the wrangler had died because of him; he would be damned if any more would.
The sun relinquished its reign to the mantle of darkness. Soon a crescent moon added its radiance to the shimmering of the stars.
Out of their dens and thicket hideaways came the fanged creatures of the night. Legions of predators were on the prowl in search of prey to fill their bellies. Their cries and howls and wails were constant, a bestial chorus that once heard was never forgotten.
The farther they climbed, the slower they went. Nate constantly tested the wind with his senses. It blew down off the heights in spurts. A gust would fan him and rustle the trees, and then everything would be still.
The rim was a black silhouette against the stars. They were several hundred feet below it when Nate drew rein and announced, “We’ll go the rest of the way on foot.”
Maklin didn’t argue. Swinging lithely down, he tied his mount to a fir and loosened the pistols wedged under his belt. “We can cover more ground if we separate.”
“We’d be easier to pick off, too.” Nate preferred that they stick together so they could watch each other’s back.
Maklin didn’t argue.
Taking the lead, Nate rapidly climbed until he came to a stone wall fifteen to twenty feet high. He groped about him but couldn’t find handholds. “This way,” he whispered, and bore to the left, on the lookout for a gap or some other means of reaching the crest.
“Maybe they’re not up here now,” Maklin whispered. “It could be we came all this way for nothing.”
Nate hoped not. He crept along until a puff of wind drew him to a split wide enough for a man to slide through. He had to turn sideways and wriggle. Intent as he was on not getting stuck, he forgot about his Hawken and bumped the stock against the rock. The sound was much too loud.
Nate came out on a flat rocky parapet. Crouching, he glided to the edge. Below lay the Valley of Skulls. Light showed in the windows and a fire had been kindled near the wagons.
“Any sign of them?” Maklin whispered.
Nate was about to say no when from off to their left, as clear as could be, came a cough. Dropping into a crouch, he moved more warily than ever.