The Misadventures of Maude March (20 page)

BOOK: The Misadventures of Maude March
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Cleomie's cheese was wrapped in cheesecloth, then
wrapped in newspaper. It was while I was putting the cheese away that I realized Maude's face stared up at me from the newspaper.

These drawings of Maude showed her with long hair, and one with her hair cut short. Goose bumps ran up my arms and down my legs, the likeness was that good. It didn't escape my notice that she had made the front page this time.

I listened to know for sure that Maude wasn't coming, then moved the cheese and read.

“MAD” WOMAN IN DISGUISE

As She Goes from Bad to Worse

The notorious Maude March held up the Des Moines Savings & Trust on Friday morning. Eyewitness reports told authorities that she passed for a man, and shot like an outlaw “without hardly taking aim.” She was identified by a man who called her by name in the heat of the moment when the robbery went bad. The bank guard, Mr. A. J. Todd, reports that Mad Maude shot him and ran from the bank without a backward glance, leaving one gang member behind to hold off the chase. The gang got away with seven hundred dollars. Adding insult to injury, gang members stole the horses of the robbery victims.

I heard Maude coming. I yanked that page out from under the cheese and balled it up. I believed my hair could easily
be standing on end. The paper was turning to ash as Maude came noisily tramping out of the woods.

“What's the matter?” she said at once. “You look like you've seen a ghost.”

“You scared me, coming on with so much noise,” I said. “I thought you must be a bear.”

“Nope,” she said with no little satisfaction. “Nothing in here but us chickens. And Cleomie's mule. Did you brush him down?”

“I didn't get to him yet.”

“I'll do it.”

“No, let me,” I said. I bundled the cheese up with badly shaking hands.

“Sallie,” Maude said, seeing this. “I didn't mean to scare you.”

“Just see if you can find the biscuits, will you? And keep an eye on the fishing lines. My hands got cold is all.”

I brushed that mule to within an inch of his life. He didn't seem to mind. I just kept thinking over the words I'd read. They thought Maude shot that man. They thought robbing that bank was her idea. They thought she was heading up a gang.

The thoughts swirled till I couldn't think them anymore. Behind me, Maude had been talking and talking, I didn't even know about what. She'd cut the biscuits in half and put a slice of cheese on each one so it looked like a ladies' tea.

“That mule looks good enough to lead a parade,” she said. “Come on over here and have some cheese and biscuits.”

I threw a woolen blanket over the mule and tied it at his neck. Cleomie called this his baby blanket. Then I sat. In fact,
I fell back against the saddlebags, suddenly too tired to eat. I did not know how I could go on. Every move we made threw Maude into deeper and deeper trouble. I had begun to wish it wasn't too late for her to go back to Cedar Rapids and marry Mr. Wilburn, where she would be safe even if she was not happy.

“Just cover me over and wake me in the morning,” I said. “Oh, no, you don't,” Maude said. “Eat. And if we catch a fish, we're frying it up. I don't know that I can eat enough cheese and biscuits to hold me.”

By the second bite my strength was returning. But the few moments I felt otherwise got me to thinking. “You're getting skinnier, Maude,” I told her. It was true. Now I thought about it, the likeness in the paper was all off. Maude's chin looked pointy, and her cheeks had hollowed out.

“It isn't just me that's thinned out. We're both going to need fattening up once we get to Independence.”

“No one from Cedar Rapids would know you if they came across you.”

“I wish that was true,” she said.

I watched the trotline as we ate and warmed ourselves by the fire. I just stared and gave my brain a rest from thinking. It was better that way.

“I thought we'd get further than this,” Maude said after a while.

“We'll get where we're going tomorrow anyway,” I said.

One of the fishing lines jigged, and I ran over to pull it in. I got a big catfish. Before I finished bragging about that one, I'd caught another. I cleaned them up, and Maude fried them.
We ate our fill of sweet meat and still had plenty left for breakfast. We could wrap that in a sheet of the newspaper.

It was terrible dark; not the stars or even the moon could be seen in the sky above. We were cold, so we built up the fire and set a small store of broken branches to use during the night.

I tried to figure out how much longer it would take us to reach Independence once we were riding a horse again. My best guess was twelve or fourteen days, but it made me want to build a little shanty right where I sat. I built in my mind a very large fireplace. I was not much in the mood to be a range rider at just that moment.

When she'd done with wrapping the fish, Maude woke me and rolled me into a blanket. She curled up behind me, herself wrapped in a worn quilt Cleomie had made some years before, and threw an arm over me. In this way, she let me sleep closest to the warmth of the fire.

W
E WOKE TO AN UNUSUAL SILENCE. THE SNOW WAS
coming down fast and steadily, and where it had fallen on our faces, it was melting and dripping like tears. A silvery gray light made it early morning to my eyes, but I felt we had slept late into the day. There was not a bird sound to be heard.

The ground was blanketed, but tufts of tall dried grasses poked holes in the look of a clean sheet. “Oh, no,” Maude said, sitting up and letting cold air sneak under the blankets. My first thought was to tuck in, but then I thought better to get it over with. I threw off the blankets.

“Let's just get moving,” I said as a wave of shivers went through me. “We'll eat on foot.” Maude buttoned her jacket up to her chin and pulled the sleeves down over her fists. “Pull out those gloves,” I said to her. “Scarves too.”

It was while we were shuffling through the powdery snow, hurrying to put our necessaries back on the mule, that I noticed the tracks. First the mule's tracks in the snow told me he'd been pacing back and forth behind Maude while we slept. This looked strange to me.

Near the creek there were cat tracks, paw prints with no claws. Good-sized tracks, belonging to probably the biggest bobcat I had ever seen. The fish heads and the innards I'd left on the bank the night before were gone.

I didn't say a word to Maude.

We walked fast to warm ourselves, each of us wearing one glove so we could eat fried fish out of the fold of newspaper with our fingers. We had to hold it in our mouths for a minute to make it warm enough to chew. But the taste was good, and our bellies welcomed the weight of it.

The wind was cold and bit right through our clothing. It was easier to bear when we were moving. Gusts of snow blew like gauzy curtains, first one way, then another. After a time, still eating, we began to suck on our fingers to warm them.

We had started on the hardest part of the trail. We would be watching for certain trees till we came to a stone wall that led right to the ranch. We were nearly all the sound we could hear; there was the wind, the creak of a branch, and the crunch and squeak of our boots in the snow. Sometimes we could hear the river off at a distance.

The light, the ghostly light of early morning, remained the same. If the sun was up there somewhere, it was behind a cloud bank as thick as a feather mattress. I thought sad thoughts for Wild Woolly, and hoped he had by now found his way home.

“If the snow gets any heavier, we won't see the stone wall,” Maude said when she pointed to the lightning-struck tree that we were still watching for up ahead. We were passing right by it, having veered a little east.

I began worrying that we might get lost. Finished with little-girl games, I pulled out my compass and checked that we were still headed due south.

“Where'd you get that?” Maude asked.

“It was Daddy's,” I said. “Aunt Ruthie showed it to me once, when I asked her how explorers kept from getting lost.”

“Is that how you've kept us headed aright?” she asked.

“It is.”

“Good girl,” she said. “Tell me now, are we headed south to Independence?”

“We are,” I said, which was near enough the truth. It might be a little to the east or west, but it was south of us, sure enough. “But I don't know that the horse trader Cleomie told us about was such a straight line from her place. We have to watch for the landmarks or we might miss him.”

“Let's keep our eyes open,” Maude said.

Walking gave me a chance to think about things. It seemed to me that I'd been too hasty in burning up that piece of the newspaper. I had not thought to look through it to see if there was any mention made of Marion's capture.

On the other hand, it no longer seemed likely that it was Marion that posse was hunting. The thought gave me a chill that had nothing to do with the snow falling down the neck of my jacket.

The other thing I thought about was how alone we were out there. Only the day before, we had passed herds of grazing deer. We had seen a fox, three raccoons, any number of turkeys and prairie dogs, and birds had flown overhead. Now we saw nothing.

The snow piled up fast. Pretty soon the tops of grasses
were only freckles on the white. Falling snow had been catching around the tops of our boots, where it melted down our legs. Both of us had socks wet around the ankles. Maude stopped and stuffed the last of the newspaper in the tops of our boots.

“I'm glad I've got these,” she said of her boots. “I'd've had frostbite by now if I was wearing those ones with the narrow toes.”

It was on the tip of my tongue to remind her Marion had bought them for her. But then I doubted she needed me to remind her. I shook my head and said, “I wonder how it is that cowboys do so well with those boots.”

“They probably shot off all their toes practicing those fast draws,” Maude said with some irritation, maybe because she'd reminded herself to worry about Marion. “They need those long, hard boot toes to keep them from falling on their faces.”

For some reason this struck me funny. Laughter escaped me in bursts until even Maude was affected. That laughter carried us another mile or more.

We kept on the move, but we were slowed down as the snow got deeper. We tried to get the mule to take his turn at beating a path, but he would have nothing to do with it. He liked having us clear a path for him. “It's only fair,” Maude said when our efforts to push him ahead were twice failed. “He's carrying everything but us.”

We had walked on for some time in this manner before Maude said, “Maybe we ought to just hunker down somewhere. It's getting so I can't see very far ahead of us.”

“How far does that mean?” I asked her.

“To that tree,” she said, and pointed.

“That's as far as I can see,” I said, “and it's good enough for me. Let's keep on going.” It wasn't that I wanted to keep on going. It was awful tiring. But I wanted to step inside a house and be offered cake with thick frosting. I wanted to sit so close to a warm fire that I felt the need of a mug of cold milk.

But I wasn't going to get that. I wasn't even going to get close. The snow had covered any fire makings we might have used. What I wanted least was to sit huddled under some makeshift cover, chilled to the bone and hoping the snow would stop soon.

So we walked. Always panting with the work of driving a path through the snow, we walked.

I was hot enough to open my coat if I was the one breaking snow. And when it was Maude's turn, I got so cold my teeth chattered. The snow came down more heavily all the time, and the wind got stronger, but I didn't like to mention this to Maude.

“There's probably a place far enough south that it never snows,” I said. “Do you think Independence is that far south?”

“I hope not.”

“Why?”

Maude said, “I keep telling myself it's only a day further. If I have to think of walking past where it can snow, I might sit right down here and cry.”

We went on, hardly speaking. We ate fish or boiled eggs when our stomachs growled. We ate because we had not filled up at the start of the day, but we neither one of us mentioned stopping to have a real meal. When I judged it to be late in
the morning, perhaps early afternoon, I said, “I'd just like to think Independence is going to be really good.”

“Do you want the last piece of fish?” Maude asked me. I figured we were eating something every hour or so, not because we were hungry that often, but because we felt better when we ate. We didn't think that much about the cold when we had the fullness of egg or the sweet taste of catfish in our mouths.

“Half of it,” I said.

We were just finishing it off when Maude said, “What was that?”

“I didn't hear anything.”

“You were chewing,” Maude said.

The wind howled all around us, so I thought it might be that Maude only heard the wind. “What did it sound like?”

She pulled her rifle off the mule and cocked it, then moved around to the other side of him. I got my shotgun and pulled back one hammer.

Then I heard a yowl.

BOOK: The Misadventures of Maude March
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