Once the wagonâs wheels pulled out onto the far bank, she remembered to breathe. She faced her daughter, who climbed up beside her in the nick of time to celebrate Henryâs crossing. âYes!â Sue patted her chest repeatedly and sighed. âThat seemed easy enough.â
Becky stood on the seat and clapped her hands above her head. âYay! You did it! Hooray for Mister Henry! Hooray for Levi!â
Sue looked up at her daughter and joined the celebration. âWhoopee!â
Beckyâs smile spread over her face like bluebonnets on the Texas prairie in April. She beamed. âMister Henry can do anything.â
âOh, you think so?â
âYes, maâam, he surely can.â Becky sat down and straightened her skirt. âBut I remembered not to hurt Leviâs feelings and hollered for him, too, at the last.â
âThat was certainly nice of you. Iâm proud you remembered.â
âYes, maâam, but Iâm sure Mister Henry didnât need any help from him. Most likely, he did it all by himself. He canââBecky looked up and nodded like the little priss she wasââdo anything!â
Sue wanted to argue with her daughter, and tried to think of something he couldnât do, but she couldnât come up with a single thing. Maybe he could do whatever he set his mind to. The first wagon stopped on the ridge of the far bank. She clucked the mules to life. âHey, now.â She snapped the reins, and the wagon lurched forward. She would have preferred a bit more speed, but the wooden wheels knifed into the water and kept on rolling.
She prayed all the way across and encouraged the team until she pulled onto the opposite bank, climbed it, then stopped a bit past the first wagon.
Henry smiled on her way by. âWell done.â
âThank you, sir.â She looked to the sky. âAnd thank You, Lord.â
After a hundred yards or so, she topped the next ridge, and her heart skipped a beat. The wagon with the broken axle sat on the bank of the second branch of White Oak Creek, a ghoulish reminder of her friends and neighborsâ failed crossing. It taunted her jubilance and screamed of doom. Her mouth went dry, and all smiles vanished. She stopped the mules and locked the brake.
Henry pulled up next to her. âThe old-timer said this was the bad one, deeper water and not a lot of bottom. This is why the train turned back and took the ferry.â
Sue tore her eyes away from the water and looked at him. âDid the old man mention how we might get across?â
âClaims thereâs a rock path.â He jumped down and extended his hand. âWant to help me find it?â
She took his hand, steadied herself, then stepped down. For a second, he didnât let go. A tingling danced up her arm, but she pulled away, extinguishing the sensation before it reachedher heart. She had no time for entanglements now, and especially not with Henry Buckmeyerâor did she? âGuess we need to get wet again.â
Unlike the first branch of the creek, these beds had holes filled with deep mud. Henry crossed back and forth, as did Sue, time and again. In one spot, she stepped onto a thin layer of rocks. âOver here. Check this out,â she called.
He walked back and forth over the area sheâd found, sloshing through the water several times, then across from one bank to the other as many times. âItâs the best weâve found.â
She hated the thought of trying to cross it, but gave herself no choice. She definitely did not want to go back to Cuthand then all the way to Ringoâs Landing. But if she didnât get her cotton to market, all her hard work and cash spent would be for nothing. Without the cotton money, itâd be doubtful she could even survive another year, certainly not with hers and Leviâs land intact.
She faced Henry, who wore a grim expression. âWhat do you think?â
He
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