Tool
Rainbow Muppet Overdrive
Molly GoodbarrelApril 28th 1848, Independence, Missouri
Molly had only just nodded towards the persons she knew (or presumed) were armed, before a high whistle cut through the air like an arrow, loud enough to make a dog wince and sharp as daggers. As Molly assumed was the whistlers intent, people stopped talking and....... looked, not merely those in attendance to the Miller's Party, but several folk on the sides of the road. Bold as brass, an Indian woman stepped forward, apparently intending to plant herself at the start of the queue, and judging by the determination in that brown gaze, unafraid of muscling her way there, if it proved needful. It was, in Molly's evaluation, something of an empty gesture, a bit of swagger to show one's mettle.......... but it wasn't as though the gathered throng had been neat-and-orderly thus far. Boss Lady Miller had plucked one of the Far Easterners to interview first, seemingly at random. Others had arrived and had been fairly content to let Boss Lady have her choice as to who should be interviewed next, though the first interview had yet to conclude.
Once all eyes were on her, Whistler spoke in a clear, firm voice, seeming to announce her skills and intent to all who'd care to listen. Molly cocked a brow but didn't comment, instead climbing up into her reading wagon's seat, the blue of her dress a sharp contrast to the dark, painted wood. The horses weren't pulling anything just yet, and adding her posterior to the wagon didn't put any more strain on them.
Medicine and firearms. And other skills, besides.
A small smile tugged on Molly's lips; if Whistler wasn't too cagey or proud to share, it would be good to compare notes with another practitioner of the healing arts. Molly wasn't precious with any of her knowledge, though she could understand how others might be. After further announcing to the other hopefuls that Whistler was grateful for the opportunity, a sweet sentiment if a misplaced one (the Millers were still absent and their opinions were the only ones that really mattered), the Sword Wielder pipped up, apparently taking a cue from Whistler's pronouncement and taking what Whistler had made into Center Stage.
He spoke with a showman's patter, a trait that he'd apparently honed at the circus, and though the connection fit, Molly couldn't help but wonder....... why former? The Circus was about as tightly knit a family as one could reasonably get - Molly had even attempted to join one, weeks before taking what was rightfully hers and vanishing into the wet and windy night, but her manner had been too highborn, her elocution too educated, her need too urgent. She was too obviously out of place for them to risk it.
So....... why had these two left the security of a troupe?
When Sword Wielder addressed her directly, she couldn't help but smile wide and give him a single, agreeable nod. Better an illusion that exalted the spirit than ten thousand truths. Besides, there were deeper meanings in this world than mere facts could ever proffer to the human heart. Sueheeyunwoo. Nope. Not on her life. Molly wasn't about to even attempt that one without hearing it aloud a few more times. Interesting that he'd keep what was likely his given name, despite the trouble it doubtless brought him. Molly watched as Sword Wielder worked the crowd, and once his talent was clear, Molly adjusted her mental moniker. From Sword Wielder to simply Swallower. Molly had to give it to the man, he had a knack for the stage.
Once his performance became........ explosive........ Molly frowned and her clear, sharp eyes took a closer look around, frankly missing Poncho's removal of her namesake and searching for what Molly suspected might be there.
But no. Though it was thoroughly disgusting, Swallower's....... display........ seemed to be an honest mistake rather than a well-placed diversion. Few things got a crowd's attention more than an obvious flub in a performance, which made it the ideal time for more innocuous sorts with sticky fingers to roam through an enthralled audience. Even when looking for it, Molly's gaze didn't catch any untoward movement, no new faces that would slip through the crowd like smoke before disappearing.
It seemed Poncho and Swallower were, in fact, alone.
Molly's attention returned to Poncho just in time to see those pistols slide back into their holsters.
None of these people, not even Boone, mattered even a little insofar as joining the Miller Party; all the razzle-dazzle, whether Whistler's pronouncement or the more literal show of the circus pair, needed to be pointed towards the Millers, neither of whom were around to be razzled or dazzled. They were the ones whose opinion mattered. Everybody else was just an audience, but Molly appreciated the show nonetheless.
Molly Goodbarrel had little doubt that everyone present would be accepted into the traveling party. The realities of travel were not wholly unknown to her. A bigger party would make for a more tempting target for bandit and raider alike....... but there was also safety to be found in numbers, and more horses or oxen the party as a group could afford to lose. Why, several of Molly's own horses had been a rescue on the last major trail she'd traveled, south rather than west, but no less littered with the failed attempt of a journey - a shattered wagon, gently starving horses still tethered and looking at her with desperate eyes, the remains of their former owners strewn about like fallen leaves..... it had been a grim discovery. Fortunately, Molly's reading wagon was relatively light, despite the load it carried, and she'd brought plenty of feed. It had been beyond risky, she knew that now, but she'd freed all the horses, fed and watered the three who stuck around, and took everything from that destroyed life that wasn't nailed down. Burying the bodies in shallow graves had been messy work, but it was the least Molly could do. Four horses, these days, one she'd started with and the other three thanks to the unnamed family who'd been traveling alone.
The sheriff at the next town hadn't been surprised at the news.
No, there was safety in numbers.
If the Millers were wise, they'd take on every comer with a horse and cart, and perhaps a few more besides. Molly certainly had more horses than she needed for her reading wagon, but it allowed her to carry considerably more.
That slaughtered family had taught Molly a lesson she'd carried in the two months since. She was lucky the same fate hadn't befallen her, in her solitary wanderings. Luck of the devil, they said of her father. Was it possible she'd inherited the trait?
Maybe.