“Oh, I dunno. Bitsy’s all right. And her bar girls come to church now. I can’t see why it would matter if they had a meeting at the Spur & Saddle.”
“Well, I can.”
Hiram spoke so rarely that both his friends stared at him in surprise.
“Okay,” Griff said. “I won’t suggest it.”
“But I will suggest to Trudy that they might want to meet at someone else’s house next time,” Ethan said. “They can spread the fellowship around. And you know they’re doing this for a good cause.”
“What? So Cyrus can buy up more land?” Hiram shook his head and shoved his hands into his pockets.
Another touchy subject, Ethan realized. Ten years ago, Cyrus had bought the ranch Hiram had had his eye on.
Ethan looked toward the rising moon. “Think the ladies are done writing their letters?”
Hiram shrugged and kicked at a pebble on the ground.
“What about that sister-in-law of yours?” Griffin asked. “She writing letters, too?”
Hiram looked uneasy. “She came in the parlor as soon as Ethan left, so I slipped out.”
“Maybe she’s not the sharpshooter type,” Griff suggested.
“Come on,” Ethan said. “It’s getting dark. Let’s go around to your place, Hiram. I’ve a mind to take Trudy walking tonight.”
Griffin chuckled. “I’ll see you boys around.”
The two friends walked in silence past the smithy and across the street. Lamplight shone from the windows of the Nugget. Several horses rubbed stirrups at the hitching rail. The men headed up the boardwalk. As they passed the jail, Ethan threw a cursory glance toward his office. Quiet and dark, just the way he liked it.
Annie Harper and her daughter, Myra, emerged from the path that led to the Dooleys’ back door.
“Evening, ladies,” Ethan called, and Hiram tipped his hat in silence. “Are you finished with your meeting?”
“Hello again, Sheriff,” Annie said. “Yes, we’re the last to leave. Gert—I mean, Trudy—has all the letters ready to be mailed.”
“That’s fine. I appreciate your help.” Ethan smiled and watched them cross the street. Myra looked back over her shoulder and gave a coy wave.
“Ha! She’s waving at you, Hiram.”
“Not me.”
“Well, surely not me. She knows who I’m sweet on, and I’m not ashamed to say so.”
“Yeah, you been sweet on Trudy for a long time.”
“So?”
Hiram shrugged. “You coming in?”
They ambled around to the back. Hiram mounted the stoop first and opened the kitchen door.
“Oh, you’re back,” Trudy said when her brother entered. “You want coffee? We’ve got some cookies, too. Ellie Nash brought them, and there are some left over.” She looked past Hiram and met Ethan’s gaze. Her voice dropped a pitch. “Hello, Ethan.”
“Trudy.”
They stood looking at each other for a long moment. Hiram plopped his hat on its peg and walked to the woodstove. He opened the coffeepot and peered into it. After a moment, he held it out toward Ethan, his eyebrows arched.
“Thanks,” Ethan said, “but if Trudy wants to go walking …”
“Surely.” She turned her gaze to Hiram. “Go ahead and drink that. I’ll put on more so that Ethan can have a fresh cup with you when we get back.”
From the next room, the sound of footsteps on the stairs reached them. Hiram caught his breath, his face freezing in a panicky mask.
“She won’t kill you,” Trudy hissed. “We’ll be back in half an hour. Right, Ethan?”
“No more than that.” Hiram shook his head violently. “Twenty minutes,” Trudy amended.
Ethan gritted his teeth. How was a fellow supposed to court a girl in twenty-minute increments? But anyone could see Hiram did not want to be left alone with his sister-in-law. Light footsteps crossed the parlor toward them.
“Well, let’s head out.” Ethan hoped they could leave before—
“Why, Sheriff! I didn’t expect to see you again tonight.” Too late.
“Uh …” Ethan shot a glance at Trudy and back at the elegant brunette framed in the doorway. She wore a different dress than she had this afternoon, pink and frothy, and her hair was neatly coiffed. “Trudy and I were just going to take a stroll.”
“Yes,” Trudy said. “We’ll be back shortly. Help yourself to coffee if you want some.”
“Oh, I’d love to see the town by moonlight,” Rose said with a broad smile. She walked over to Ethan and laid a hand on his forearm. “Maybe you could point out the sights to me.”
“Uh …”
“Ethan’s courting Trudy,” Hiram said testily.
They all turned and stared at him. He still stood in front of the stove with the coffeepot in his hands.
Rose’s jaw dropped. “Well, I never! How … exciting. Perhaps Hiram and I should go along as chaperones.”
“They don’t need no chaperone,” Hiram said.
Ethan was surprised Trudy hadn’t spoken up and given Rose what for. Hiram’s outburst must have shocked her into silence. He cleared his throat, not sure what Trudy’s reaction would be, but knowing what his mother would have demanded that he do. “Mrs. Caplinger, I’m sure we’d be happy to have you accompany us if you’d care to come along.”
Rose smiled sweetly at him. “Thank you. That’s very kind of you. But since Hiram says it’s all right, I’m sure you have an understanding with him. And with Gert, of course. I think I’ll stay here and keep my brother-in-law company. We haven’t had a chance to discuss the folks back home. I need to catch him up on all the doings in his old neighborhood.”
Trudy opened her mouth and closed it.
Ethan said, “Well then, if you’re sure you don’t mind, we’ll be going. Trudy, do you want your shawl and bonnet? It’s a little cool out tonight.”
While she gathered her wrap and put on her bonnet, Ethan looked over Rose’s shoulder at Hiram. His friend’s face was gray.
“We’ll see you in half an hour,” Ethan said. Hiram scowled. “Or less.”
“Take your time,” Rose said. She took down one of Trudy’s teacups. “We’ll be right here when you return. Won’t we, Hiram?”
Hiram’s shoulders drooped. He walked to the table, poured Rose’s teacup full of coffee, and took a mug for himself from the cupboard. A small stream of coffee trickled from the pot, then gave out. Hiram gazed at it mournfully.
If Trudy noticed, she would stop to start a new pot. Ethan scooted her out the back door and pulled it closed behind them. “Guess it’ll be a short stroll this evening.” He put his hat on.
“It had better be.” She frowned up at him. “I feel guilty leaving them together.”
“Hiram does seem a little on edge around her.”
“You heard her this noon. She’s talking about staying here permanently. Hiram’s petrified. He thinks that somehow he fits into her future plans.”
Ethan reached for her hand. “Let’s not think about that now. What do you say we walk down to the river?”
“No, that would take too long. I’m sorry, Ethan, but I’m worked up myself. If I thought I could get away with it, I’d ask her to stay at the boardinghouse. She’s making Hiram very uncomfortable. But if I did that, she’d wire her mother, and her mother would tell my mother, and then I’d be in trouble. No, we’ve got to be good hosts. But somehow we’ve got to disabuse her of the notion that we want her to live with us.”
Ethan squeezed her hand. “I’m sure it will work out. Do you want to walk out Harper Lane?”
Trudy stopped on the boardwalk. “No. No, I don’t. I don’t know why I’m even out here with you. I should be back there with them. We may not need a chaperone, but Hiram does.”
“Aw, that’s a little extreme, don’t you think? Twenty minutes …”
She put her hand up to his cheek, warm and gentle, and Ethan’s hopes rose. For about three seconds.
“I’m sorry, Ethan. Any other tim
e, I’d love to be out here walking with you. But my brother needs me. Please, let’s go back.”
CHAPTER 9
Rain began after midnight and fell incessantly through dawn. Isabel’s father drove her to school in the wagon. The schoolroom was cold, and she decided to keep her cloak on for a while. When it was too chilly, the children couldn’t concentrate on their lessons. They never worked sums quickly if their hands were cold.
The door crashed open behind her, and Will Ingram bounced in.
“Morning, Teacher.”
“Good morning, William. Please close the door more gently than you opened it.”
“Yes ma’am. My ma said to come early and see if you wanted a fire built in the stove this morning.”
“Yes, please. I was just going to do that, but you may have the task.” She went to her desk and arranged her books and lesson notes.
Will puttered about at the stove and went out for a minute to bring in an armful of wood from the shed.
“Not much wood left,” he said when he came in. Water dripped off his clothes, and he left wet footprints from the door to the potbellied stove halfway along one wall of the large room.
“Thank you. I’ll inform the school board. I expect they thought we were done needing a fire this spring.”
The other children filtered in by twos and threes. Most days they stayed outside until she rang her bell, but on days of rain or extreme cold, they were allowed to enter the schoolroom as soon as they arrived. All knew the rule, however, that they must remain quiet.
At precisely eight o’clock, Isabel stood and rang her handbell softly. “Good morning, students.”
“Good morning, Miss Fennel,” they chorused.
She opened the school day by taking the roll, offering prayer, and reading a psalm. Then began the round of arithmetic classes. At the blackboard, she set problems for the older children to work while she drilled addition and subtraction up to tens with the two first graders. No second graders attended the Fergus school this year, and the third and fourth grades had only one pupil each. She generally called them together for their arithmetic.
She erased the older children’s problems from the chalkboard and began to write two examples each for Julie Harper and Paul Storrey. Behind her, the stove door creaked open. Will must be adding fuel to the fire, though the classroom had warmed up nicely. She thought she heard a whisper. Isabel turned around with a stick of chalk in one hand and her open arithmetic book in the other. Will was sliding into his seat beside Nathan Landry.
Pow! Bang!
Girls screamed and jumped up, knocking books and slates from their desks. Isabel’s chalk flew from her hand, and the book tumbled to the floor. Children scrambled in a tangle of pantalets and fallen benches away from the stove.
Pow!
The older boys had remained in their seats. Will held one hand across his mouth, Isabel’s brief impression of his expression was not horror, but rather an ill-hidden smirk. The girls continued to shriek. Six-year-old Millie Pooler wailed. Her classmate Ben Rollins, whose seat was near the stove, appeared to have wet his pants.
“Children! Calm yourselves.”
The room stilled. Julie Harper caught a prolonged sob and hiccupped.
Isabel glared at Will. His gaze met hers, and he dropped his hand to his side and sobered. “Want me to check the stove, ma’am?”
“No William. I think you’ve done enough for today. You will go straight home and tell your father what you’ve done.” She looked at the watch pinned to her bodice. “I shall come around to see your parents this afternoon, and I shall ask them what time you reached home. If you have not arrived there by nine-twenty, I shall ask them to increase whatever punishment they have meted out for this act of yours.”
“But—”
“Go. Now. Anything you wish to say to me may be said this afternoon at your home.”
He held her gaze only a moment longer then lowered his chin. “Yes ma’am.” He walked slowly toward the cloakroom, and a few seconds later the outer door slammed behind him.
Isabel surveyed her class. “Children, pick up the mess and resume your seats, please.” She walked to Ben and touched his shoulder. “Ben, you may be excused. Tell your mother I said you may return to school after you change your clothes.”
Ben hung his head. His eyes full of tears, he murmured, “Yes ma’am,” and headed for the door.
Before going back to the blackboard, Isabel eyed the stove. When it cooled off, she would examine the contents, but she thought she knew what she would find.
“No one is to go near the stove,” she said firmly. Stooping, she retrieved her arithmetic book.
“Here’s the man you want to ask,” Libby said, nodding toward the door. Hiram Dooley had just entered the emporium, letting in a chilly draft. He stopped on the rag mat and wiped his boots, but rainwater dripped off his hat brim onto the floor as he looked downward.
“Yes, a good idea,” Isabel said.
“Mr. Dooley, may we have a word with you?” Libby called.
Hiram looked up with widened eyes as though shocked that a woman would speak to him. He glanced down at the small puddle on the floor, as if he suspected that prompted the attention they gave him.
“Don’t worry about that, Hiram. Folks have been tracking in mud all day, and a little more water won’t hurt. I intend to mop the whole floor this evening after closing.”
He slid out of his slicker and hung it on one of the hooks near the door, then walked toward the counter, eyeing Libby and the schoolmarm cautiously.
“What can I do for you ladies?”
Libby smiled, hoping to put him at ease. A quiet man who always seemed a little on edge around women other than his sister, Hiram had become one of her favorite neighbors. Since the start of the shooting club, she’d furthered her acquaintance with both Dooleys, and she liked what she found beneath his self-effacing exterior.
“Miss Fennel was just telling me about a prank one of her students pulled today. It seems while she had her back turned, one of the boys tossed a few cartridges into the school stove.”
Hiram frowned. “The boy ought to know better.”
Isabel nodded, her pale blue eyes snapping. “So I told his father twenty minutes ago. Mr. Ingram assured me he will deal with the boy, but he also said something I had to wonder about. Mr. Dooley, is it true that putting a bullet in a stove is not dangerous? Mr. Ingram seemed to think it was a harmless joke his son played.”
Hiram rubbed the side of his neck thoughtfully. “Well now, I expect it set off the powder charge and made a pretty big bang, depending on what caliber shells you’re talking about.”
Isabel winced. “I confess it frightened me. It scared us all and put the classroom in an uproar.”
“Which is just what Will Ingram wanted,” Libby said.
“I suppose so.”
“Well ma’am, it’s like this,” Hiram said. “The powder would make a big boom, for certain, and the cartridge case would move, but it would stop when it hit the side of the stove’s firebox. Not being confined in the chamber of a gun, it wouldn’t shoot off so hard or go in a particular direction. I reckon the blast was a lot of noise without much force behind it, and the lead bullet pretty much stayed put inside the stove.”
“I suppose that’s a good thing,” Isabel said gravely. “I’m glad to know there wasn’t as much danger to the children as I at first feared. But it certainly disrupted the class.”
“It’s a bad trick to pull,” Hiram said. “And you never know. If the stove door weren’t shut tight … well, we could imagine circumstances where it could result in tragedy.”
“Yes,” Libby said. “If another child went over and opened the stove door, for instance, just before the powder caught.”
“True.” Hiram set his lips together in a tight line.
“Mr. Ingram will probably tan his backside,” Libby said.
“I hope he does.” Isabel colored slightly. “Perhaps as his teacher, I shoul
dn’t admit that, but Will has been a handful this spring. It took an extreme situation like this for me to go directly to his father. And I’m not sure yet that one of the other boys didn’t supply the bullets. Mr. Ingram agreed to get the entire story out of him. But I’m glad to know there was little danger to the other children. Thank you, Mr. Dooley.”
He nodded.
Libby had been keeping an eye on the other customers browsing throughout the store. Laura Storrey looked her way from the section where kitchen utensils hung on a pegboard. Libby glanced at Isabel and Hiram. “Can I get either of you anything? I see Mrs. Storrey looking my way as though she’d like assistance.”
“I just came for a can of cinnamon for Trudy, but I can find it, thank you.” Hiram gave the cinnamon the same sober nod other people would give a coffin, but Libby remembered when he had been more lighthearted. She was sure that the gentle gunsmith needed only the right circumstances to banish his gloomy aspect. Of course, the arrival of the widowed sister-in-law he so disliked hadn’t helped. As she hurried to assist Mrs. Storrey, she resolved to add his name to her prayer list. It might seem frivolous to some, but to Libby it made perfect sense to pray that another person’s dejected spirits be lifted.
The rough benches in the old haberdashery building filled quickly on Sunday morning. More than half of Fergus’s one hundred–plus residents had signed the church’s new constitution and become members. The holdouts lay low on Sundays, and some slunk into the saloons after sundown.
Hiram looked about with satisfaction while Rose engaged Trudy in a whispered conversation. He hoped they’d build a proper church this summer. Mayor Nash had already spoken to him about leading the building crew.
Libby had stopped halfway up the center aisle to speak to Vashti and Goldie, the two girls who worked at the Spur & Saddle. He found it hard to take his eyes off Libby. Her golden hair picked up rays of sunlight that reached in through the front windows. She always radiated a sweet spirit, and he couldn’t think of a kinder, more competent woman. She’d done a lot for Trudy this past year by befriending her and prompting her to organize the shooting club for the women.
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