2

Mrs. Brandenburg greeted them at the door, and Lucas helped Cassie with her shawl. They filed into the dining room to sit, Lucas at Cassie’s elbow. Her knees thanked her as she dropped into her chair and Lucas scooted it in.

Mrs. Brandenburg dished up bowls of steaming soup as soon as they sat down. “There is bread in one basket and crackers in the other. Mavis, I tried a new cracker recipe. You’ll have to be honest and tell me what you think of it. I put dill seed in it, of all things. Ran the seeds through the coffee mill. Now we’re probably going to have dill-flavored coffee for a while.”

Reverend Brandenburg offered up the grace along with a plea for justice and nodded to the others. “We need to be back at the court by one thirty. Judge Cranston is a stickler for time, and I know he wants this wrapped up today.”

Lucas snorted. “I don’t see any need for a hearing at all. We caught Jud red-handed, or redheaded as was the case for him, and the others never said they didn’t do it.”

“But they have the right to a trial. I’m just glad there is no jury to make it take longer. Although everyone here knows Case’s bigotry, he’s never been one to keep his mouth shut.” Brandenburg dunked one of the crackers in his soup. “Delicious.” He smiled at his wife.

She looked not at him but to Mavis.

“What do you think?”

“I want the recipe.”

Cassie could have been eating sawdust for all she knew. She could not pay attention. I don’t want to leave here, Lord. What’s wrong with wanting a home? Here I think I have one, and now this.

“Don’t worry about this, Cassie.” Mrs. Brandenburg laid a hand on her arm. “All will be well.”

Cassie sent her what she could manage of a smile. A nod would have to suffice. Both Mavis and Mrs. Brandenburg knew how to trust God, no matter what. She, however, was still trying to learn that.

She did have enough curiosity to ask, “What does cross mean? The judge said it when he was looking at the lawyer.”

“Cross examination,” Reverend Brandenburg replied. “The defense declined, because they didn’t want the court to hear that damaging testimony twice. Not too important when it’s only a judge, but it’s very important when a jury is hearing the case.”

“Thank you.” She managed a smile this time. So the reverend knew quite a bit about law as well as faith.

Cassie and the Engstroms arrived back in the courtroom with ten minutes to spare. Here came Sheriff McDougal with his charges; his deputies again handcuffed the three prisoners to their chairs. Loud enough to be heard easily, Case grumbled something about being bound to the chair like a common criminal.

“Shut up,” hissed one of the others. “You want to make this even worse?”

“You tell me to shut up and—” Case’s ugly face grew even more so.

The judge entered, the sheriff called, “All rise,” and the afternoon was under way.

The sheriff called Dr. Barnett to testify. He described the wounds and his treatment. “That young lady could have lost the use of her arm had things gone only a tiny bit differently. Even worse, she could have died from loss of blood.” He shook his head. “I left the South to get away from the Ku Klux Klan and to find that same kind of hatred here . . . Heartbreaking, that’s what it is.”

Judge Cranston looked up. “Cross?”

Again the lawyer shook his head.

The sheriff announced, “The state rests.”

“Defense?”

Reluctantly, it would appear, the lawyer called, “Case Beckwith to the stand, please.”

A deputy unlocked the chair half of his handcuffs, and Case bolted upright. He plopped down into the witness chair.

The sheriff glared at him. “Up.”

He stood.

The sheriff waved the Bible. “This is a Bible, in case you’ve never seen one before. Put your left hand on it and raise your right. Your other right.”

Case repeated the familiar promise to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Was he capable of that?

Mr. Jenski, the lawyer, stepped in next to him. “You’ve been identified as one of the miscreants. Do you dispute that, Mr. Beckwith?”

Case growled, “We didn’t go there to do any arson or murder. We just wanted to scare ’em a little so they’d move on. We didn’t set fire to nothing. We didn’t mean to shoot anybody. She just got in the way. Maybe she even did it on purpose to get us in trouble.”

Cassie gaped. Her stomach felt as if she’d just been punched.

The judge asked the sheriff, “Cross?”

He was smirking. “No need. No, Your Honor.”

Mr. Jenski looked pained. “You may stand down, Mr. Beckwith.”

“But I ain’t done testifying! We didn’t really hurt anything, except some too-big-for-her-britches stranger. We didn’t start no fire, so they musta. They did it to get us in trouble, I tell you. We’re innocent!”

The judge roared, “Stand down!”

And Case did so.

The judge glared at all three. “Anyone else have anything to say?”

Case howled one more time, “We’re innocent!”

The lawyer was covering his face with one hand, his head drooping sadly.

“Very well. We already have the confession of Mr. Dooger that you three were all in on the raid, and now you, Mr. Beckwith, established that you were there. Does anyone here present have any proof or credible witness that might change any of that?” The judge looked at Mr. Jenski, then rather imperiously around at everyone else in the room.

Mr. Jenski shook his head. His face was, to Cassie, exactly what defeat looked like.

The judge picked up a piece of paper. “Then I declare the defendants guilty as charged. The defendants will approach the bench for sentencing.”

Sheriff McDougal cleared his throat and then poked Case to make them stand. The deputies unlocked their handcuffs from their chairs but, Cassie noted, cuffed the men’s hands behind their backs. Reluctantly, the three shuffled over and stood before the platform.

The judge leaned forward, his elbows on the table. “I feel constrained to point out that if you three had the brains God gave a goose, you wouldn’t be standing before me today. You acted despicably and brought shame to this town.

“Case Beckwith, I hereby sentence you to five years for each count, to be served in the state penitentiary at Sioux Falls, the sentences to run concurrently.” Eyes narrowed, he stared at the big man. “Possible parole at three years if you behave yourself.”

Case glared back at him, but for a change he kept his mouth shut.

“Judson Dooger, I sentence you to one year on each count, your sentences to run concurrently. I hope you can learn to think for yourself and not just follow a bad leader. Joseph Jones, you receive the same sentence as Mr. Dooger, and the same advice. Are there any questions?”

“Who’s going to take care of my family?” Mr. Jones muttered, shaking his head.

“You should have thought of that before you went off carousing with Mr. Beckwith. Case closed. Court dismissed.” The judge brought his gavel down—not so loudly this time.

“All rise.” The sheriff did not look particularly excited or happy. Was he pleased he had won?

With a great deal of noise, chairs all over the room rattled as people stood to leave. The volume of many voices grew. Cassie could not bear to look toward the three wives. What now? How must it feel to hear and see your man taken away?

Judge Cranston stepped down off his platform and started to remove his black robe.

Cassie said to no one in particular, “I don’t understand. Why didn’t he just sentence those three without the trial, if the evidence was so cut and dried?”

Reverend Brandenburg shrugged into his coat. “We may be a ways out from civilization, but we maintain the civil law. The trial followed the letter of the law. Those three can never say they did not receive a fair trial.” He went up to the judge and stuck out his hand. “Good to see you again, Homer. You want to come by for supper? You know there is always a room for you too.”

“Thanks. Wish I could, but I need to be on that five o’clock train. You come on down to Rapid City one of these days. ’Bout time for a real visit.” He stepped in closer. “If I could have justified it, I would’ve sent him off forever. You can bet that Case Beckwith hasn’t learned any lesson. He’ll be trouble in prison too. Count on it.”

“’Fraid you might be right, but you never know. The Holy Ghost might get ahold of him and make him a new man. That’s what we’ve been praying for.” They shook hands, clapped each other’s arms, and walked off together.

“Are you all right?” Mavis asked Cassie.

“Can you beat that?” Cassie nodded toward the men. “They know each other.”

Mavis seemed downright lighthearted. “To quote a good pastor friend of mine, God works in mysterious ways His wonders to perform.”

“Did you know who the judge would be?”

“No, and I didn’t know that Reverend Brandenburg and Judge Cranston were friends. But then, there are a lot of things I know nothing about. I do know that we can rest easy now and go on with our lives. Let’s go home.” She hooked her arm through Cassie’s on one side and Ransom’s on the other.

Cassie glanced over to see two of the women comforting the third, Mrs. Dooger, the one whose husband had been the one with the wound to his head.

She heard the woman cry, “But my Jud isn’t a bad man, he was just—”

“Stupid!” interrupted Mrs. Jones. “To go to the saloon and get mixed up with the likes of Case Beckwith, and my Joe was just as stupid. I’m sorry, Molly, but that’s just the way it is. And now we all get to pay for their stupidity.”

Who will help them out? Cassie wondered as they left the courtroom. For that matter, how will the rest of us manage? We’re paying too. Nothing is for certain, that is for sure. After all, what if she could never shoot again professionally or do her trick riding routine, thanks to a stupid man who put a bullet in her arm?