CHAPTER 3

Libby Adams flipped the bolt of black bombazine over several times, spreading yards of the sturdy fabric on her counter. She could tell from long practice when she had laid out the four yards Mrs. Walker wanted. She could have cut it to within two inches without ever consulting her yardstick, but she measured it anyway, under the eagle eye of the mayor’s wife. Mrs. Walker always bought dark colors and practical fabrics.

While Libby folded the cloth, Mrs. Walker browsed the notions counter, selecting buttons for her new dress. Her husband, meanwhile, hovered in the emporium’s hardware section. The few groceries they had chosen were already tallied and waiting in a crate, but the mayor usually wound up cooling his heels while his wife shopped for her personal wants. He found rancher Micah Landry eyeing a posthole digger and greeted him with relief. Libby’s part-time clerk, Florence Nash, was diligently restocking the cracker and candy jars. A housewife selecting soap and lamp oil was the only other customer at the moment. Well, Milzie Peart huddled near the box stove, but she seldom bought anything. Libby was tempted to ask her to leave. Her body odor, worsened by the heat, kept other customers away from the stove.

Mrs. Walker brought her sundries to the counter and placed a card of a dozen black buttons and a paper of straight pins on the folded length of fabric.

Libby smiled at her. “All set, ma’am?” She’d known Mrs. Walker for years. Their husbands had been friends in the old days. But the mayor’s wife kept herself slightly aloof, and Libby never felt herself on an equal footing with Orissa Walker.

“You don’t have any new silk floss?”

Libby tried to keep her smile from drooping. “Not yet. I’ve ordered a better selection, but these things take time.”

She hoped her investment in expensive embroidery threads didn’t prove a poor one. Only a few women in Fergus had time to fritter away on decorative arts, and she knew she might never sell all the skeins of fine floss she had ordered. Still, some of the girls who worked at the Spur & Saddle or the Nugget were handy with a needle, and they all liked to add fripperies to their costumes. Libby shuddered when some of them entered the emporium wearing scanty dresses, but they were good customers. For them, she maintained one of Fergus’s best-kept secrets: a supply of garish satins and sheer muslins stored in the back room. She had even special-ordered ostrich feathers, satin garters, and beribboned, glove-fitting corsets for Bitsy Shepard and her employees. Mrs. Walker would probably die of apoplexy on the spot if she saw the items that Libby procured for Bitsy. In the year and a half since Isaac’s death, Libby had been forced to support herself, and that meant ordering merchandise that would sell.

The sleigh bells on the door jingled, and the door swung open. Cyrus Fennel charged in, bringing a blast of cold air. His gaze settled on the mayor’s wife.

“Mrs. Walker! Is your husband here? I went by your house, but—”

“I’m here, Cyrus.” The mayor stepped away from the wall of hardware. “You wanted to see me?”

Libby shivered. “Shut the door if you please, Mr. Fennel.”

Cyrus glanced at her and hastily closed it. “I beg your pardon, ma’am. Charles, we have a crisis.”

“What is it?” The mayor stepped closer, as did Micah Landry and the shopping housewife. Florence paused with a handful of jawbreakers suspended over an open candy jar. Mrs. Walker eyed Fennel critically through her small spectacles.

Cyrus held the mayor’s gaze. “Bert Thalen is dead.”

Libby drew a sharp breath, and the others gasped.

“What happened?” Mayor Walker asked.

“I don’t know. I was coming from Hiram Dooley’s place, and I stepped in to have a word with Bert. He’s lying on the floor in the back room of his office, dead as a plucked chicken.”

“Oh dear.” Walker fumbled in his pocket and produced a handkerchief, with which he dabbed at perspiration on his brow. “I suppose we’d better get someone to lay him out.”

“You’d best come and take a look,” Fennel said. “Thalen’s the law around here, and there’s no one else we can fetch to tend to him.”

The mayor cleared his throat and glanced at his wife as he shoved the handkerchief back in his pocket. “Hmm. Well … I suppose Hiram Dooley will make a coffin for him.”

“But someone needs to take some kind of official notice that he’s dead,” Fennel persisted.

“We don’t have a doctor,” Mrs. Walker pointed out unnecessarily. Everyone in Fergus was painfully aware of the fact.

“It would take days to get someone up here from Boise,” Landry said. “You’d best look at him, Mayor.”

“Hmm … well, I suppose.”

Fennel and Landry headed for the door. The mayor followed with slower steps. He glanced back at his wife. “You’d best stay here, m’dear. I shan’t be long.”

“Nonsense. I’m coming.” Mrs. Walker wrapped her woolen cape snugly about her and walked away from the counter, leaving her purchases behind. “We haven’t had a funeral in more than a year.”

The Walkers and the housewife went out. Libby glanced over at Florence and said, “Or a wedding in twice that long.” She tore a length of brown paper off the roll beneath the counter and wrapped Mrs. Walker’s material and sewing notions. On the boardwalk outside, several people hurried past.

“Sounds like word’s gettin’ around.” Florence screwed the lid onto the jar.

Libby felt a sudden urge to go over to Thalen’s office. The mayor’s wife was right about Fergus; the town had spent a dull winter. The sheriff’s death was big news. Bert Thalen had been a friend of her husband’s when Isaac was alive, God rest his soul. Besides, as owner of the emporium, she ought to get the details so she could tell her customers all about it. The store was empty. Milzie Peart must have slipped out while the others were talking.

“You mind the till,” Libby told Florence. Quickly she took off her apron and grabbed her coat and bonnet.

A farm wagon approached from the north end of town, but Libby tore across the street before it came within hailing distance. A knot of curiosity seekers had gathered outside the sheriff’s office. She sidled up to Gert Dooley.

“What happened to the sheriff?”

Gert glanced at her then turned her attention back to the office door. “Dunno. I was just dishing up supper for Ethan Chapman and Hiram when Griff Bane came pounding on the door and told Hiram he needed to get over to the jail ‘cause Bert was dead. Hiram and Ethan are in there now with Griffin, the mayor, and Cy Fennel.”

Libby nodded. Griffin Bane owned the smithy and livery stable. Most likely the sheriff, a widower who lived alone just outside town, would be laid out over at the stable. Fergus lacked a lot of things besides a doctor, an undertaker being one of them.

The mayor came out of the sheriff’s office and latched onto the handrail by the steps. His face held a greenish cast, and his knees seemed a mite wobbly.

“Folks,” he called out, and the crowd went silent. “Folks, our beloved sheriff, Bert Thalen, has breathed his last. I’ve asked Hiram Dooley and Griffin Bane to take care of … what needs to be done. Funeral tomorrow at the graveyard, one o’clock sharp.”

The people began to murmur. A few walked away, but more arrived, having just received the news or seen the gathering.

The mayor joined his wife on the walkway. “Well, m’dear, we need to retrieve our bundles from the emporium.”

“Mayor, wait!” Cyrus Fennel hurried down the steps. “There’s something else you need to take care of, Mr. Mayor.”

Everyone halted, eager for more news.

Walker frowned at Fennel. “What is it, Cy?”

“Why, we’ll need a new sheriff. I think you should appoint someone.”

“Sheriff’s an elected position,” Gert called out.

Fennel’s eyebrows lowered. “We can’t leave the position open while we wait for an election. Can’t go long without a lawman.”

“You could appoint someone temporary-like,” Micah Landry suggested.

Mayor Walker hooked his thumbs in his coat pockets and stood for a moment, staring toward the doorway. At last he said, “I’ll take that under advisement.”

The people let out their pent-up breath and shuffled away. Hiram Dooley and Ethan Chapman emerged from the office, and Gert advanced to meet them at the bottom of the steps. Libby followed on her heels.

“What happened in there?” Gert asked her brother.

Hiram shrugged.

Ethan said, “Not sure. Looks like he might have fallen and hit his head on the edge of his bunk. He’s lying on the floor beside it.”

“Tripped and fell?” Gert probed, frowning up at the tall rancher.

“Maybe.” Ethan didn’t sound convinced. “Coulda been heart failure, I guess.”

“Bert was a strong man,” Libby ventured.

Ethan glanced her way and nodded a greeting. “Miz Adams. He was gettin’ along in years. Must have been well past fifty.”

Closer to sixty, Libby thought, but she kept silent. Her husband, Isaac, had been fifteen years her senior, and he would have been fifty this spring. His friend, Bert Thalen, was several years older.

Gert persisted. “So somehow or other, he hit his head.”

“All I know is, the mayor wants Hiram to build him a casket.” Ethan clapped the gunsmith on the shoulder. “I’ll help Griffin move the body over to the livery, and then I’ll come help you.”

Hiram nodded.

“That’s it?” Gert asked.

“Well … I’d say someone needs to examine the body closer. Someone who knows what they’re doing.” Ethan gritted his teeth. “There’s some blood on the floor, and it looked like he whomped his head pretty hard. Stove his skull in some.”

Hiram nodded, and Gert eyed her brother critically, as though his silent opinion counted more than Ethan’s.

“I did notice one other thing when they rolled him over,” Ethan said.

“What was that?” Gert asked eagerly.

Ethan stuck his hand in the pocket of his Levis and pulled it out, then turned it over and opened his fist. A coin lay in his broad palm.

“A penny?” Libby stared up into Ethan’s face, but he was looking at Gert.

“It was underneath him,” Ethan said. “Probably doesn’t mean anything.”

“He might have had it in his hand when he died.” Gert’s forehead wrinkled.

Ethan nodded. “Might. And dropped it as he fell.”

Griffin Bane appeared in the doorway. “Hey, Ethan, you ready? I can use some muscle here.”

“Coming.” Ethan shoved the penny back into his pocket and hurried up the steps.

Gert eyed her brother. “I suppose you need to see if you’ve got the right lumber for a coffin.”

Hiram nodded, his lips clamped together.

“Well, come on then.” Gert turned toward their nearby house. “Finish your supper first though. I’ll put Ethan’s plate in the pie safe until he comes back. If he doesn’t forget and go home without his supper.”

Brother and sister moved off, and Libby felt suddenly chilled. Full darkness had fallen, and she quickened her steps toward the emporium. Closing time had arrived, but if she stayed open, folks might come in to talk. The emporium made a good meeting place—not as good as the saloons, but a respectable place where decent women could gather. And when they did, they were apt to purchase an item or two.

Her speculation proved correct, and small groups of people wandered into the emporium over the next two hours, drawn by the lights. They leaned on the counter or clustered about the stove, debating the recent state of the sheriff’s health and possible candidates to take over the office.

Libby sent Florence home at eight o’clock, and soon afterward, she locked the door behind the last lingerers. She locked her cash box in the safe in the back room. Heading up the stairs to her living quarters, she shivered. The apartment was cold, so she left the stairway door open to let some of the warmth up from the store. She set her lamp on the table and washed her hands. While she prepared her solitary meal, she thought about what Bert Thalen’s passing would mean to the town. Her husband had respected him. Libby felt less secure just knowing Bert was dead. Cyrus Fennel had a point: Though Fergus was not a lawless town, it might become one if it had no sheriff.

When at last she lay down to sleep, she slid her hand under the pillow beside her—Isaac’s pillow. The sheets were cool, but the polished wood of the Colt Peacemaker’s handle felt the same as always. Solid. Dependable. Libby wished she knew how to handle the gun better. When Isaac was alive, she never worried about guns. Now she felt safer just having it handy. If someone broke in, she could point it at them. Chances were they’d listen to her. But maybe it was time she learned to load and shoot the big pistol.