CHAPTER 7

Griffin kept in his anger all the way to the hotel. What right did this upstart boy have to tell him what he was and wasn’t going to do? Evelyn had sent him here to get straightened out. Well, Griffin didn’t know much about parenting, and he’d be the first to admit it. But he knew about hard work. Hard labor had made a man of him, and he figured it could do the same for Justin. But what if the boy wouldn’t work? He couldn’t force him to do it.

He had a mind to wire Evelyn and tell her he was sending the boy back. But that wouldn’t solve any of the problems that had traveled across the country with his nephew. He’d have to give it some thought. Calm down, that was it. Keep from getting mad and saying things he’d regret later.

“When did you eat last?” he asked as he pushed open the door to the Pacifica Hotel.

“I had breakfast.”

“Breakfast? What about dinner?”

Justin shrugged. “Some folks bought dinner where we stopped last.”

“What? You didn’t have any money?” Griffin eyed him closely. The boy shrugged and squinted his eyes.

“Well, we’re going to have us a whopping big supper, I’ll tell you that.” Griffin tromped to the desk. “We’d like a room, my nephew and me.”

“Yes, sir.” The clerk turned the guest registry toward him. “Sign here, please. That’ll be a dollar.”

“Thank you. And we’d like supper as soon as possible.”

“Our dining room opens at four thirty for early diners.”

“Can’t get nothing now?”

“No, sir. Unless you go into the bar, but your nephew looks a bit young for that. If the marshal came along while you were in there, I couldn’t guarantee you wouldn’t face charges.”

Griffin looked over at Justin. “How old are you?”

Justin hesitated. “Seventeen?”

“I doubt it.”

The boy hung his head and muttered, “Fifteen and a half.”

“Right. We’ll go down the street and find a place where we can get something to tide us over till supper. Let’s go put our kit in the room first.”

They found a boardinghouse down the street, and the proprietor was willing to heat up some leftovers for them. A bowl of beef stew and a brace of biscuits went down quickly. Griffin considered ordering a refill, but decided it would benefit the boy more to have a small meal now and another later, rather than to stuff himself.

“How about apple pandowdy?” the woman who had served them asked.

“Surely.” Griffin looked over at Justin. “You could do with a dish of that, couldn’t you?”

“I guess.”

Griffin scowled. “That’s no way to answer. You say, ‘Yes, sir.’ “

“All right, yes, sir. I’d like coffee with it, if it’s all the same to you.”

Shouldn’t boys drink milk? Griff tried to remember back when he was fifteen on the farm. He’d drunk a lot of milk. But somewhere in there, he’d started drinking coffee with his father, too. “All right.” He looked up at the woman. “Another cup of coffee, please.”

When she’d gone, Justin said, “How far is it to Fergus?”

“About forty miles. We’ll get there tomorrow afternoon.”

“Ma said you’ve got a smithy and a livery stable.”

“Yes, and this past year I’ve been running the branch line for the stagecoach company. Guess I didn’t tell your mother about that.” He ought to write to Evelyn more often, but he seldom had time to sit down and craft a letter.

Justin’s chin came up a notch. “Are you rich?”

Griffin laughed heartily. “That’s a good one, son.”

The boy’s face clouded. “You’re not my pa. In case you didn’t hear, my pa’s dead.”

“Yes, I heard. I’m sorry about that.”

“Well, just so’s you know, I don’t plan to be your boy.”

Griffin studied him for a long moment. About the time he’d decided silence was the prudent thing, the woman came back with their dessert and coffee.

Maybe he was doing his nephew a disservice by feeding him. Maybe he’d ought to invoke that Scripture verse Pastor Benton mentioned a few weeks back—the one about people who didn’t work not eating. He’d give that some thought.

“I’ve got a few errands to do before supper.” He lifted his thick china mug and sipped the coffee. It was much better than what he’d gotten at the depot. And better than what he made in the old tin pot he kept on the shelf near the forge. His always tasted a little burnt.

“I can amuse myself while you’re at it,” Justin said.

That didn’t seem right in Griff’s mind. He recalled Evelyn’s words about the boy getting in with the wrong friends. “He comes and goes as he pleases. I don’t like to mention it, but I fear he stole some money from my reticule last week. Not only that, but he’s taken up smoking. “

Just recalling those lines made Griff’s nose wrinkle. He hadn’t smelled any tobacco on the boy, but then, Justin wouldn’t likely smoke on the stagecoach with other passengers present. And he appeared to have arrived broke. But if he wasn’t above stealing, he might get himself into trouble if Griff turned him loose in Boise. Yep, a young fellow like Justin could find a heap of trouble in this half-grown, half-tamed town.

“You stay with me.” He took a gulp of coffee.

“What?” The boy obviously took the command as an insult.

“I said, you come around with me. See what I do. I’m going to do a little livestock shopping. We could use an extra team of six, and I need another riding horse or two for the livery trade. After that, I’ll go around to the Wells Fargo office again and see if the division agent is back. I need to talk to him about some stagecoach business.”

“I don’t want to stand around while you do all that.”

“What would you do?”

The line of Justin’s mouth hardened. “Explore.”

“Oh yes, I can just envision that. You stay with me.” Griff took another sip.

Justin cautiously slurped his coffee. He didn’t make a face or ask for sugar. Maybe he’d been drinking coffee for a while, though Griff couldn’t imagine Evelyn allowing it. Of course, he had no idea how Jacob Frye had raised his children; didn’t know Jacob at all, for that matter. Griff tackled his apple pandowdy.

“Your pa let you drink coffee all the time?” he asked when he’d scraped out the last bite.

“Nope.”

Griff drained his cup and pushed his chair back. “Come on. Let’s get over to the stockyard.”

The ride down from Silver City went twice as fast as the long pull uphill had gone. Vashti clung to the edge of the seat at least two-thirds of the way. Sometimes Bill drove faster than she’d have thought prudent, but on some of the slopes, it would be impossible to make the mules walk. By the time the road flattened out some, her hands ached from gripping the seat and the shotgun. Despite the warm sunshine, she could feel the tang of winter in the mountain breeze.

“Hey, young George, you done all right this trip,” Bill said with a lopsided grin.

“How long till we get home?”

“Another hour.”

Vashti nodded. They had no passengers on the return trip, but the heavy treasure box was always on her mind. That cargo had to make it safely to Fergus, and someone else would take it on to Boise.

“Think Mr. Bane will let me do it again?”

“No idea. But if he asks me, I’ll tell him you did good.”

“Thanks.” She lifted her hat and let the sun shine on her head for a moment. It was warmer down here than it had been up at Silver. She shot a glance at Bill. “What are you laughing about?”

“Don’t ever do that when there’s men about. No way they’d think you was a boy when they saw that pile of red hair.”

“My hair is not red,” she said with precision and dignity.

“That right?”

“It’s auburn.”

“Ha.” Bill drove on for a bit, still smiling. “How’d you come to be with Bitsy, anyhow?”

Vashti hesitated. No one in Fergus knew her story. Not even Bitsy and Goldie, her two closest friends.

After about half a minute, Bill looked over at her. “You don’t need to tell me. I just thought … well, you know. You could have gotten some other job besides working in saloons.”

“You don’t know anything about it.”

“That’s right, I don’t.”

Her joy in the sunlight, the breeze, the trotting mules, and the creaking coach crumbled. Her stomach began to ache. They came to another steep hill, and Bill let the mules extend their trot but kept the reins taut so they wouldn’t break into a run and go out of control. Vashti clapped her hat on. They flew down the grade, with her clenching the edge of the seat once more and bracing with her feet.

When they slowed to a businesslike trot, she said, “My folks died when I was eleven.”

“Didn’t know that.”

She nodded.

“Didn’t you have no kin?”

“I did.” She didn’t like thinking about those times. For a good many years, she’d tried to forget.

“Guess they didn’t treat you right.”

“Something like that.”

They rode in silence for another mile.

“We’re almost to town.” Bill leaned down and reached under the seat for his horn.

“Is this where I plug my ears?”

“You’d better not. If you do, it’ll mean you’re not holding on to that shotgun.”

Up ahead, she glimpsed the roofline of the Spur & Saddle. Beyond it, the steeple of the new church pierced the achingly blue sky. Bill put the horn to his lips.

She’d have to go back to see Libby at the emporium. Next time, she’d have some cotton wool in her pocket to stuff in her ears when they approached a stop.

The mules broke into a canter as the blast of the horn rang out. They charged into town in a flurry of dust. Vashti wished Griffin could see them, but he wasn’t due back for another four hours at least.

“How we going to open the safe?” She turned to Bill, but he didn’t seem flustered.

“Miz Adams says we can put it in hers until Griff gets back.”

“Oh.” Vashti looked ahead to where they would stop and unload the strongbox. There on the boardwalk in front of the Wells Fargo office and stretching up the street before the emporium almost as far as the post office, waving and calling congratulations, stood the members of the Ladies’ Shooting Club of Fergus.

“I thought we were going to take the stage to Fergus.” Justin scowled as he eyed the mule his uncle expected him to mount.

Just like a kid. They wanted change and excitement, but when it came along as someone else’s idea, they balked. Speaking of mules …

“We were. But I need this string, so I bought it, and I don’t know another way to get ‘em home. So get in the saddle and let’s move.”

The boy had no idea that he had it easy. Griffin rode the one horse he’d purchased—he’d considered letting Justin take it, but if anything went wrong, he had to be able to get around quickly. Besides, this was the horse he’d chosen for Hiram to give his bride as a wedding present. The ten-year-old palomino gelding looked flashy, but he was settled and well behaved. Libby could handle him with no problems.

Griffin would ride the palomino and lead along the string of three more mules he’d bought. Six new mules would have been better, but he’d settle for four. These looked healthy and strong, and the seller had guaranteed they’d pull a coach. Griffin had already strapped Justin’s satchel to one of them and his own small pack to another. The sun was up, and the day was a-wasting.

“Come on,” Griffin said. “Mount up.”

Justin held the mule’s reins and turned to face the saddle. He wiggled this way and that and finally raised his left foot to the stirrup. Griffin almost called out to him but held back. Was the boy really as green as he seemed? He’d lived in the city. Maybe he hadn’t ridden much.

When he landed in the saddle with a thud, the mule stood still and blew out a breath as though resigned to a tedious day. Justin stared down at the reins in his hand as if he knew something wasn’t quite right, but he couldn’t pinpoint the problem. He separated the reins and put one in his right hand.

Griffin adjusted his hat and said as calmly as he could, “You need to get the off rein on the off side. Lean forward and run it under his neck. Grab it with your other hand.”

Justin sat still for a moment, like an equestrian statue, but Griffin had never seen a general cast in bronze on a mule before.

After a good half minute, Justin leaned forward along the mule’s neck and fumbled with the lines under the animal’s throat latch. It was all Griffin could do not to ride over, grab one rein, and pass it to the correct side. Instead he looked toward the distant hills. He counted silently to ten and then looked back. Justin had dropped the off rein and now leaned over the mule’s withers to the right, groping for it. But in doing that, he pulled the mule’s head around to the left without meaning to.

“Let up on the near rein,” Griffin said.

Justin looked over at him.

“I said, let him have some slack.”

Justin dropped the other rein.

Griffin sighed. “Good thing that’s not a fresh horse, or he’d be halfway to Nampa, and you’d be eating dust.” He walked his new horse over, and the other three mules went with him. He angled the horse so that he could get close to Justin’s mule without jostling it. With a swoop of his long arm, he caught the near rein and held it up for the boy. “Hold on to that loosely, and bend over the other side and get the off rein.”

Finally Justin had both reins again, one on each side of the mule’s neck.

“All right, let’s move.” Griffin headed his horse toward the road. He looked over his shoulder to make certain Justin followed.

Although the boy continued to hold the reins so slack they looped down below the mule’s neck, the mule seemed content to fall in with the others and keep pace. It was going to be a lengthy process to teach his nephew to ride well—but the owner of a livery stable couldn’t allow his kin to be so ignorant about animals. Of course, if Justin couldn’t stay in the saddle without a struggle, he’d be unlikely to ride off and get himself into trouble. Perhaps there were advantages to not teaching him to ride.

The boy’s sour expression stayed in place for the first mile or two. Griff ignored it and set a steady pace, jogging along. It was as good as he could expect when leading three mules. Justin kept his seat, though he jarred up and down in the saddle. That boy was going to be sore come tomorrow.

Finally Griffin called out, “The trail gets narrow up ahead. You go ahead of me.”

Justin looked ahead and then back to him. “What if there’s outlaws in those rocks?”

Griffin patted his sidearm. Since he’d ridden to Boise on the stage, he hadn’t packed a long gun, but he had worn his pistol. He’d had the same thought as Justin, but he wasn’t about to tell the boy that.

“Reckon there won’t be. If there are, I’ve got my Colt, and it won’t be much longer until the stage comes along behind us.”

Justin hesitated, his eyes squinted into slits. After a moment, he gritted his teeth and turned forward. “Come on, mule. Get up!”

Griffin smiled. That was progress.

Vashti entered the emporium, carefully holding her basket level. In it, she carried four of Augie Moore’s famous cinnamon buns wrapped in clean napkins—two for Griffin and two for his nephew. They’d be hungry when they got off the stagecoach from Boise. She intended to wait at the office and greet them when the stage came in, but first she had business to tend to with Libby Adams.

“Good afternoon, Vashti,” Libby called from the hardware section of the store. “Don’t you look pretty!”

“Thank you, ma’am.” Vashti had taken special care in her grooming after she and Bill brought the stage in from Silver City late that morning. She’d bathed and arranged her hair in feminine waves about her face. Then she’d put on her most conservative dress. Even so, when she’d mentally compared her image in the gilt-framed mirror to the way Libby and some of her other friends looked, she knew she’d still missed the bull’s-eye when it came to dressing like a lady. The hem of her dress was too short, the fabric too gaudy, and the neck too low—though she’d basted a row of lace along the edge.

“I wondered if I could have a moment of your time.” Vashti looked about the dim interior of the store. A couple of women shopped among the groceries; Mrs. Walker was engrossed in yard goods, assisted by Florence Nash; and it appeared that Goldie and Libby were sorting out nails and bolts.

“Of course.” Libby touched Goldie’s shoulder. “Just keep counting each size, dear, and write the totals down as we’ve been doing.” She smiled and walked toward Vashti. Even her workaday outfit was a soft blue dress with black braid and buttons—a gown any lady could wear proudly to church or on a stroll about town. “How may I help you?”

“I didn’t mean to interrupt your work.”

“Think nothing of it. Goldie and I are taking inventory. I’m selling the emporium to the Hamiltons—that couple who came in on the stage the other day. We’re counting all the merchandise so we can give them a list of what they’re buying.” Libby pushed back a strand of her golden hair.

“That’s a big job.”

“Yes, but not too bad. I’ve kept good records. It shouldn’t take us more than a couple of days. They can’t move here immediately, but we’ve signed the paperwork. They’ll come back in the spring and take over the store.” She smiled, and her teeth showed pearly white against her pink lips. Vashti was sure Libby wore discreet cosmetics—never enough to overpower her lovely features. Libby was the most beautiful woman she knew, and she hardly needed enhancements.

Vashti gulped. “Well, ma’am, I wanted to settle up with you on the bill for the clothes you provided for me yesterday, and”—she looked down the aisle toward the yard goods—“well, I wondered if you could help me pick out a pattern for a regular dress.”

“A regular … Oh, I see.” Libby smiled. “The one you have on is very becoming.”

“Thank you, but I know it’s too short, and the fabric isn’t at all suitable for … well, for most occasions.” Vashti pulled her shoulders back and looked Libby in the eye. “I don’t serve drinks anymore, Miz Adams. I want to look like a lady. I want to be a lady. Just because I want to drive a stagecoach and Mr. Bane is making me wear pants to do it doesn’t mean I shouldn’t look nice the rest of the time.”

There. She’d said it. She didn’t want to look like a boy when she worked and a floozy when she didn’t.

Libby stepped toward the counter. “Why don’t you set your basket here? I have several patterns that would suit you, but we also have some very nice ready-made dresses. The winter fashions just came in. There’s a green woolen dress with a smart overskirt that I considered keeping myself, but it was a bit too short for me. On you, however …” She leaned back and considered Vashti’s attributes. “Yes, I think it would just skim your ankles. Very practical, if it’s not too plain for your taste.”

“I’d like to see it.”

They walked the length of the store together. The other women looked up. Emmaline Landry, a regular member of the shooting club, called, “Afternoon, Vashti.”

“Hello, Miz Landry.” What a difference from the way the townspeople used to treat her. Not so long ago, Vashti and the other saloon women used to come to the emporium after hours when none of the regular customers would see them. Now Goldie worked here, and Bitsy and Vashti came to shop whenever it struck their fancy.

Florence left her customer’s side and came to join them. “Vashti! You looked so cute in that vest and hat this morning. If I hadn’t known you were a girl—”

“Now, Florence,” Libby said gently, “Miss Edwards wants to look at some more feminine apparel this afternoon.”

“Oh, have you seen the silk and wool shawls that came in? I told Mother she and I both have to have one.”

“Yes, one of those might go well with the green woolen dress.” Libby paused before a rack of dresses, skirts, and coats. She pulled out the dress in question and held it up for Vashti to see.

“That’s … that’s beautiful, ma’am. How … how much?”

Libby flipped the little pasteboard tag that dangled from the cuff of the gathered sleeve. “Three dollars and fifteen cents.”

“Try it on, Vashti,” Florence said. “I’ll bet it will fit you perfectly.”

“Is there time before the Silver City stage comes in?” Vashti glanced anxiously toward the front window. “I want to be out front when Mr. Bane gets here with his nephew.”

“Perhaps not,” Libby said. “You can come back later and try it.”

Vashti nodded, disappointed. She wanted to make the best possible impression on Griffin. To her way of thinking, the buns would help, and she would tell him how smoothly everything went on the Silver City run. Bill would confirm what she told him, but she wanted to be the one to tell him first. “I was hoping …”

“What were you hoping, my dear?” Libby’s smile left no doubt of her affection and empathy for Vashti.

“The last time he saw me, I was decked out like a boy. I wanted him to see me as a woman—a neat, professional woman. But my clothes …”

“What about your clothes?” Florence asked.

“They’re not like yours and Mrs. Adams’s. Not suitable for business. Like when I sell stage tickets.” She glanced across the store toward where her friend was still diligently counting screws and nails. “Even Goldie. Since she started working here, she’s bought regular clothes, and she looks fine. We were always trying to catch attention in the old days, but now I just want to look nice.”

Libby smiled and squeezed her arm. “You come back after the stagecoach comes in, and we’ll talk.”

“Thanks.” Vashti started to leave but turned back. “Oh, and I almost forgot. I owe you for the boy clothes. I want to settle up with you for those.”

Libby spread her delicate fingers. “Mr. Bane told me to put them on his account.”

Vashti opened her mouth. For years she’d turned down men’s offers to buy her fancy things—laces and ribbons and silk petticoats—knowing they’d want more than a pretty thank-you in return. Now a man was buying her clothes, but they were thick work boots and a leather vest.

“It’s part of his business expense,” Libby said quickly. Vashti gulped and nodded. “All right. I’ll come back later.”

“Don’t forget your basket.”

“Thank you!” She grabbed the gathering basket with the buns in it and hurried outside and down the boardwalk to stand before the office door. A man walked across the street from the Fennel House.

“Ticket to Dewey.”

Vashti went inside and made out his ticket. She took his money and put it in the cash box Griffin kept in his desk drawer. The man watched her, unblinking, the whole time, and she cringed as she handed him the ticket. If only she were wearing that green dress. She rose and stepped toward the door, wondering what she’d do if he didn’t move.

“You’re all set for your ride to Dewey, sir. Excuse me.”

He stepped back, and she exhaled. She went out again to wait for the stagecoach. Peter Nash came out of the post office. He usually met the Boise coach to claim the town’s sack of mail. His presence put Vashti more at ease.

“Hello, Mayor,” she called. The traveling man took a few steps down the boardwalk and leaned against the office wall.

“Good afternoon, Miss Edwards. How did your run to Silver City go?”

“Just fine.”

Mr. Nash smiled and chatted pleasantly with her. Soon she heard the stage coming. Johnny Conway, the regular driver on the Boise run, didn’t blow a horn when he came into town. He just ran the horses like a pack of demented wolves were after them. Griffin didn’t like that. Come to think of it, why was Johnny racing the team like that with the boss inside the coach? Vashti peered down the street, trying to see through the cloud of dust that approached with the stage.

Johnny pulled up with his usual showmanship—yelling to the team to whoa and stopping them on a dime—if there’d been a dime lying in the street, that is. Vashti shook her head and scowled at him. He looked down and grinned at her, touching his whip to his hat brim.

“Afternoon, Miss Edwards. Don’t you look fine?”

“Where’s the boss?” Vashti had already noticed that Lenny Tucker, one of the regular messengers, rode the box with Johnny, and none of the faces she could see through the coach window had her boss’s exuberant beard and shaggy head of hair.

“He didn’t take the stage back.”

“What?” Vashti stepped closer to the coach. Lenny jumped down on the other side and hustled around to open the door. “Where is he?”

“He told the station agent in Boise he was buying some stock for the line and driving it home.”

“Oh.” Vashti sagged and let out a big sigh. So much for the buns and careful toilette.

“We passed him an hour out of town,” Johnny said.

She straightened. “So he’ll be here soon?”

“Soon enough.”

“Is his nephew with him?”

“Yup.”

“What’s he like?”

Johnny shrugged. “He’s a kid.”

Lenny set a sack of mail on the walk. “There you go, Mayor.”

“Thanks, Lenny.” Mr. Nash hefted the sack and swung it over his shoulder. “I guess a few folks in Fergus will be getting mail today.” He ambled off up the street.

Two passengers got out and headed for the Nugget.

“We’ve got three more sacks of mail to go on to the mining towns,” Lenny said.

Vashti looked into the coach and counted the sacks. “All right, go switch out the team.”

“All set, Johnny,” Lenny said moments later as he climbed back up on the box.

Johnny touched his whip to his hat again and lifted the reins.

Vashti realized she might have time to try on the green dress. She started to the emporium, then remembered the cash box and the ticket money she’d put in it. She couldn’t leave any money in the Wells Fargo office unattended. Griffin would skin her alive. She ran inside and took the small amount she had collected and shoved it into her pocket. Then she dashed to the emporium.

Mrs. Adams was talking to the couple who planned to buy the store, but Goldie saw her and strode over to meet her.

“Hey! Florence told me you were coming back to try on that green dress. That would look wonderful on you.”

“Thanks. I’m not sure I can afford it. I mean … Mr. Bane hasn’t paid me yet, and I feel as though I should be the one paying for the boy’s clothes, not him.”

“Miz Adams thinks it’s all right,” Goldie said.

“Well, I want to talk to her about that. Because I don’t want anyone in town getting the wrong idea.”

“I s’pose.” Goldie smiled. “Well, I’ve got hinges to count. I’m trying to be extra careful so’s the Hamiltons will want me to keep working for them when they’re the owners.”

Vashti eyed her friend closely. “I’m sorry, Goldie. I hadn’t even thought about how it will affect you if Miz Adams sells the emporium. Do you think you might not have a job anymore?”

“I don’t know. Miz Adams said she’ll ask them to keep Florence and me on, but it’s up to them.”

“We can pray about it,” Vashti said.

Goldie smiled. “We surely can.” She tossed her head. “Isn’t it funny? A year or so ago if you’d have said that, I’d have thought you were loco. But I believe that if I lose this job, God will help me find another one.”

“Well, you know you won’t go hungry. Bitsy and Augie will see to that.” Vashti looked down the length of the store. “Think Florence can wait on me?”

“Surely. Just tell her you want to try the dress. And I want to see you in it.”

Five minutes later, Vashti stepped timidly from Libby’s back room, wearing the green woolen dress. Mr. Hamilton had disappeared, but Libby and Mrs. Hamilton stood near the counter, still talking.

“There you are.” Libby stepped toward Vashti. “Come on out here, dear. That looks lovely on you.”

“Oh my, yes.” Mrs. Hamilton smiled at her as though Vashti were a special customer.

Florence and Goldie left their tasks and came near. A couple of customers browsing the shelves glanced their way, and Vashti began to feel like a sideshow exhibit.

“It is supposed to be this long?”

Libby held up a fold of the skirt. “You could stand to have two or three inches off the hem, but for the most part, that’s a good fit.”

Vashti liked the way the bodice buttoned up, snug but not too tight, to her throat.

“Come look in the mirror,” Florence said.

The customers made no pretense of not gawking at her.

“That’s a pretty dress,” said a rancher’s wife.

“Thank you,” Vashti whispered.

Florence led her to the long mirror mounted on the wall between the yard goods and the tinware. When she saw her reflection in the glass, Vashti caught her breath.

“Oh.”

“Yes.” Florence beamed at her.

I look like one of the regular women. No one would think I’d worked in saloons. Tears burned her eyelids. She’d kept wearing the old dresses because she had nothing else, and she didn’t like to ask Bitsy for money when she knew cash was tight at the Spur & Saddle.

“I’ll have to see if Mr. Bane pays me today. If he does, I’ll come back. If not, I’ll just have to see if it’s still here when I get some more money.”

“I’ll see that Mrs. Adams doesn’t sell it to anyone else,” Florence whispered.

“Oh, I couldn’t let you do that.”

“Why not? Mrs. Runnels and Mrs. Walker ask her to hold things all the time. And Mrs. Adams says big stores back East do it regularly.”

Vashti gulped. She still wasn’t certain about the boots, hat, and other clothes she’d received for her role as stagecoach guard.

“I’d better take it off before I muss it.” She hurried to the back room, and within five minutes she was back out on the boardwalk in her old satin. She tugged at the skirt, hoping the hemline wasn’t too garishly short for daytime in a decent town. The alluring fashions she’d been expected to wear in her former life had never bothered her as much as they did now.

The door to the Wells Fargo office was still closed, but far down the street at the corner by the smithy, she could see a large man riding a horse into town. As he turned the corner toward the livery, she saw plodding behind him a string of three mules, and at the tail end of the procession came another mule with a slight figure on its back.

Griffin was home. She squared her shoulders. Time to face the giant.