R.
Wyatt swore under his breath. He didnât doubt Rowdyâs gratitude, but he suspected the marshal had an additional motiveâhe wanted to make it harder to leave.
He checked the clock on the shelf under the far windowâit was nearly noonâand saw another slip of paper, folded tent-style. A rueful grin hitched up one side of his mouth. He hadnât gotten this much mail in a long time.
The second note was from Lark.
WyattâHelp yourself to the food, and if you run out of anything, use our account at the mercantile to buy what you need. Make yourself at home.
He folded the note carefully and tucked it under the edge of the clock, his throat strangely tight, his eyes burning a little. He jollied himself out of the melancholies by looking around for a third note, from Gideon, or maybe even Pardner.
Neither of them had written a word, though.
He went to the larder, a wooden box with a metal handle, opened it up, and found cold meat inside. There was half a loaf of bread, too, so he made himself a sandwich and walked through to the little parlor beyond the kitchen. He hadnât passed much time in a real house since heâd left the homeplace for the last time.
His ma had cried that day. Begged him to stay and work the farm.
Heâd ridden out instead. Heâd had better things to do, heâd thought back then, than plowing fields and milking cows. No, heâd preferred to rob trains with Pappy.
âFool,â he said aloud, admiring but not touching the framed photographs set up on a wooden table near the windows. Lark and Rowdy, posing solemnly on either side of a Grecian pillar. Little Hank, bare-ass naked on a fur rug, in the saddle in front of a grinning Rowdy, cradled in Larkâs arms in a rocking chair.
The soreness in Wyattâs throat got worse, and he had to blink a couple of times. He retreated from the row of pictures, scanned the rest of the room. There were two other doors, one open, one closed.
The open door led to the bathroom, a swanky one with a flush toilet and a copper boiler to heat water, just as Rowdy had said. Wyatt stepped inside the small room and looked into the mirror above the pedestal sink. He needed a shave, he decided, rubbing the dark stubble on his face. Rowdy had left behind a razor and a soap mug, and the tub looked mighty inviting.
Just go, he told himself. Saddle up Sugarfoot, ask some neighbor to look after Reb and Larkâs mare, and go.
He thought about supper at Sarahâs, sitting across a table from her, just for one meal. Heâd make sure Langstreet didnât pose any kind of serious threat to her, and leave in the morning.
First thing in the morning, for sure.
No matter what.
In the meantime, he might as well go into the jailhouse, in case somebody came by needing a lawman.
He was amused to find, when he approached the desk, that Gideon had left a note after all. Scrawled on the back of a Wanted poster and carefully centered in the middle of the blotter.
Donât steal anything. If you do, Iâll come after you for sure. Gideon Yarbro.
Wyatt chuckled. He had no doubt that the kid was sincere. Two lawmen in the family now, Pappy, he thought. And me wearing a badge, too. Guess you must be wondering where you went wrong.
Â
T HE AFTERNOON , blessedly quiet in terms of business, passed at an excruciatingly slow pace. Sarah spent the time examining the booksâcolumn after column of figures penned in her distinctive handwriting, every cent accounted forâand wondered if Charles would believe the only lie she could come up with on such short notice.
Her fatherâs eyesight had been very poor before Dr. Venable had arranged for a pair of spectacles to be sent up from Phoenix, and sheâd fallen into the habit of managing the ledgers for him.
Flimsy, but it might work.
Carefully, she recorded the statement in her own small book, which she carried in the pocket of her skirt. Ever since lying had