juggling the egg basket, now containing a small tin of lard, roughly three-quarters of a cup of sugar scooped into a paper sack and a box of table salt, from one wrist to the other.
âWeâll be on our way now, Harriet,â she said. âWe have things to do.â
Chapter 3
A s he rode slowly along every street in Blue River that morning, touching his hat brim to all he encountered so the town folks would know they had a marshal again, one who meant to live up to the accompanying responsibilities, Clay found himself thinking about Parnell Nolan. Blessed with a beautiful wife and two fine daughters, and well-liked from what little Clay had learned about him, Nolan had still managed to be in a whorehouse when he drew his last breath.
Yes, plenty of men indulged themselves in brothelsâbachelors and husbands, sons and fathers alikeâbut they usually exercised some degree of discretion, in Clayâs experience.
Always inclined to give somebody the benefit of the doubt, at least until theyâd proven themselves unworthy of the courtesy, Clay figured Parnell might have donehis sinning in secret, with the notion that he was there fore protecting his wife and children from scandal. But Blue River was a small place, like Clayâs hometown of Indian Rock, and stories that were too good not to tell had a way of getting around. Fast.
Of course, Nolan surely hadnât planned on dying that particular night, in the midst of awkward circumstances.
Reaching the end of the last street in town, near the schoolhouse, Clay stopped to watch, leaning on the pommel of his saddle and letting Outlaw nibble at the patchy grass, as children spilled out the door of the little red building, shouting to one another, eager to make the most of recess.
He spotted Edrina right awayâher bonnet hung down her back by its laces, revealing that unmistakable head of spun-gold hair, and her cheeks glowed with exuberance and good health and the nippy coolness of the weather.
As Clay watched, she found a stick, etched the squares for a game of hopscotch in the bare dirt and jumped right in. Within moments, the other little girls were clamoring to join her, while the boys played kick-the-can at an artfully disdainful distance, making as much racket as they could muster up.
The schoolmarmâa plain woman, spare and tall, and probably younger than she lookedâsurveyed the meleefrom the steps of the building, but she was quick to notice the horse and rider looking on from the road.
Clay tugged at his hat brim and nodded a silent greeting. His ma, Chloe, had been a schoolteacher when she was younger, and he had an ingrained respect for the profession. It was invariably a hard row to hoe.
The teacher nodded back, descended the schoolhouse steps with care, lest she trip over the hem of her brown woolen dress. Instead of a coat or a cloak, she wore a dark blue shawl to keep warm.
Clay waited as she approached, then dismounted to meet her at the gate, though he kept to his own side and she kept to hers, as was proper.
The lady introduced herself. âMiss Alvira Krenshaw,â she said, putting out a bony hand. She hadnât missed the star pinned to his coat, of course; her eyes had gone right to it. âYou must be our new town marshal.â
Clay shook her hand and acknowledged her supposition with another nod and, âClay McKettrick.â
âHow do you do?â she said, not expecting an answer.
Clay gave her one, anyway. âSo far, so good,â he replied, with a slight grin. Miss Alvira Krenshaw looked like a sturdy, no-nonsense soul, and although she wasnât pretty, she wasnât homely, either. Sheâd probably make some man a good wife, given half a chance, and though thin, she looked capable of carrying healthy babies tofull-term, delivering them without a lot of fuss and raising them to competent adulthood.
Wanting a wife to carry over the threshold of his new house, come spring,