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Authors: William W. Johnstone

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C
HAPTER
39
PSR Ranch, office
 
“W
ho did you say he was?” Richards shouted the question so loud that spittle sprayed from his mouth.
“The feller that's callin' hisself Buck West is actually Smoke Jensen.” Morgan was a thin, baldheaded man who ran the leather goods store in Bury.
“How do you know this, Morgan?”
“On account of I seen 'im back in Red Cliff. This here is Smoke Jensen, all right.”
“I'll be damned,” Richards said under his breath. “She was right.”
“Who was right?” Stratton asked.
“Janey. She told me this Buck West was trouble.”
Stratton frowned. “Where is Janey, anyway? I ain't seen her in a day or two.”
“I don't have any idea, and to be honest with you, I don't care. I've had about as much of her as I want to put up with. Get the word out. We'll divide the thirty-thousand-dollar reward among all the men who take part in killing Smoke Jensen.”
Stratton nodded and left to do as Richards had ordered.
 
 
Bury
 
“You're Smoke Jensen, ain't ya?” The PSR cowboy who had stepped out from behind a building was already holding a pistol in his hand.
At that moment, Smoke realized his identity had been compromised. “I'm Buck West.”
“No, you ain't. You're Smoke Jensen, and Richards and ever'one else knows that now. Only I'm the one who's goin' to kill you and collect that thirty thousand dollars.”
“What's your name, cowboy?” Smoke asked.
The cowboy smiled. “I may as well tell you, seein' as I'm goin' to be rich and famous after today. Folks call me Sunset.”
“Sunset? A fitting name, seeing as the sun is about to set on your life.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Put the gun back in your holster, Sunset, and walk away. If you do that, I'll let you live.”
Sunset laughed. “You're the one that's goin' to die.” He raised the pistol to fire, but before he could cock it, Smoke drew and fired. Sunset died with a shocked expression on his face.
Smoke hurried back to Sally's house. “Sally, they know who I am. Come with me. I'm taking you down to the Pink House. You'll be safe there.”
“All right,” Sally said without question.
Smoke led her through the alleyways until they reached the big, pink building. They found Flora in her parlor.
“Yes, of course I'll keep her here,” Flora said. “She'll be safe with me. We'll lock the doors, and I've got enough shotguns for everyone.”
“Thanks.” Smoke leaned toward Sally, then stopped and glanced toward Flora. “Look away, would you?”
“Oh, for heaven's sake. Kiss her, then go take care of your business.”
Smoke kissed Sally, then with a wave toward both of them, left the house.
“Help me say a little prayer for him, Flora, would you?” Sally asked after the door closed behind Smoke.
“I've already started. You've grown quite fond of him pretty quickly, haven't you?”
“Fond of him? Flora, I love him.”
“That all happened fast, didn't it?”
“When you know it's the right man, it doesn't take you long to make up your mind,” Sally replied.
Flora smiled. “Make up your mind about what?”
“About marrying him. I intend to be Smoke Jensen's wife.”
“If he lives through this.”
“He will,” Sally said confidently.
* * *
Smoke headed back downtown, encountering Sheriff Reese and three other men.
“Hold on there, Jensen!” Even as Reese shouted, he pulled the trigger on the shotgun he was carrying. But he fired too quickly. Smoke, who was coming up from the alley, had not yet stepped into the street from behind the building. He leaped back just as the double load of buckshot tore into the corner of the building.
He stepped out then and started shooting, taking down a deputy and one of the other men. Reese, having expended both barrels of the shotgun, didn't represent any immediate danger. Two men turned and ran, while Reese dropped the shotgun and went for his pistol.
Reese was fast, faster than Smoke had expected, but he was able to shoot just before Reese brought his pistol to bear.
* * *
From outside of town, Preacher heard the gunfire of more than the occasional gunshot and knew that it was significant. “Grab your rifles, boys! The fun has started!”
Grabbing the assorted buffalo guns, Creedmores, Henrys, and Winchesters, the seven mountain men took up positions overlooking the pass that was the only way into town from the PSR Ranch. A veritable army of more than twenty heavily armed men were on their way into town.
“I'm gonna take the first shot,” Lobo said, raising the Henry to his shoulder.
“All right. Go ahead,” Preacher said, considering himself the leader.
Lobo pulled the trigger, and the riders kept coming.
“You missed!” Preacher jeered.
At that moment, one of the riders lurched, then fell out of his saddle.
Lobo grinned. “I didn't miss. It just takes this damn Henry a little longer to get the job done.”
Beartooth was next, the boom of the buffalo gun sounding like an explosion.
After that, all seven mountain men opened fire, and the pass rang with the echo of gunfire.
Less than five minutes after the shooting started, the pass lay somber under the heat of the sun. Bodies were everywhere; men and animals sprawled, soon to be bloated by death. Among the dead were gunhands who had been gathered from all over the country; Telford, who was wanted in Wyoming, Olds, who had paper on him from Nevada, and Peyton, who had been one of Reese's deputies, and was wanted for murder back in Iowa. The pass was quiet now that the gunfire was over, and, except for the circling buzzards, still.
 
 
PSR Ranch, office
 
“There ain't nobody left, Mr. Richards.” Bozeman was the only one who had survived the fight at the pass, and even he had not come through it unscathed. He had a bullet hole in his leg staining his trousers red with blood. “Ain't nobody left in town neither. Leastwise, not nobody we can count on. Sheriff Reese, he's been kilt.”
“Do you think Jensen's comin' out here?” Potter asked, his voice reflecting his fear.
“Yes, sir, I'm sure he is.”
“All right, Bozeman, you get down by the front gate. Hide somewhere, and when you see him comin', shoot him,” Richards ordered.
Bozeman shook his head. “No, sir, I don't want nothin' more to do with it. Onliest reason I come back here to warn you was I was thinkin' maybe you might give me some money, enough to get out of here.”
“You didn't do your job. Why should we give you anything?” Stratton asked.
“They was nineteen men got kilt for you three,” Bozeman pointed out. “I got shot up for you. That makes twenty, and you can't even give me enough money to get out of here?”
“You did it for the reward money, only you didn't kill him. No, if you aren't going to help now, get out of here.”
Bozeman pulled his pistol. “Give me some money,” he demanded. “Or else I'll—”
Potter stepped up behind him and shot him in the back. Bozeman's eyes bulged out like they were about to pop from their sockets. The gun slipped from his fingers and thudded to the floor as he opened his mouth.
All that came out was a thread of blood before he collapsed on the floor.
“What do we do now?” Stratton asked.
“We've got to get out of here,” Potter said.
“No,” Richards replied, shaking his head. “I ain't runnin' no more. We've got too much at stake here to be run off like some rabid dog. Potter, you're wantin' to be governor. How's that goin' to happen if you're gone?”
“Yeah.” Potter passed a shaky hand over his face. “Yeah, you're right.”
“What's your plan?” Stratton asked.
“The first thing is, I'll meet him on the front porch, and I'll offer him ten thousand dollars to be on his way and leave us be.”
“You know damn well he isn't going to take you up on that,”Potter scorned.
“I know. That's why I said I'll meet him on the front porch,” Richards said. “You two will be inside. Muley, you'll be just behind that window. Wiley, you'll be over there behind that window. As soon as you hear him turn down the offer, shoot. The moment he says no, both of you shoot at the same time.”
At that moment the front door opened and, startled, all three turned to see Deputy Rogers.
“Rogers!” Richards said.
“I was listenin' to you out on the front porch. Bozeman is right. Reese and at least five more is dead in town. Ever'one else has left.”
“Why didn't you leave?”
Rogers smiled. “I figure you'll pay me if I kill Jensen for you.”
“All right, you get—”
“No,” Rogers said, interrupting Richards. “I heard what you was sayin' to the others, and I plan on goin' out on the porch with you. I want you to know that I'm the one that kilt him. I been wantin' to kill Jensen ever since he come to town, even afore I knowed who he was.”
“I don't know how smart a move that is,” Richards said. “Jensen is very fast. I know because we've been trying to kill him for some time now.”
Rogers disagreed. “No, you've been sendin' people to kill him. You don't have to send me. I'm already here.”
“All right, Rogers. You're welcome company.”
“Richards!” The call came from outside the house.
“Richards, Potter, Stratton! Come on out!”
“That's him,” Rogers said with an eager edge to his voice.
Richards nodded toward Stratton and Potter, and the two men got into position behind the windows. He looked toward Rogers, who loosened his gun in the holster, then nodded back.
The two men stepped out onto the front porch.
Smoke stood in front of the ranch house, easy and confident. “Where are the other two?”
“For the moment, you can deal with Deputy Rogers and me,” Richards said. “Excuse me. Seeing as you killed Reese, that would be
Sheriff
Rogers, now.”
“Where's Sally Reynolds?” Rogers asked.
“It doesn't make any difference to you where she is,” Smoke said.
Rogers smiled. “Oh, yeah, it does. See, after this is all over, she's gonna be my woman.”
Richards wasn't interested in that. “Jensen, suppose I give you ten thousand dollars? Would you ride away and never bother us again?”
A faint smile drew up the corners of Smoke's mouth, but his eyes glittered with hate and resolve. “I don't think so.” He shook his head a little . . . and caught a fleeting glimpse of a gun appear in the window to his left. Drawing with lightning speed, he fired at that window, then swung his pistol to the right window and fired again. Potter tumbled out onto the porch from one of the windows, Stratton from the other.
When the shooting started, Rogers began his own draw, but he was too late. Smoke had already turned back to him and fired. One bullet into Rogers's forehead, and the deputy went down, dead before he hit the porch.
Richards managed to get his gun out and raised, but he wasn't able to pull the trigger before Smoke killed him with a single bullet.
Had anyone still been at the PSR Ranch, the four shots would have sounded like one sustained roar of gun thunder.
Except for Smoke Jensen, not one living person was anywhere on the ranch.
 
 
Bury
 
Leading two packhorses and with Sally riding astride beside him on a saddle horse he had bought for her, Smoke was ready to put Bury behind them forever. The two of them left the town, heading toward the High Lonesome.
Flora, Emma, and the other ladies of the Pink House stood on the front porch, waving good-bye. “Gee, I hate to see her go,” Emma said. “She was such a good friend to all of us.”
“Yes,” Flora said, a little lump in her throat. “She was.”
“It's too bad she was a schoolteacher. She's so pretty, she would have been really good at what we do here,” Emma said.
Flora laughed out loud. “You know what? I think she would have agreed with you.”
 
 
Summit County
 
“Do you like dogs, Mrs. Jensen?” Smoke asked as they reined their mounts to a stop and sat atop a hill overlooking the vast sweep of mountains, streams, and richly grassed valleys.
“Yes, I do,” Sally answered.
“Good. I do, too. We'll have a lot of them at Sugarloaf.”
“Sugarloaf?”
Smoke smiled at her. “That's what we're going to call our ranch.” He nodded toward the paradise in front of them. “It's waiting for us out there, along with the rest of our lives.”
TURN THE PAGE FOR AN EXCITING PREVIEW!
 
USA Today
and
New York Times
Bestselling Authors
W
ILLIAM
W. J
OHNSTONE
with J. A. Johnstone
THE GREATEST WESTERN WRITERS OF THE 21ST CENTURY
The Kerrigans risked everything to stake a claim under a big
Texas sky. Now one brave woman is fighting to keep that
home, against hard weather, harder luck, and the West's most
dangerous men.
 
A RANCH DIVIDED . . .
 
After a long hard journey up the Chisholm Trail,
Kate Kerrigan is in Dodge City, facing a mystery of
murder. A cowboy she hired, a man with a notorious
past, has been accused of killing a prostitute and
sentenced to hang. Kate still trusts Hank Lowry.
And when a hired killer comes after her, she knows
she has struck a nerve. Someone has framed Hank
for murder—in order to cover up a more sinister
and deadly crime spawned in the musty backrooms
of the Kansas boomtown . . .
 
Back in West Texas, the Kerrigan ranch is under siege.
A wagon train full of gravely ill travelers has come onto
the parched Kerrigan range, being led by a man on a
secret mission. With Kate's son Quinn manning the
home front, one wrong step could be fatal when the
shooting suddenly starts . . .
 
The Kerrigans, A Texas Dynasty
JOURNEY INTO VIOLENCE
 
Available August 2016, wherever
Pinnacle Books are sold.
C
HAPTER
1
“S
he ran me off her property, darned redheaded Irish witch.” Ezra Raven stared hard at his
segundo
, a tall lean man with ice in his eyes named Poke Hylle. “I want that Kerrigan land, Poke. I want every last blade of grass. You understand?”
“I know what you want, boss,” Hylle said. He studied the amber whiskey in his glass as though it had become the most interesting thing in the room. “But wantin' and gettin' are two different things.”
“You scared of Frank Cobb, that hardcase
segundo
of hers? I've heard a lot of men are.”
“Should I be scared of him?” Hylle asked.
“He's a gun from way back. Mighty sudden on the draw and shoot.”
Hylle's grin was slow and easy, a man relaxed. “Yeah, he scares me. But that don't mean I'm afraid to brace him.”
“You can shade him. You're good with a gun your own self, Poke, maybe the best I've ever known,” Raven said. “Hell, you gunned Bingley Abbott that time. He was the Wichita draw fighter all the folks were talking about.”
“Bing was fast, but he wasn't a patch on Frank Cobb,” Hylle said. “Now that's a natural fact.”
“All right, then, forget Cobb for now. There's got to be a better way than an all-out range war.” Raven stepped to the ranch house window and stared out at the cloud of drifting dust where the hands were branding calves. “I offered Kate Kerrigan twice what her ranch is worth, but she turned me down flat. How do you deal with a woman like that?”
“Carefully.” Hylle smiled. “I'm told she bites.”
“Like a cougar. Shoved a scattergun into my face and told me to git. Me, Ezra Raven, who could buy and sell her and all she owns.” The big man slammed a fist into his open palm. “Damn, I need that land. I want to be big, Poke, the biggest man around. That's just how I am, how I've always been, and I ain't about to change.”
The door opened and a tall, slender Pima woman stepped noiselessly across the floor and placed a white pill and a glass of water on Raven's desk.
“Damn, is it that time again?”
“Take,” the woman said. “It is time.” She wore a plain, slim-fitting calico dress that revealed the swell of her breast and hips. A bright blue ribbon tied back her glossy black hair, and on her left wrist she wore a wide bracelet of hammered silver. She was thirty-five years old. Raven had rescued her from a brothel in Dallas, and he didn't know her Indian name, if she had one. He called her Dora only because it pleased him to do so.
Raven picked up the pill and glared at it. “The useless quack says this will help my heart. I think the damned thing is sugar rolled into a ball.”
Hylle waved an idle hand. “Man's got to follow the doctor's orders, boss.”
Raven shrugged, swallowed the medication with a gulp of water, and handed the glass back to the Pima woman. “Git, Dora. White men are talking here.”
The woman bowed her head and left.
“Poke, like I said, I don't want to take on a range war. It's a messy business. Nine times out of ten the law gets involved and next thing you know, you're knee-deep in Texas Rangers.”
Hylle nodded. “Here's a story you'll find interesting, boss. I recollect one time in Galveston I heard a mariner talk about how he was first mate on a freighter sailing between Shanghai and Singapore in the South China Sea. Well, sir, during a watch he saw two ironclads get into a shooting scrape. He said both ships were big as islands and they had massive cannons in dozens of gun turrets. Both ships pounded at each other for the best part of three hours. In the end neither ironclad got sunk, but both were torn apart by shells and finally they listed away from each other, each of them trailing smoke. Nobody won that fight, but both ships paid a steep price.” He swallowed the last of his whiskey. “A range war is like that, boss. Ranchers trade gunfire, hired guns and punchers die, but in the end, nobody wins.”
“And then the law comes in and cleans up what's left,” Raven said.
“That's about the size of it,” Hylle said.
“I don't want that kind of fight. Them ironclads could have avoided a battle and sailed away with their colors flying. Firing on each other was a grandstand play and stupid.”
Hylle rose from his chair, stepped to the decanters, and poured himself another drink. He took his seat again and said, “Boss, maybe there is another way.”
“Let's hear it,” Raven said. “But no more about heathen seas and ironclads. Damn it, man, you're making me seasick.”
Hylle smiled. “From what I've seen of the Kerrigan place it's a hardscrabble outfit and Kate has to count every dime to keep it going. Am I right about that?”
“You're right. The KK Ranch is held together with baling wire and Irish pride. She's building a house that isn't much bigger than her cabin. She's using scrap lumber, and the first good wind that comes along will blow it all over creation.” Raven lifted his chin and scratched his stubbly throat. “Yeah, I'd say Kate Kerrigan's broke or damned near it.”
“So answer me this, boss. What happens if her herd doesn't go up the trail next month?”
A light glittered in Raven's black eyes. “She'd be ruined.”
“And eager to sell for any price,” Hylle said.
Raven thought that through for a few moments then said, “How do we play it, Poke? Remember them damned ironclads of yours that tore one another apart.”
“No range war. Boss, we do it with masked men—night riders. We scatter the Kerrigan herd, gun a few waddies if we must, but leave no evidence that can be tied to you and the Rafter-R. Stop her roundup and the woman is out of business.” Hylle smiled. “Pity though. She's real pretty.”
“So are dollars and cents, Poke. The Kerrigan range represents money in my pocket.” A big, rawboned man, Raven's rugged face bisected by a great cavalry mustache and chin beard. He lit a cigar and said behind a blue cloud of smoke, “We wait until the branding is done and then we strike at the Kerrigan herds, scatter them to hell and gone before Kate can start the gather. Can we depend on the punchers?”
Hylle nodded. “They ride for the brand, boss.”
“Good. A two-hundred-dollar bonus to every man once the job is done and I own the Kerrigan range.” Raven slapped his hands together. “Do you think it can work?”
“No question about that. No cattle drive to Dodge, no money for the KK.”
“Hell, now I feel better about things, Poke. It's like you're a preacher and I just seen the light. How about another drink?”
Hylle grinned. “Don't mind if I do, boss. We'll drink to the ruin of the KK and the end of pretty Mrs. Kerrigan's stay in West Texas.”
C
HAPTER
2
K
ate Kerrigan stood on her hearthstone and watched the rider. He was still a distance off and held his horse to a walk. The weight of the Remington. 41 revolver in the pocket of her dress gave her a measure of reassurance. The little rimfire was a belly gun to be sure, but effective if she could get close enough.
That Kate could stand on her hearthstone and see the man at a distance was not surprising since her new home was still only a frame and a somewhat rickety one at that. She'd scolded the construction foreman, but Black Barrie Delaney, captain of the brig
Octopus
, had assured her that he had inspected the work and the basic structure was sound. As she often did, Kate recalled their last conversation with distaste.
* * *
“I did not bring, all the way from Connemara, mind you, a slab of green marble for your hearthstone, Kate, only to have your new house fall about your ears.” Delaney wore a blue coat with brass buttons. Thrust into the red sash around his waist were two revolvers of the largest kind and a murderous bowie knife.
“Barrie Delaney, I'll never know why I let a pirate rogue like you talk me into building my house,” Kate said. “Why, 'tis well-known that you should have been hanged at Execution Dock in London town years ago.”
“Ah, Her Majesty Queen Victoria's mercy knows no bounds and she saw fit to spare a poor Irish sailorman like me.”
“More fool her,” Kate said. “You've sent many a lively lad to Davy Jones's locker and a goodly woman or two if the truth be known. Well, here's a word to the wise, Barrie Delaney, fix this house to my liking or I'll hang you myself or my name is not Kate Kerrigan.”
Delaney, a stocky man with a brown beard and quick black eyes full of deviltry that reflected the countless mortal sins he'd committed in his fifty-eight years of life, gave a little bow. “Kate, I swear on my sainted mother's grave that I will build you a fine house, a dwelling fit for an Irish princess.”
“Fit for me and my family will be quite good enough,” Kate said.
* * *
Kate shook her head at the memory. As she watched the rider draw closer, she pushed on the support stud next to her. It seemed that the whole structure swayed and she made a mental note to hang Black Barrie Delaney at the first convenient opportunity.
Kate's daughters Ivy and Shannon, growing like weeds, stepped out of the cabin, butterfly nets in hand, and she ordered them back inside.
Ivy, twelve years old and sassy, frowned. “Why?”
Her mother said, “Because I said so. Now, inside with you. There's a stranger coming.”
“Ma, is it an Indian?” Shannon asked.
“No, probably just a passing rider, but I want to talk with him alone.”
The girls reluctantly stepped back into the cabin and Kate once more directed her attention to the stranger. He was close enough that she saw he was dressed in the garb of a frontier gambler and he rode a big American stud, a tall sorrel that must have cost him a thousand dollars and probably more.
The rider drew rein ten yards from where Kate stood and she saw that his black frockcoat, once of the finest quality, was frayed and worn and a rent on the right sleeve above the elbow had been neatly sewn. His boots and saddle had been bought years before in a big city with fancy prices and the ivory-handled Colt and carved gun belt around his waist would cost the average cowpuncher a year's wages. He seemed like a man who'd known a life and times far removed from poverty-stricken West Texas. His practiced ease around women was evident in the way he swept off his hat and made a little bow from the saddle.
“Ma'am.” The man said only that. His voice was a rich baritone voice and his smile revealed good teeth.
“My name is Kate Kerrigan. I own this land. What can I do for you?”
“Just passing through, ma'am.” He'd opened his frilled white shirt at the neck and beads of sweat showed on his forehead. “I'd like to water my horse if I may. We've come a fair piece in recent days, he and I.”
Kate saw no threat in the man's blue eyes, but there was much life and the living of it behind them. His experiences, whatever they were, had left shadows.
“Then you're both welcome to water,” Kate said. “The well is over there in front of the cabin and there's a dipper.”
The man touched his hat. “Obliged, ma'am.” He kneed his horse forward. His roweled spurs were silver, filigreed with gold scrolls and arabesques.
Kate fancied they were such as knights in shining armor wore in the children's picture books.
The rider swung out of the saddle, loosened the girth, and filled a bucket for his horse. Only when the sorrel had drank its fill did he drink himself, his restless, searching eyes never still above the tin rim of the dipper. Finally he removed his coat, splashed water onto his face, and then ran a comb through his thick auburn hair. He donned his hat and coat again, tightened the saddle girth, and smiled at Kate. “Thank you kindly, ma'am. I'm much obliged.”
To the Irish, hospitality comes as naturally as breathing, and Kate Kerrigan couldn't let the man go without making a small effort. “I have coffee in the pot if you'd like some.”
To her surprise, the man didn't answer right away. Usually men jumped at the chance to drink coffee with her and she felt a little tweak of chagrin. The man was tall and wide-shouldered. As he studied his back trail, there was a tenseness about him, not fear but rather an air of careful calculation, like a man on the scout figuring his odds. Finally he appeared to relax. “Coffee sounds real good to me, ma'am.”
“Would you like to come into the house?” Kate said. “Unlike this one, it has a roof and four walls.”
The man shook his head. “No, ma'am. Seems like you've got a real nice sitting place under the oak tree. I'll take a chair and you can tell your girls they can come out now.”
“You saw . . . I mean all that way?” Kate said.
“I'm a far-seeing man, ma'am. I don't miss much.”
Kate smiled. “Yes. Something tells me you don't.”
After studying the cabin, the smokehouse, the barn and other outbuildings, the man said, “I reckon your menfolk are out on the range, this time of year. Branding to be done and the like.” He saw the question on Kate's face and waved a hand in the direction of the cabin. “The roof's been repaired and done well, all the buildings are built solid and maintained. That means strong men with calloused hands. Your ranch isn't a two by twice outfit, Mrs. Kerrigan. It's a place that's put down deep roots and speaks of men with sand who will stick.”
“And a woman who will stick,” Kate said.
“I have no doubt about that, ma'am. Your husband must be real proud of you.”
“My husband is dead. He died in the war.” Kate smiled. “Now let me get the coffee.”
As Kate walked away the man said after her, “Name's Hank Lowery, ma'am. I think you should know that.”
She turned. “Did you think your name would make me change my mind about the coffee?”
“Hank Lowery is a handle some people have a problem with, Mrs. Kerrigan. They rassle with it for a spell and either run me out of town or want to take my picture with the mayor. Either way, they fear me.”
Kate said, “Now I remember. I once heard my
segundo
mention you to my sons. A lot of unarmed men were killed in some kind of fierce battle, wasn't it?”
“The newspapers called it the Longdale Massacre, but it was a gunfight, not a massacre. The men were armed.”
“We will not talk of it,” Kate said. “You will drink your coffee, Mr. Lowery, and we will not talk a word of it. Does that set well with you?”
Lowery nodded. “Just thought you should know, ma'am.”
“Well, now you've told me. Do you take milk and sugar in your coffee? No matter, I'll bring them anyway.”
* * *
“Is the sponge cake to your liking, Mr. Lowery?” Kate asked.
The man nudged a crumb into his mouth with a little finger. “It's very good. I've never had sponge cake before, and seldom any other kind of cake, come to that.”
“I'm told that sponge cake is Queen Victoria's favorite, one with a cream and strawberry jam filling just like mine.”
Lowery smiled. “You're a good cook, Mrs. Kerrigan.”
“No I'm not. I'm a terrible cook. I can't even boil an egg. The only thing I can make without ruining it is sponge cake.”
“Then I'm honored,” Lowery said. “This cake is indeed your masterpiece.”
“Thank you, Mr. Lowery. You are most gracious. Ah, here are the girls at last and Jazmin Salas is with them. She's the one who cooks for the Kerrigan ranch, and her husband Marco is my blacksmith.”
Kate made the introductions.
Aware of her twelve-year-old blooming girlhood, Ivy played the sophisticated lady and shook Lowery's hand, but seven-year-old Shannon was predictably shy and buried her face in her mother's skirt.
“Beautiful children, Mrs. Kerrigan,” Lowery said. “They do you proud.”
Jazmin's gaze lingered on the man's holstered Colt, fine clothes, and the silver ring on the little finger of his left hand. She guessed that Mr. Lowery had never done a day's hard work in his life. Although she had heard of such men, they were as alien to her as the strange little Chinamen who toiled on the railroads.
“Is the gentleman staying for supper, Mrs. Kerrigan? If he is I'll set an extra place at table.”
Kate hesitated.
Lowery read the signs. “There's no need. I should be riding on.”
“Of course you'll stay for supper, Mr. Lowery,” Kate said, recovering from her indecision. “I will not allow a man to leave my home hungry.” To lift the mood, she added, “We're having chicken and dumplings. Is that to your taste?”
“If it's as good as the sponge cake, then it most certainly is.”
“Better,” Kate said. “Jazmin is a wonderful cook.”
“Will we eat in the dining room . . . again?” Jazmin said.
“Of course. Where else would we eat?”
Jazmin's eyes lifted to the table and chairs set up within the wobbly frame of the new house. “Yes, ma'am. Let's hope the weather holds and there is no wind.”
If Hank Lowery was amused, he had the good manners not to let it show.

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