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Authors: Jillian Hart

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"€œLila, there you are."€ One of her best friends, Earlee Mills, smiled from behind the fabric counter at the far end of the store. In tow was her little brother, Edward, who pushed at a loose tooth as he studied the button display, held captive by one hand. Earlee didn'€™t look inclined to let him go. "€œI heard all about the excitement. Are you all right? I saw the bullet hole right through the front window."€

"€œIt went into the counter, but all is well. I was providentially behind the counter instead of in front of it at the time."€ She flung her arms wide and gave Earlee a quick hug. "€œOh, it'€™s good to see you. I'€™ve missed you, all of you, so much."€

"€œIt'€™s only been four days since church. We all saw each other then. And we have our sewing circle this week."€ Earlee looked sweet in a handed down blue calico dress that perfectly matched her eyes. Her hair tumbled down from her sunbonnet in golden ringlets. "€œEdward, remember what I told you?"€

"€œDon'€™t touch a thing,"€ he repeated, pulling his fingers back just in time from a button made in the shape of a dog.

"€œMy fault. I shouldn'€™t have let go of you."€ Earlee rolled her eyes, good-natured as always and caught hold of her brother once again. "€œI just finished writing a letter to Meredith. That'€™s where we'€™re headed. The post office."€

"€œOh, I meant to stop by there yesterday but then all the excitement happened. At least I have something thrilling to write about. Meredith will keel over from shock, as my life is so boring."€ She paused, gathering up the words to tell the news about Burke, but they didn'€™t seem to want to come.

"€œNo,
my
life is boring,"€ Earlee teased. "€œYou can trade with me if you want. I'€™m stuck out on the farm and you are here in town, where all the action is."€

"€œAction? Yesterday was the only action I'€™ve seen yet. Remember, if you trade lives with me, then you have to deal with Eunice."€

"€œOh, point taken. Think I'€™ll keep the one I have."€

"€œI knew you would say that."€ Laughing, Lila stepped behind the counter. "€œDid you come to get that trim you were hoping for?"€

"€œNo, I wish."€ Earlee glanced wistfully at the glass beneath the wooden countertop, where spools sat lined up in a long row of delicate laces, beautiful silk ribbons and colorful rickrack. "€œMa needs another bottle of tonic. Her heart is troubling her again."€

"€œI'€™m sorry she'€™s ailing."€ Earlee'€™s ma had suffered a severe case of small pox which had left her in a weakened state ever since. As the oldest girl, the responsibility of the children and the housework fell on Earlee'€™s slim shoulders. Lila wished Earlee'€™s situation could be easier. She bopped over to the medicine cabinet behind the cash drawer and sorted through the many bottles. "€œI'€™m keeping her in prayer."€

"€œThat would be a help. Thank you."€ Earlee cleared her throat and attempted to be stern'€”and failed. "€œEdward, what did I just tell you?"€

"€œI'€™m sorry, Earlee. I can'€™t help it. My finger just did it all on its own. Honest."€ The little boy didn'€™t look very worried about getting punished. "€œThere'€™s a real bullet in here."€

"€œStop touching it."€ Earlee shook her head and tugged her brother away from temptation. "€œDid you hear Chance Bell got winged by a bullet? It went right through the wall of the hardware store. Someone else was shot right on the bank step. One of the bank'€™s guards. Word is that he was winged in the leg and will be all right. Ma got word through her church group to pray for the deputy who got shot twice in the chest."€

"€œHe'€™s here."€ She lowered her voice, wondering if Burke could hear her or if he'€™d drifted back into a healing sleep. "€œIn the storeroom."€

"€œHere?"€ Earlee'€™s eyes widened as she opened her reticule and plucked out a fifty cent piece. "€œIs it the really attractive deputy? The newest one? He'€™s even more handsome than Lorenzo Davis."€

"€œI didn'€™t think that was even possible until I saw Burke."€ She blushed, glad to take the coin and make change in the drawer. It gave her something to focus on so she could pretend to herself she wasn'€™t blushing.

"€œBurke?"€ Earlee arched one dainty eyebrow. "€œYou'€™re on a first-name basis with him?"€

"€œI am. I tended to his wounds after he stumbled into the store."€ She dropped a dime, a nickel and two pennies onto Earlee'€™s palm. "€œDon'€™t look at me like that. I had a responsibility."€

"€œYou like him."€

"€œHe'€™s too old for me."€ Twenty-four to her eighteen. Six years was a lot. He was the manliest man she'€™d ever met, but in a good way. A mighty way. He was just like the Range Rider in her favorite novel series, but she couldn'€™t tell Earlee that. "€œHe will be strong enough to be moved soon, because Eunice is not going to let him stay here a second longer than he has to. Then I'€™ll never see him again."€

"€œYou
do
like him."€ Earlee tucked away the money and gave her brother what passed for a scowl but fell far short. Edward lifted his forefinger off the wrapped butterscotch candy in the candy barrel. "€œWhat about Lorenzo?"€

"€œMaybe I'€™ll give up on Lorenzo."€ Lila ripped off a length of brown paper.

"€œBut you'€™ve been in love with him since you were eight years old. That'€™s a long time."€

"€œOh, he'€™s never going to fall for me. I thought maybe after he forgave Fiona for ignoring him and falling in love with Ian, that he might turn his eye to me. But he'€™s never going to, or he would have done so."€ That hurt, but it wasn'€™t a surprise, either. "€œThings don'€™t always work out the way you wish."€

"€œWhat made you change your mind? Is it this new man? The deputy?"€ Earlee laid a gentle hand on her brother'€™s shoulder.

"€œNo."€ She didn'€™t want to say anything until she was sure, but she'€™d spotted Lorenzo in church last Sunday watching a certain young lady with a wistful look, and that lady wasn'€™t her or Earlee. She tied the package neatly with a string and handed it over. "€œI'€™m going to hold out for a dime-novel hero."€

"€œOh, I just finished reading the last book you lent me."€ Earlee tucked the bottle inside her reticule. "€œThe Ranger Rider hero is utterly too-too."€

"€œHe always saves the day and he'€™s a really good man down deep, no matter what."€ Fine, so she was thinking about Burke. How could she not? "€œI can'€™t wait to see what comes on the train today. I'€™m expecting a new batch of books."€

"€œExciting. I can'€™t wait, either."€ Earlee'€™s smile faded as she kindly nudged her little brother away from the candy. He gazed at it with such longing. Treats like candy were not common in the Mills'€™ house. Earlee clearly hesitated, worrying her bottom lip. "€œHow many pieces for a penny?"€

"€œA dozen."€ It was six candies, but Earlee was family to her. "€œEdward, did you want to pick out the pieces?"€

"€œReally, Lila? Oh, I would!"€ Not expecting such a privilege, he hopped up and down with excitement. "€œCan I have a butterscotch one?"€

"€œAbsolutely."€ Lila grabbed a little striped paper bag meant just for candy and circled around the counter. "€œHere you go. Make your choice."€

"€œMa likes the peppermint balls."€ He bent his head to fish one of the cheerfully striped candies from the mix. "€œAnd Ramona does, too."€

It took a while for Edward to pick just the right piece for everyone in his family. A customer came in and Lila waited on Lanna Wolf, who was in need of a new packet of needles. After wrapping the packet and adding the sale to the Wolf'€™s account, Lila gave Edward an extra butterscotch candy for the road, hugged Earlee goodbye, refused the penny and dashed to the storeroom. Her patient lay asleep, a powerful man in spite of his wounds, a hint of natural color returning to his face.

Thank You, Lord
, she prayed, grateful he was improving. Heroes should always recover to fight for justice another day. The door jingled, drawing her attention. It was the glass repairman come to replace the damaged pane in the front window.

Chapter Five

E
arlee Mills couldn'€™t stop her hands from shaking as she plopped onto the bench outside the post office and stared at the letter, just to make sure she hadn'€™t imagined it. It was definitely real. She ran her fingertip over the stark handwriting that spelled out her name. Finally, after months of waiting and believing he had given up caring about her, Finn McKaslin had sent a letter.

"€œEarlee."€ Edward popped the butterscotch out of his mouth and held it by two sticky fingers. "€œCan we go home now?"€

"€œJust one minute."€ She tipped the letter so he couldn'€™t make out the return address. She didn'€™t want anyone to know about Finn. A lot of people'€™s opinions of him had changed ever since he'€™d been convicted of robbing a train last summer, but she had always carried a torch for the youngest McKaslin brother. She knew he was a good man down deep. Even good men made mistakes. "€œWhy don'€™t you watch the horses go by for two more minutes?"€

"€œI'€™m hot. I want to play in the creek."€ Edward gave a gap-toothed grin, which always worked on Ma.

Earlee felt her strength weakening. It wasn'€™t easy to say no to that cute freckled face. "€œI said two minutes. Is that really very long? Then we will be on our way."€

"€œOkay."€ He popped the candy back into his mouth, wiped his sticky fingers on his trouser leg and turned toward the street. Fortunately a matched team of glossy black horses paraded by drawing a fashionable buggy with gleaming red wheels, which absorbed all of the boy'€™s attention. "€œOne day I'€™m gonna own me a buggy and horses like that."€

"€œYes, you will."€ She tugged a hairpin out of her coiled up braids and slit the envelope neatly open. Her fingers felt wooden and she stabbed herself in the scalp when she slipped it back into her hair. For months she'€™d had to accept that Finn wasn'€™t interested in her. And why would he be? Fairy tales didn'€™t happen to girls like her. She had to be realistic. He had only ever been in need of a pen friend, someone to help ease his loneliness.

There was a single sheet of paper and a short note in his masculine script.

Hello, Earlee,
It'€™s been a while since I got your letter. Honestly, I didn'€™t know if I should write you back. It'€™s something that'€™s been bothering me the whole time and I may as well get it off my chest. I'€™m being selfish writing you and looking forward to your letters. I am lonely here and unhappy, but maybe you shouldn'€™t spend your time writing to a convict like me. That'€™s what I am. I'€™ve come to accept it. After spending a month in solitary confinement or the pit, as we call it here, I can'€™t be in denial any longer.

He was in a pit? Earlee tore her eyes from the letter, feeling as if she'€™d been struck. How horrible for him. A pleasant puff of warm breeze fanned over her face and stirred her bangs. She was free. She had never given it much pause before. Beauty surrounded her, bright blue sky, dazzling sunshine and the colorful excitement of the town street. The scent of the bakery wafted down the boardwalk, horses strutted by, and she could go anywhere if she had a mind to. Edward clomped over and dropped onto the bench beside her.

"€œCan we go now?"€ he begged.

"€œIt hasn'€™t been a full two minutes."€ She tweaked his nose gently to make him grin. The candy was tucked in the corner of his mouth and made him look a little chipmunk. "€œBut I suppose I can walk and read at the same time, if you promise to warn me before I walk into a hitching post."€

"€œI'€™m good at watching for stuff!"€ Edward bounded onto his feet, his boots thumping on the planks. "€œHurry, Earlee!"€

"€œI'€™m coming."€ She pushed off the bench and followed her little brother down the boardwalk. Her attention drifted back to Finn'€™s letter.

I appreciated your description of town life and life on your farm. Your writing made me forget where I was for a few moments. That'€™s a gift I'€™m grateful for but don'€™t write me again.
Goodbye,
Finn.

"€œEarlee!"€ Edward grabbed her elbow.

She glanced up and skidded to a stop just in time. A teamster'€™s loaded wagon and double team rumbled by. She wobbled on the edge of the boardwalk, heart pounding.

Finn had said goodbye. He didn'€™t want her to write anymore. Crushing disappointment settled like an anvil on her chest. She remembered him as he'€™d been in their school days, although he was several classes ahead of her. His dark hair tousled by the breeze, his good-natured grin, his easygoing friendly manner that made every girl in school swoon just a little.

"€œWe can go now."€ Edward tugged her forward, shaking his head disapprovingly. "€œGirls."€

"€œBoys."€ She ruffled his hair affectionately. She tucked away Finn'€™s letter. That was the end of that. He didn'€™t want her as a pen friend. If this were a story she was penning, the correspondence between the hero and the heroine would be the catalyst for a great romance, one of rare love and infinite tenderness, the kind of love that would last for all time.

But real life was not like a novel. She sighed and tugged another hairpin from her topknot. She had one more letter to open. She withdrew Meredith'€™s envelope from her pocket and carefully unfolded it, trusting Edward to keep her from tripping as she bent her head to read.


Lila plunged her hands into the warm soapy water and grabbed one of the wet garments from the bottom of the tub. A hot puff of air breezed down the alley behind the store and across her face. She thought of the deputy asleep on the other side of the wall just feet away. She could picture him perfectly. There was something incredibly decent about Burke Hannigan. Definitely hero quality.

Lord, please save him. I believe he is worth it
. She wrung the excess water from his shirt and scrubbed it on the washboard for a third time, although it did no good. The bloodstain had set. What was a Range Rider doing in Angel Falls? There were few more respected or awe-inspiring professions in all of Montana Territory'€”at least not in her opinion. And to think he had walked right into the store and into her life. She shook out the sudsy garment and leaned over the washboard again.

A faint ring of spurs sounded alien against the background noise of traffic over on the main street and the voices murmuring from the open windows of the neighboring buildings.

"€œ"€™Afternoon, missy."€ The warmth seemed to fade from the breeze as a shadow fell to a stop over her washtub. Sheriff Dobbs gazed down at her with his thumbs in his trouser pockets, dressed all in black, his tin star on his chest. "€œIs Deputy Hannigan still breathin'€™? Or was I right? He looked nearly dead the last time I saw him."€

"€œHis fever broke in the night, but he is still very weak."€

"€œThen he'€™s alive?"€ The sheriff seemed amused by that.

"€œHe most certainly is."€ She shivered, even in the blazing heat of the day. She had never felt more aware of being alone. No one was in the alley. No dogs roaming, no kids playing kickball or chase or tag, not even persnickety Mr. Grummel from next door and his cantankerous donkey. She set her chin, determined not to be intimidated. "€œThe doctor is sitting with Deputy Hannigan. Would you like me to fetch him for you?"€

"€œDoc Frost is here? No, I don'€™t like doctors."€ The sheriff rocked back on his heels, considering this information. He stared down the alley as if his thoughts, whatever they were, consumed him. "€œI came to get what belongs to the sheriff'€™s office. Hannigan'€™s things."€

"€œYou mean his clothes?"€

"€œAnd anything you might have found in the pockets. Any papers, maybe his badge."€

"€œHis b-badge?"€ She lost her grip on the shirt. It tumbled out of her hands and plopped with a splash into the sudsy water.

"€œI don'€™t want that to fall into the wrong hands."€ He tried to smile, but it fell short and looked more like a sneer.

"€œOf course."€ She shook off her hands, water dropping into the dust as she reached into her pocket. The five-point deputy'€™s star glinted dully in the evening light as she held it on her palm. She'€™d removed it from his shirt a few moments before.

"€œThat'€™s fine, young lady."€ He covered her hand with his, his touch lingered a tad too long.

Lila'€™s stomach turned. She jerked back, her pulse thumping like a scared rabbit in her ears. Dobbs turned away, spurs singing. He stopped to look the building up and down, studying the entrance and windows before moseying on his way.

Her pulse roared through her veins and she tremored with the force of it. This was more excitement than she felt comfortable with. At least Burke'€™s secret was still safe. She'€™d kept her word to him. Relieved, she dunked the clean garment in the rinse water and plunged out the soap bubbles.

She could still see the sheriff taking his time ambling down the alley. Why was Burke working as a town deputy? The question crept into her thoughts as she wrung out his shirt and caught sight of one of the bullet holes. If he was a Range Rider, shouldn'€™t he be out riding the range, hunting down outlaws and protecting trains? Or was he conducting an investigation right here in town?

"€œHowdy, Lila."€ Mr. Grummel called out from his cart as he drove by. "€œEunice has you doing laundry again?"€

"€œIt'€™s the deputy'€™s clothes."€

"€œAh, that'€™s good work you do. That poor man. Oy."€ Mr. Grummel pulled back on his reins and his donkey ignored him, stepping forward in brazen disobedience. "€œIt'€™s a wonder the bank hasn'€™t been robbed before this. All these villains running loose. I don'€™t know what'€™s wrong with the world. It wasn'€™t like that in my day. Stop, you stubborn donkey."€

Mrs. Grummel poked her head out of the next door. "€œAlbert, is that you? Did you pick up the package from the depot like I asked you to?"€

His answer was drowned out by the squeal of the Bellamy kids from across the way. Three little boys, a dog and a ball tumbled into the alley, their calls, shouts and barks echoing against the buildings like a thunderstorm. The donkey brayed in protest.

A perfectly normal afternoon. Lila hopped up the steps to the small porch, where she clipped Burke'€™s shirt to the small clothesline. Over the sights and sounds of kickball and the Grummels'€™ conversation, she upended the washtubs neatly and stowed them on the porch, amazed that the afternoon could still feel so normal when she no longer felt exactly safe. That feeling did not fade until long after the sheriff was gone from her sight.


"€œHow is the deputy?"€ The tray rattled as Lark set it on the edge of the counter.

"€œBetter but still weak."€ Lila tallied up the last of Cora Sims'€™s purchases. The tangy comfort of chicken broth steamed into the air. "€œLark, you are a dear."€

"€œSince Eunice is still at her meeting, I thought I would bring it down and save you a few steps."€ Lark sidled up and stole the pencil. "€œGo, take care of him. I can manage this."€

"€œBut Eunice'€”"€

"€œWhat she doesn'€™t know won'€™t hurt her."€ Lark grinned as if she knew full well how hard it was for her big sister to say no to her.

It wasn'€™t fair, but she loved her little sister too much to argue. "€œLet me finish up at the fabric counter. Miss Sims is still deciding."€

"€œI can do it."€ Lark rolled her eyes.

Lila went around the shelves to the corner of the store where Cora Sims fingered the new shipment of calicos.

"€œI love a nice cheerful calico. I'€™m making new curtains for my sitting room."€

"€œThis would be very lovely."€ Lila hefted the bolt off the rack. The cotton was fine quality and soft to the touch. She breathed in the starchy, cottony smell as she set the fabric on the cutting counter. A few tugs of the material and in unrolled with a
thump, thump
. She admired the dark blue sprays sprigged on the light yellow background. "€œThese will be very cheerful with the sun shining through a window."€

"€œExactly what I thought. I need twenty yards, please."€ Cora glanced over her shoulder to check on her adopted daughter, Holly. "€œI heard there was a bit of excitement in your store yesterday."€

"€œSo, you'€™ve heard all about Deputy Hannigan?"€ She gave a few more big tugs on the fabric and measured it against the ruler tacked to the counter, one long yard after another. "€œWord travels fast."€

"€œI hear the deputy was a hero. He was running to the scene, spotted the robber getting away and drew his gun."€ Cora shook her head. "€œI'€™m not sure what violent thing will happen next. Not six months ago I was nearly assaulted on the street."€

"€œAnd your reticule was stolen. I remember."€ Lila smoothed the cotton carefully and took out the scissors, which were snatched from her hand.

"€œGo on,"€ Lark sang sweetly as she pushed up to the counter. "€œMiss Sims, if I remember, the sheriff hardly did a thing to that man."€

"€œIf it hadn'€™t been for the bounty on his head, I wouldn'€™t have gotten any justice. Rafe, my fiancé, was enraged."€ Cora waved her fingers in a friendly goodbye. "€œTake good care of our deputy, Lila. Don'€™t look so surprised. I can smell that delicious broth from here."€

"€œDoes everyone know?"€ she asked as she wove through the store.

"€œThat you'€™re sweet on the man? Probably."€ Cora'€™s answer sounded amused.

"€œI'€™m not sweet on him. Not really. It'€™s my duty to take care of him. I take my responsibilities very seriously."€ She gripped the tray and went up on tiptoe to give Lark one last glance. It appeared as if she were doing fine folding up the cut fabric and chatting with Cora. No need to worry, and Lark was right. What Eunice didn'€™t know wouldn'€™t hurt. Eunice did not see Lark as capable, but how else was the girl to prove she was able to run the store?

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