The Bounty Hunter’s Redemption. Janet Dean
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Max used to say food was good at Sarah Harvey’s café, but one look at the cook gave a man heartburn. Max had a jab for every man and woman in town.
“Shore did, Sheriff,” a voice called.
Through the open door, Carly caught sight of the Harders twins peering at her from a cell. Even as they sat side by side on the bunk, Carly couldn’t tell Lloyd and Lester apart from here. The two went everywhere together, getting into one scrape after another. Their latest escapade—using the sign outside her shop for target practice.
“Food’s way better’n Ma’s, but don’t you be telling her I said so, ma’am.”
Carly had tasted Mrs. Harders’s cooking at church potlucks and couldn’t disagree. “I’d never hurt your mother’s feelings.”
“We’re right sorry for shooting up your sign, Miz Richards.”
“Yep, plumb ashamed of ourselves.”
“I sometimes suspect you two get into trouble just to get some decent victuals,” Sheriff Truitt grumbled. “Well, your feet will be under your ma’s table by suppertime.”
“Aw, can’t you keep us another night, Sheriff?”
“This ain’t no hotel. I aim to make your lives so miserable you’ll think twice about another drunken shooting spree.”
The sheriff closed the door to the brothers’ groans and turned toward Carly. “They’ll spend the month doing chores for you, Mrs. Richards. Work ’em hard. The nastier the job the better.”
Carly gave a nod. But had no idea what they could do. The Harders brothers didn’t appear to be good at much except carousing.
“They should pay for a new sign, but money’s scarce and their ma—”
“Sheriff, I’m here on another matter.”
“What’s that?”
Carly met the sheriff’s inquisitive gaze. “That bounty hunter paid me a visit.”
“From the look on your face, I’d say he didn’t come to apologize for killing your husband.”
Anyone who hunted down outlaws for the bounty was surely driven by greed. “Could he have gone after Max for the reward?”
“Nope, no time for Max to make the wanted posters.”
“Well, he’s looking to make money from Max’s death.”
“How so?”
“He claims his sister’s husband—the man Max killed in Kentucky—won the deed to my shop in a poker game. He says his sister has the deed and that makes her the owner.”
The sheriff frowned. “Do you believe him?”
“No! I don’t trust the word of a killer.” Carly sighed. “But I checked. The deed’s not in my safe.”
“Then he could be speaking the truth.”
“Well, yes. But Max could’ve moved the deed.” She paced the room, then turned to the lawman. “Sheriff, I want you to do something. You can’t let some stranger ride into town and take my property,” she said, unable to keep her voice from trembling.
“No need to get worked up, Mrs. Richards. No one is taking anything while I’m around, leastwise not illegally.”
Carly breathed in. Out. In. Out. Until her racing pulse returned to a steady rhythm. “If the bounty hunter has the deed, he could’ve stolen it, even killed Max for it. Max can’t accuse him from the grave.”
“If Max anted the deed and lost—”
“He had no right to risk our livelihood and the roof over our heads!”
“No moral right.” The sheriff rubbed his nape. “Not sure about his legal right.”
“Are you saying I could lose the shop?” Carly shoved each shaky word from her mouth, barely louder than a whisper.
“No point borrowing trouble. Time will tell.”
Easy for the sheriff to say. “I have no legal recourse?”
“If you were asking about horse stealing, I’d know the law. Property rights ain’t my specialty.”
The door to the sheriff’s office opened. Nate Sergeant stood in the opening. Tall, broad-shouldered, a six-shooter strapped to his hip. Even from across the room, Carly could feel the power radiating from him.
He removed his Stetson and gave Carly a nod. “Sheriff, I suppose Mrs. Richards has explained the situation.”
“She has.”
“I’ll be bringing my sister to Gnaw Bone tomorrow, along with the deed to Mrs. Richards’s shop.”
“If you’ve got that deed, I’d like to see it. Better yet, I’d like to keep it here in my safe until the circuit judge can straighten out this mess.”
Nate Sergeant gave a nod. “Any idea when that will be?”
“Depends on the number of cases he’s hearing.”
“Sheriff,” Carly said, “can you check his itinerary?”
“I’ll send a wire and see what I can find out, Mrs. Richards.”
“Thank you.”
Carly said goodbye, then strode toward the exit. Sheriff Truitt had been no help. She heaved a sigh. The sheriff wasn’t the troublemaker in town. That label belonged to Nate Sergeant, the man holding the door for her as she strode through, and then followed her out.
“Mrs. Richards...” he said.
Carly stopped and turned toward him, steeling her spine against whatever he had to say.
His gaze was surprisingly soft, gentle. “I’ve brought harm to way too many. I surely don’t want to hurt you,” he said, his eyes filling with despair so wretched Carly couldn’t look away. “I wish things were different, ma’am.”
Carly had an urge to try to ease his torment, to offer absolution. She reached a tentative hand toward his jaw. Close enough to feel the warmth from his skin.
At the gesture, his pupils flared into smoldering pools of black.
Carly’s breath caught. She jerked her hand away.
Without a word he turned on booted heel, strode to the wagon out front and clamored aboard.