the months she had been here. She was a different person from the woman who had left Sherman, clinging to the fragile hope that Derby and she would be happy together, or at least that their situation would improve. How naïve she’d been about love, loyalty, life, about a lot of things.
She looked down at the ground, pressed a loose rock deep into the chalky soil with the toe of her shoe, then turned her head and looked back at the still.
It was an odd configuration; all the separate parts of it looked crudely assembled, wrongly angled, and disjointed. She wandered over and went up the slight incline toward the limestone backdrop where Ernie had resumed using the long stick to stir the contents of the cooker.
Still regarding her with apprehension, he said, “It’s just beginning to bubble. We’ll be capping her soon.”
Laurel peered down into the simmering mixture, then looked over at the empty glass jug sitting on the ground beneath the spout of the barrel, waiting to be filled with a product in huge demand. She thought of the “file cabinet” full of unpaid bills.
She met Ernie’s nervous gaze, then turned to Irv.
“What’s the recipe?”
Twenty-Two
When Sheriff Amos strolled into the stable late one afternoon, Thatcher was in the center aisle grooming a mare that had been brought to him the day before.
“Another bucking bronco?” Bill asked.
“No, this one just needs to be taught that it’s not up to her when she’s ridden. Her owner has to chase her down. She has him trained, not the other way around.”
“I’ve seen your handbills all over town.”
“They’ve paid off. I’ve got only one empty stall.”
“Good for you. When you’re done there, let’s take a walk.”
Thatcher lowered the currycomb and looked over at the sheriff, whose grave expression indicated that this wasn’t a social call. He asked the first question that came to mind. “Has she been found?”
“No.”
Thatcher waited, but when the sheriff didn’t expand on that, he said, “Time to quit anyway.”
After returning the mare to her stall and putting away the grooming utensils, he walked with Bill toward the bridge. They didn’t cross. Instead the sheriff led him down the grassy embankment to the water’s edge. The creek’s current was sluggish.
Bill removed his hat and fanned his face. “This spot isn’t as cool as I thought it would be. Not much of a breeze.”
“Doesn’t bother me if it doesn’t bother you.”
The sheriff turned his head and gave Thatcher several moments of intense scrutiny. “Does anything bother you, Thatcher?”
“Lots of things.”
“You don’t show it.”
Thatcher raised a shoulder, not knowing how else to respond.
“What about people’s opinion of you?”
Thatcher shifted his stance and tilted his head to one side. “One thing that bothers me is for someone to beat around the bush.”
“All right.” Bill hiked up his gun belt and took a deep breath. “I officially called off the search for Mila Driscoll today. It’s been three weeks. Volunteers have petered out. I can’t spare the manpower to keep up the search.
“I informed Gabe in person. I promised to hop on any leads that turned up, but I’m not hopeful there’ll be any. The case remains open-ended.”
Thatcher was quick to catch on to the reason for this visit. “This leaves me the one and only suspect.”
The sheriff backed up to a butt-high boulder, propped himself against it, and folded his arms. “I don’t think you had anything to do with it, Thatcher. None at all. But people are funny.”
“It’ll be like a shadow of doubt following me around.”
“I hope not, but people—”
“Need somebody to blame.”
“It’s human nature.”
Thatcher knew Bill was right. An unsolved mystery was like a sore tooth. It couldn’t be left alone. He was the logical solution to this mystery, and, no matter what he did, in the back of some folks’ minds, he would continue to be.
He supposed he could leave town as suddenly as he’d arrived, but that would look like running and only justify suspicion. And where would he go? He could probably be hired on at another ranch, but that would somehow seem disloyal to Mr. Hobson. City life held no allure for him.
Wildcatters were actively soliciting for roughnecks to work in the new oil patches, promising good pay. But he’d be living in a men-only camp and doing a dirty and dangerous job. If that lifestyle had held any appeal for him, he would have stayed in the army.
For the time being, staying in Foley was his best option. But he knew the prejudice he