heartily disapproved of how Letty had come by the money to pay for them.
Once outside, she looked up. The sky was clear without a cloud in sight—the Evening Star already evident. The air smelled of dust and gunpowder. The thin slice of moon hanging just above the horizon would not cast many shadows upon the darkening land. For Letty, it was a night like so many others, yet she still listened, waiting to hear that call.
“Letty! You get on down here now!” Will the Bartender yelled again.
Letty ignored him, watching as half-a-dozen cowboys from a neighboring ranch rode into town in a flurry of whoops and shouts. She frowned, hoping most of them got drunk and passed out before they got the notion to take her to bed.
Just as she was about to give up and go inside, she heard the haunting, mournful coo she’d been waiting for. The lone whippoorwill’s call sent shivers up her spine. Somewhere beyond the lights of the town, a small brown bird was calling to its mate. The sound was a reminder of who she’d been, not what she’d become, and it gave her enough solace to face the oncoming night. Satisfied, she walked back into her room and closed the door. It was time to get to work.
As she started down the stairs, Pete Fairly began banging on the piano keys. She didn’t recognize the song, but it didn’t matter. The noise level inside the White Dove had already reached fever pitch and no one was listening to him play. When one of the cowboys saw Letty coming down the stairs, he let out a whoop.
“There she is!” he hollered, and took off his hat and threw it in the air before yanking her off the last two steps and whirling her around in his arms.
Letty pasted a smile on her face and let her mind wander as the cowboy took her around the room in what passed as a dance. Pretending that she liked it was part of the job. She knew how to laugh and flirt and drink with the best of them.
One hour passed and then another. Letty’s toes had been stepped on so many times by so many drunk cowboys that she wanted to cry, she’d been up and down the stairs to the cubbyhole where she serviced the clients a half-dozen times, and she was wishing for something substantial to eat.
“How about a song?” someone shouted.
Letty sighed with relief. At least while she was singing, they couldn’t step on her feet.
“Yeah sure, cowboy.”
Letty was sauntering toward the piano when someone suddenly picked her up and sat her on the end of the bar, instead. She threw back her head and laughed and when she did, the men in the room laughed with her. Then she looked over at Pete, who was waiting for her to begin.
Letty cleared her throat. The room began to settle. She had a good voice, but it never occurred to her as she sang that her life was a perfect analogy for the small brown bird to which she listened each night. She would never have admitted, not even to herself, that through her songs, she was calling for a mate of her own.
“Mother, oh Mother, where did I go wrong?
I was a good boy until I left your sweet home.
Now I sleep on the ground and spend my days on the run, with nothing to remind me of you but this song.”
The poignancy of the words blended with the pure notes of Letty’s voice, bringing more than one wild cowboy to tears. Before she was through, the room had gone completely quiet. Even the gambler at the back of the room had laid down his cards and was leaning forward, his elbows on the table, his gaze fixed on Letty’s face.
His name was James Dupree. He’d been at the White Dove for exactly six days now, and each night he found himself drawn to the woman sitting at the end of the bar. He knew her name was Leticia Murphy, but she called herself Letty. In her youth, he figured she must have been quite a looker, but the hard life and the years had etched their own brand of scars on her face. The smile on her lips never quite reached her eyes, and her laugh was too brittle to be believed. Still, there was something about her that drew him. Maybe tonight he’d make it his business to do more than