All in Good Time (The Gilded Legacy)

12




DESSA PUSHED AGAIN on the bar that boarded the doors to the empty carriage house. It was either such a tight fit inside the latch that it stuck, or it had been sealed somehow. Most likely the doors hadn’t been opened in years; certainly they hadn’t been opened since she’d moved in. Glancing around for something to pry apart the wide double doors, sparing her fingers in the process, she found a slim and sturdy stick that might have been fashioned for just such a task.

Fearing that even the stick wasn’t strong enough, she was about to give up when the board popped out of place. The doors sprang free, nearly hitting her in the face in their eagerness to open.

She peered inside the old building, only half surprised to see the sun lighting the area from above. Looking up, she spotted a hole in the roof just as she heard the scampering of some small animal in the opposite corner. A squirrel with fat cheeks flicked a curly tail. It ran one direction, then the other before disappearing under an opening beneath one of the walls.

She needed to find some kind of suitable wood in here to add to the sign Mr. Ridgeway had brought. Looking around, not immediately finding any prospects, she pondered prying a wallboard loose if nothing else was available. One at the rear appeared to be hanging precariously already. Obviously the rickety shelter offered little protection from wildlife, so removing a board would make little difference.

When the doors had opened so violently, they’d loosed what she guessed to be years of dust and dirt from their crevices. But now that her eyes had adjusted to the relative darkness, she realized the carriage house was far more orderly than she would have expected of a place with a hole in the roof and wild animals living inside. There was even a cot set off to the side, narrow but complete with a pillow and blanket. An old jacket was cast over the foot.

The dusty floor was empty except for a rusted and abandoned hitch, a few broken pieces of wood that may have come from the roof, and a curiously placed bowl in the corner, near the spot where the squirrel had been hiding. If she didn’t know better, she’d say it had been storing nuts there, from the few left in the center. Didn’t squirrels bury nuts and seeds?

Deciding against taking the wallboard—at least having it in place, even if it was wobbly, gave a brief impression the building was still sound—she fought with the doors to close them again, then brushed her gingham skirt free of soil as she made her way back inside the house.

She would speak to Mr. Ridgeway about where he’d acquired the wood for the sign he’d given her. It was likely best to have her addition match his anyway, if she was to attract anyone with it.



“Come in,” Henry responded to the knock at his office door.

As expected, Mr. Sprott stuck his head around the door, though he did not step inside. “There is a Mr. . . . Smith . . . to see you, sir. He doesn’t have an appointment.” Then Mr. Sprott entered after all, leaving the door open behind him as he stepped closer to Henry’s desk. “He’s quite young and seems a bit nervous,” he whispered, “and asked to speak to the bank president alone. Should I send him off?”

Henry did not need to leave his desk to give the visitor the benefit of a glance. He could easily be seen just outside the open office door, staring intently in the direction of the vault.

The boy was slight of build and did indeed look as nervous as Mr. Sprott claimed, with one hand in his pocket and the other twitching now and then. He was narrow-shouldered and couldn’t be more than eighteen years of age by the smoothness of his chin. Though it was a somewhat shadowed chin. Dirt? Surely he was too young to have much of a beard. By the simple black cap that covered him from nape to crown and the rough cut of his jacket, Henry guessed whatever business he had with the bank was inconsequential at best. Another miner looking for an investor, no doubt. One so scrawny wasn’t likely to go far.

Henry was about to tell Mr. Sprott to send the boy on his way when he spotted Miss Caldwell going into Tobias’s office.

The sight of her simultaneously intrigued and alarmed him. There was only one reason he could imagine for her visit to his bank, and particularly to Tobias’s office. She probably wanted to borrow more money.

“Send him in,” Henry told his clerk. If the boy wanted anything of the slightest interest, he could provide the excuse Henry needed to make his way into Tobias’s office before Miss Caldwell left.



“Yes, that’s right,” Dessa told Mr. Ridgeway, who had immediately, even happily, ushered her into his office. “I’d like it hung just below the one you’ve already provided.”

“And it’s to say what, exactly?” Mr. Ridgeway picked up a pencil.

“‘Free Beauty Lessons, Tuesdays at Two.’ Would that be too many words, do you suppose? Can it easily fit on a piece of wood roughly the same size as the Pierson House sign?”

“Oh yes, yes, I’m sure my man can make it to your specifications.” Still, he looked baffled. “But why would you want to offer such lessons? Won’t that . . . well, won’t it encourage women in the business you’re trying to discourage?”

She leaned forward, allowing her smile to broaden. “That’s just it, Mr. Ridgeway. The beauty lessons I’m proposing will be to beautify the soul. Because after all, God has the power to make everything beautiful, hasn’t He? We’ve only to look at what He’s created to see that. I’m willing to stoop to whatever ploy I need to get them inside the door. How do you like my idea?”

He stroked his smooth double chin. “Well, of course I have so little experience with such . . .” But before he’d even finished his sentence, he offered her a smile with a twinkle in his eye. “It’s worth a try, Miss Caldwell. I’ll have the sign readied immediately and come by to affix it myself before the week is over. Will next Tuesday be soon enough to offer your first lesson?”

Dessa stood and extended her hand to him. “Oh yes, and thank you, Mr. Ridgeway! God has blessed me through you once again. I’m very grateful.”

He led her outside his office, one hand politely at her elbow. “I’m sure you’re full of wonderful ideas, Miss Caldwell,” he was saying, but just then his gaze left hers for a spot beyond her shoulder.

Dessa turned to see what he was looking at. She’d hoped not to run into Mr. Hawkins, but there he was, just emerging from his office. A shorter man, and younger—surely no more than a boy—held Mr. Hawkins’s arm at an odd angle, nearly behind his back. That Mr. Hawkins would allow such contact was curious indeed, until Dessa saw the desperate look on the young man’s shadowy face, glimpsed only when he twisted his head from side to side to see beyond the brim of a hat that was too large.

“Stand back!” Though no one had approached, the boy yelled the words anyway, waving a glass vial above his head. His high-pitched voice alone betrayed his youth. “Everybody! Stand where you are. Don’t move!”

Mr. Hawkins held out his free arm, palm down, as if to offer what comfort he could. Though he appeared stiff, on edge, he was not in a panic.

The youth pushed Mr. Hawkins forward, and the banker obliged by walking steadily toward the vault. Neither Mr. Hawkins nor the boy with the strange glass vial ever looked Dessa’s way.

Whispers sprang up in every direction. Mr. Sprott, the clerk Dessa had met on previous visits, stepped forward, but Mr. Hawkins shifted his palm upward to halt the clerk’s progress.

“He has nitro, Mr. Sprott,” Mr. Hawkins said, far more calmly than the boy at his back had spoken a moment ago. His pronouncement sparked such stark terror in the mild clerk that even before the words registered in Dessa’s mind, she felt his fear. “You’ll want to stand still so you don’t startle this man into dropping the vial. All of you.” Mr. Hawkins raised his voice, but only in volume, not in alarm. “Just let him go about his business and it’ll be over in a moment. That’s it. Calmly.”

Dessa watched, heart thumping, as Mr. Hawkins opened the bars that stood as the first deterrent to entering the massive vault behind them. During business hours the money was evidently rather easy to access, based on the mere moments it took Mr. Hawkins to fill a bag while the young man dangled the glass vial of powerful nitroglycerin—a substance that could easily bite away chunks of the Rocky Mountains to uncover gold and silver hiding within.

What would happen if he dropped that vial here? Surely the vault, and everyone around it, would be blasted to the sky. Including Mr. Hawkins.

Mr. Ridgeway, at Dessa’s side, took a small step forward—but only far enough to stand in front of Dessa. She peered around his shoulder to watch as the boy received a bag filled with notes and greenbacks—perhaps even some gold, judging from the heavy appearance of the bag.

Then, in possession of what he’d come for, the youth turned on his heel and ran toward the bank door.

Only to trip and land sprawled on the floor not three feet from freedom.

Dessa was sure she wasn’t the only one to close her eyes in sheer terror, preparing for impact. She raised her hands to cover her face—but nothing, absolutely nothing happened.

Before even the first shriek sounded, Dessa saw Mr. Hawkins chase after the boy. The youth had barely regained his footing before the banker seized him round the waist, tackling him to the floor and directly into the small puddle of whatever innocuous liquid had been in that vial.

The bag of money tumbled from his grip, spewing its contents much as the vial had.

With the would-be thief already down, people gathered round, Dessa among them. A clerk gathered up the loot, replacing it in the sack.

Mr. Hawkins’s jacket was askew, his hair fallen down over his brow, but he was the first to his feet. Somehow he managed to keep hold of the boy’s collar, and as the guard who evidently was just outside the building was summoned, Mr. Hawkins thrust the thief toward the confines of his office. They both disappeared inside.

“You’ll excuse me, won’t you, Miss Caldwell?” Mr. Ridgeway had clearly been disturbed by the incident, as evidenced by the beads of sweat on his forehead and upper lip.

“Oh, of course! But may I stay? It’s all such a blur. . . . I need a moment to catch my breath.”

It wasn’t entirely the truth, since she’d left out her urge to assure herself that Mr. Hawkins was unharmed. Though why that was the first thought on her mind she did not know. How heroic he’d been, to catch the thief that way!

“Yes, of course,” said Mr. Ridgeway. “Come with me, if you like. It appears we weren’t in any danger after all.” Then, pulling a handkerchief from his pocket and briefly rubbing his face, he followed the path the bank’s security officer took to Mr. Hawkins’s office.



Henry could still feel the blood pumping madly through his veins, amid a swirl of leftover fear. Fear that was being replaced by relief, triumph, and anger.

But looking down at the boy—who surely must be near the age Henry was when he’d more successfully tried the same line of work—that anger suddenly transformed into a mix of wrath and guilt. It was the first time Henry had felt what those on the coaches must have felt all those years ago.

“That was the most rattle-headed attempt at a bank robbery I’ve ever seen,” he told the boy. “What’s your name?”

“S-Smith.”

Henry shook his head. “No. I want your real name.”

The boy slumped in his chair, as if he’d just now surrendered to the fact that he’d failed. “Murphy.”

“Well, Mr. Murphy, do you know the punishment for attempted bank robbery?”

He nodded but kept his face lowered so that his large hat hid most of it. “I saw a man hung for robbing banks. In Nebraska.”

Henry patted the boy’s shoulder, only now realizing he was even slighter than Henry thought beneath a jacket several sizes too large. If he hadn’t been so fooled by that vial of water, he’d have seen this whelp thrown out the doors in no time at all. The boy was built for neither mining nor robbing. “One failed attempt is more likely to send you to jail than a hanging, boy. Unless you’ve made other, more successful attempts in the past?”

He shook his head slowly. “No, sir. This is my first time.”

“Well, Henry, I didn’t expect to hear you comforting the rascal. Who have we here?”

Henry looked up to see his uncle, followed by his security guard, Mr. Wilson, and Miss Caldwell. A swell of emotion followed. Regret that Miss Caldwell had to witness such a scene, relief that they were all spared, a touch of unexpected pride that she’d been there to see him best the boy instead of being a victim of such a prank. And frustration that it mattered.

“This is Mr. Murphy.” He addressed his security officer. “I want you to make sure this boy is confined here in my office while we find out if he has family, Mr. Wilson. Then, if he does, you’ll bring his parents here.”

Murphy’s eyes rounded so wide that Henry noticed the boy’s face for the first time. Indeed, it was dirt along his jawline. And his eyes were feathered by thicker lashes than he’d have expected. “You aren’t . . . sending for the police?”

Henry stared down at the boy, pleased when he cowered. “Do you want to go to jail?”

“No, sir.”

“Then you’ll cooperate by telling Mr. Wilson and me what we want to know, won’t you?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Start by taking off that hat.” But when Henry reached for it, the boy raised his hands in defense, as if Henry had been about to strike him. “I just want a look at you, boy.”

Tobias stepped forward. “Show some respect for those who have the power to send you to jail, will you? He only wants you to remove your hat.”

“I—I’d rather keep it on, if you please.” He kept his face averted and a hand at each side of his hat, staring at the floor again. “But I’m grateful to you, sir, for not sending for the police.”

Henry looked away from him to allow a glance in Miss Caldwell’s direction. He might have felt embarrassed over the pleased—albeit surprised—smile he saw on her face. Perhaps she was glad he wasn’t intent on sending the youth to jail, where he belonged. But a new commotion at his office door drew his attention before he could ponder those thoughts. Mr. Sprott was there, followed quickly by Ed Ruffin, the policeman who regularly patrolled the neighborhood. Henry frowned anew.

“What’s this I hear about an attempted robbery?” Ruffin asked, stepping around Mr. Sprott to stop before the boy’s chair in front of Henry’s desk.

“No need to bother you with this, Ruffin,” Henry said. “It was just a prank. A foolish one by a foolish youth. Nothing more.”

Ruffin shifted the billy club hanging on his belt, looking now at Henry, this time with confusion. “You don’t want me to arrest him?”

“No, Mr. Ruffin. That won’t be necessary.” Then he glowered at the boy again. “Not this time, at any rate. If I learn he’s tried this before, or if he tries it again, my charges can be made then.”

Murphy lifted his terror-filled face, a face Henry was beginning to see in a whole new light. “I promise you I’ve never done anything like this before. And I won’t again; I swear I won’t.”

“Yes, well, so far you haven’t given me much reason to trust your word, so we’ll see whether or not you’re telling the truth. Get comfortable, Murphy. It’s going to be a long afternoon.”

Henry directed everyone from his office, though he had an idea to keep Miss Caldwell behind. When she paused at the door, he knew she had something to say, even though she seemed hesitant to utter it.

“Yes, Miss Caldwell?” he prompted. Perhaps she wouldn’t mind staying a moment longer, at least until he could prove or disprove what he suspected of Murphy. For one, why he was so tall but possessed a voice that was yet to change. . . .

“It appears you believe as I do after all, Mr. Hawkins,” she whispered. “Everyone deserves a second chance.”

“You may be a bit generous toward me in your assessment, Miss Caldwell. I wonder, though, if you might stay a moment?”

Her brows rose. “Yes, of course, if there is anything I can do.”

Henry lowered his voice. “I wonder if you might be more successful in asking Murphy to remove his hat?”

Now her brows drew together, as she turned from him to gaze at the back of Murphy’s head. She approached the boy’s side. “I wonder, Mr. Murphy, if you would take off your hat?”

He stared at the floor again, but shook his head.

“Is there some reason you don’t want to remove it?”

He shook his head yet again.

Henry’s impatience grew by the moment, so that he was nearly tempted to forcefully pull away the offending garment and see for himself whether his suspicions were founded in fact or fancy.

But before he could do so, Miss Caldwell knelt before the boy and laid a gentle touch on his hands. No sooner had she done so than her eyes widened and she sent a surprised glance Henry’s way. Then he knew he wasn’t wrong, and she’d figured out what Henry guessed.

“Is Murphy your first name or last?” Miss Caldwell gently inquired.

“Last.”

“And what’s your first name? The name your mother calls you?”

“My mother’s dead.”

“And your father?”

He swiped at his face with a sniffle. “Dead too. Just last month.”

“Well, what did they call you before they died?”

“Jane.”

Then the girl who was dressed as a boy burst into tears.