Gabriel's Lady. Ana Seymour
a shake and stood. One of Caroline Prescott’s favorite phrases was, “Never underestimate the power of the human spirit.” Surely her mother’s daughter could not let herself be daunted by an unasked-for stint of pioneering.
She brushed her hands together resolutely. The room was sparse and crude, but it didn’t have to be dirty. Her first order of business would be to give this place a good, thorough cleaning. She marched across the room and flung open the door to call to Morgan, who was at the river’s edge sifting a cradleful of sludge.
“Does my brother have any cleaning supplies in the lean-to?” she called.
Morgan laughed. “Cleaning supplies?”
“Brushes, brooms, buckets, soap.”
With no apparent effort, the Welshman pulled on a thick rope and hoisted the heavy cradle into an idle position. Then he came over to her. “I don’t think so, Missy. What do you want those things for?”
“To clean, of course. If this is to be our home for the next few weeks, the least I can do is try to make things a little more livable.”
Morgan peered into the tiny cabin with a doubtful expression. “It would be quite a task, if you ask me.”
“Well, it would give me something to do. Obviously Parker doesn’t want me hanging over him while he’s mining. So I’ve decided that I’ll just take over the housework and the cooking.”
“The cooking?” While money was not abundant in the Prescott household with all that was spent on their parents’ respective crusades, the family had never been without a cook and a maid.
Amelia nodded firmly. “I don’t know why not. I have two good hands and a brain in my head. It can’t be that hard to learn. We’ll start by going into town and picking up some supplies.”
“Yes, ma’am,” Morgan said, shaking his head.
There seemed to be no way to lock up the cabin, so they merely shut the door, saddled up their horses and rode away, leaving everything unprotected, as appeared to be the custom in this strange land. They headed back across the beautiful meadow, then followed the twisting path into town. Amelia’s spirits rose as they went. It felt good to be doing something, to have a purpose. Parker would feel better, too, she decided, when she told him that she was going to leave him alone to his mining operations and that she would take care of having a clean house and a nice hot meal ready for him each day. Perhaps if she made him happy enough, he would agree to give up his trips to town.
When they reached the main street, she told Morgan, “I’m going to send a wire to Mother and Father letting them know that we’ll be heading back in six weeks. I don’t know exactly how I’ll explain the delay, but I’ll think of something. In the meantime, I’d like you to look for Parker.”
Morgan frowned as he tied their mounts to the rail in front of the telegraph office. “I don’t like leaving you alone, Missy. And, anyway, where am I supposed to find that wild brother of yours?”
Amelia shrugged. “I believe he mentioned an establishment called the Lucky Horseshoe.”
Morgan’s frown deepened. “Now, Missy, you know very well that I haven’t been inside a saloon these past twenty years.”
Amelia bit her lip. “I didn’t say you had to drink anything, Morgan. Just fetch him out of there. Tell him I want to talk with him.”
“I don’t know…”
Amelia gave him a gentle shove. “Go on with you. I’ll send my wire and then meet the two of you at the general store.”
His big boots shuffling against the fine dust of the street, Morgan headed down the row of saloons toward a large building at one end that sported an awning and a shellacked sign painted with an upside-down horseshoe.
Tinny piano music drifted out through the saloon’s wide-open door. Morgan took a deep breath, set his shoulders and walked in.
Gambling tables covered with green felt filled over half of the large, smoky room. Clustered next to the bar were a few smaller tables just for drinking. Most were empty. A busty woman with bright yellow hair sat on a stool next to the bar, her crossed legs revealing the grimy ruffles of at least three petticoats.
Morgan paused at the door and squinted through the smoke at the gambling tables.
“Hey, big fella,” the woman at the bar called to him. “Wanna buy me a drink?”
He walked slowly toward her, politely removing his hat as he went. “I’m just here looking for a friend, ma’am.”
“I can be right friendly when I want to be, Samson.” Her eyelashes were crusted with kohl. Close up she looked much older than she had from the door. There was no welcome in her eyes to match her words.
“Ah…the name’s Morgan, ma’am. Morgan Jones. But I really just came to find a fellow name of Parker Prescott. Would you know him, by any chance?”
She smiled. “Parker’s a regular. And a right pretty boy he is, too.” The thickened lashes fluttered up and down. “But I prefer the strong silent type, don’t ya know. So how’s about that drink?”
Morgan shifted his weight from one foot to the other. “Ah…have you seen Parker around here this afternoon?”
The woman leaned back against the bar and turned her head to call to the bartender at the far end. “Roscoe, this fellow here doesn’t want to have a drink with me.”
The words were slurred, and as she swung around she teetered for a moment at the edge of the stool. Morgan put out a hand to steady her.
“No sampling of the merchandise,” said a voice behind him. “If you want Stella’s company, you’d better buy a drink.”
Morgan turned around. The man in back of him was a middle-aged man, elegantly dressed with a bright silk vest that stretched over a banker’s paunch. His cheeks were slightly flabby and his hands looked soft. He had thinning hair that he’d greased and pulled over to one side. Normally Morgan would have brushed off such a man like a bread crumb on a tablecloth, but there was something in the fellow’s expression that gave him pause. The man smiled and stood politely awaiting Morgan’s answer. His steel-colored eyes held a deadly expression that matched the deadliness of the longbarreled Colt Special tucked into his belt.
“I don’t drink, sir,” Morgan said softly.
The man’s smile grew broader. “Well, now. That’s a strange thing to say for a man standing in the middle of a saloon. Or did you think this was the Ladies’ Aid Society?”
Morgan held his temper. “I’m just looking for Parker Prescott.”
The man hesitated for a minute, then seemed to make a decision. He clapped Morgan on the back and said heartily, “Any friend of Parker’s is welcome here, my good fellow. I take it you’re new in town.”
Reluctantly Morgan introduced himself.
“I’m Jim Driscoll. Big Jim, most folks call me.” He patted a hand on his stomach and laughed. He pushed the woman roughly off the stool. “Go on upstairs and get some coffee to sober up, Stella,” he told her. “How’re you supposed to last out the night when you’re sotted before sunset?”
She stumbled away from the bar and headed toward the stairs at the end of the room. Driscoll indicated the seat she had vacated. “Sit down, Jones. The first one’s on the house for a new customer.”
Morgan didn’t move. “Thank you for the offer, Mr. Driscoll, but as I said before, I don’t drink. If Parker’s not here, I’ll just be moving along.”
“Something wrong with our liquor, man?” Two cowboys, one with two Smith & Wessons holstered in a double gunbelt and one with a Colt Peacemaker stuffed into his pants, had quietly come up along either side of Driscoll. Morgan took a step backward but found himself up against the long bar. “I’m not here for trouble,”