The air was stale with smoke. Leaning over, she struggled to open a window without getting up. Ben cursed under his breath and did it for her, and she made a face as she waved ineffectually at the air.
"Are you going to make a habit of this?" she asked.
"I liked the smell of Daddy's cigars much better."
Ben stubbed out a cigarette and raked a hand through his dark hair. "I might not have enough time to develop a habit," he said curtly.
"Meaning?”
"Meaning that if I'm not dry-gulched by some well meaning vigilante committee soon, I'll probably be taken out and hanged by the sheriff and a posse, nice and legal. I'm the most likely suspect. Everyone knows it. "
"But I've provided your alibi. I said you were with me that night. "
He shook his head, scowling morosely. "They think you're lying to protect me."
Addie sighed and pressed her palms to her temples, desperate to remember the name she’d given to Jeff. Inside her mind somewhere was the truth. She closed her eyes and pressed harder, wishing she could squeeze out the memory. But her returning memories were infrequent and almost always incomplete.
"It's one of our own men," she said, curling her fingers into her hair as if she would tug it out, disheveling the perfectly coiffed braids. "Surely one of them knows something, or suspects something. Why isn't anyone saying anything? They wouldn't really protect one of their own even if he was a murderer, would they?"
"I don't know," Ben muttered, beginning to pace again. "I wouldn't have thought so."
Later that evening, as the family sat down to dinner in the main house, Ben strode in with a distracted expression. They all glanced up at him as he looked at Addie and spoke quietly.
"I've got some business to take care of. I might be gone until morning."
Addie's skin prickled with awareness. Something had happened. "Anything serious?" she asked with forced calm, and he shrugged.
"I won't know until later."
Slowly Addie took the napkin from her lap and put it on the table. "I'll walk you to the door," she said, darting a cautious glance at May, who offered no objection. As soon as they left the room, Addie clung to his arm. His muscles were taut. "What is it?" she whispered anxiously.
"One of the boys admitted to having seen one of the beds in the bunkhouse empty during the night of the murder."
"Whose?"
"Watts's."
"But… but he's taken me and Caro to town lots of times, and you had him watch over the house so many nights while we were all asleep-"
"I can't prove he's the one. It's only a suspicion." Addie took a deep breath and held on to his arm more tightly. "Where are you going now?" she whispered.
"To visit his sister."
"But… she's a prostitute."
"Hell, Addie, I'm not going to bed her. I'm just going to ask her some questions."
"She's not going to tell you anything to implicate her own brother, even if she knows something. Oh, Ben, I don't like this at all-"
"She's just a girl. A girl who likes money." He frowned as he looked down at her, prying his arm loose from her grasp. "And I don't have much to lose by visiting with her. In the meantime, don't worry about Watts. He's staying far away from the house in a line shack tonight, guarding the edge of the property. "
"Ben," Addie said, her forehead furrowed, "she might try to get you to sleep with her. I know you and I haven't been together lately, but-"
"Oh, good Lord." Ben laughed suddenly. "If you think there's a danger of the two of us…" He continued to laugh, shaking his head as he went out the door. "For your sake, I'll do my best to control myself." She scowled as she watched him go, wondering what he thought was so funny.
In the cowboy's lingo, an especially dirty saloon or dance hall was called a dive. The place where Jennie Watts worked, the Do-Drop-In, deserved a new word all its own. It was filthy and noisy, the floors sticky, the customers raucous, the music boisterous. Ben ambled in and ordered a drink, discovering shortly thereafter that the cheap whiskey deserved its nickname of "rotgut." Ben drank sparingly, eyeing the fleshy girls and their skimpy clothes until he saw a bosomy dark-haired girl whose face reminded him of Watts. Lightly he caught her arm, and she automatically raised a hand to swing at him until she saw his face. Then she put the upraised hand to her hair, smoothing the stray wisps back as she smiled at him.
"Hey, han 'some. "
"Are you Jennie Watts?" It was unorthodox to ask someone's name. Part of the unwritten code was to wait until a stranger decided to identify himself-or herself. But this was a whore, and she couldn't afford to be offended too easily.
"Jennie's busy. But I'm not."
"Where is she?"
The girl frowned a little. "Upstairs. Don't know when she'll come down, neither."
He gave her a cajoling smile and slipped a few dollars into her hand. "Will this help you remember to tell me when she does?"
She smiled saucily, her palm closing around the money. "Maybe." She wiggled her backside enticingly as she walked off, causing Ben to submerge a grin in his drink. It was only a few minutes later that she returned to nudge him with her elbow while carrying a tray of empty glasses. He looked at the narrow stairs leading to the upstairs rooms and saw a girl just reaching the bottom step. She was young, thin and hard-faced, with exotic blue eyes set against strikingly pale skin. In a few strides he was at her side.
"Pardon me… Jennie Watts?"
She glanced up at him through adult eyes in a child's face, and the combination made him vaguely uneasy. "Why do you want to know?" she asked, surprisingly deep-voiced.
"If you are, I'd like a few minutes of your time. "
"You want to dance first?"
"No, I-"
"Then come on." She turned and went upstairs, leaving him to follow. They went into a small, sparsely furnished room where the air reeked of sex and liquor. Ben glanced at the unmade bed and stained sheets, his eyes expressionless. The girl sat on the comer of the bed and began to unbutton the front of her dress.
"Wait," Ben said, and she paused, her eyes cold as they rested on him.
"You want it with my dress on?"
"I just want to talk."
Jennie swore under her breath and stood up, pointing to the door. "Get out."
He pulled out a few bills, holding them between his first two fingers. "I intend to pay for your time."
Leisurely she walked over to the small table by the bed and lit a cigarette, regarding him through a haze of smoke. She didn't ask who he was. It didn't matter as long as his money was green.
"What do you want to talk about?" she asked.
"Your brother."
She hesitated, then gave a short nod. "Yeah?"
"You seen him lately? Talked to him?"
"Maybe."
"Has he come into any money lately? Maybe even asked you to keep it for him?"
She looked at him silently, lifting the cigarette to her lips and taking a long drag. She had something worthwhile to tell.
"I have great respect for family loyalty," Ben continued, looking at her intently. "But it has been known to come with a price tag." He made a move to reach for his wallet again, then paused, waiting for her answer.
"Don't everything?" And she watched with an appraising gleam in her blue eyes as he tossed a wad of bills onto the bed.
Addie curled up in the comer of the slickly upholstered parlor sofa, feet tucked underneath her. The house was hushed as the family slumbered upstairs, the only sound the methodical ticking of the clock. An unread book was spread open in her lap. Occasionally she would tum a page, her hands compelled to do something. She looked up as she heard quiet feet on the stairs, and saw Cade enter the room, dressed in his cotton nightshirt and a pair of worn-out breeches. He looked tired and grumpy, his feet dragging as he walked over to the sofa and flopped down at the other end.