Chapter 2
When the other boarders in Mrs. Pincher’s rooming house began to stir, Temperance made herself rise to wash her face and brush out her hair, even though she’d only had four hours of sleep.
Her thoughts immediately turned to the mysterious Owen. She had been tempted to ask the other miners about him, but one didn’t flirt with one man by asking about another.
Besides, she had no interest in him. She refused to be intrigued by him.
She was lucky she hadn’t woken anyone, including Mrs. Pincher’s dog, when she had used a pilfered key to slip in after two. Mrs. Pincher only took in respectable long-term boarders. She preferred married couples, but she had made an exception for Temperance, seeing as her father was joining her soon.
Temperance’s wages and tips for the night at Dudley’s had amounted to a dollar ninety-five. She ought to give all of it to Mrs. Pincher for her overdue rent, but she recounted it, then wrapped it in a handkerchief, leaving out the quarter that the stage office charged for receiving a letter, should one be there from her father.
She examined her purse, wondering if she could get anything for it. She had mended the hole in the ruched silk and the bright green hadn’t faded. Only one bead was missing off the leather trim.
She sighed. Whatever she got wouldn’t go very far. Not nearly far enough. What on earth is keeping these men who had offered Papa a contract?
“You turned in early last night,” Mrs. Pincher said when Temperance came to the table for a bowl of porridge.
“I did.” Temperance flicked her gaze around the room, ensuring she hadn’t seen any of her fellow boarders in Dudley’s last night.
“But you didn’t sleep well? You look tired. Do I smell cigar? Gentlemen, I’ve asked you not to smoke in the house.”
Temperance resisted the urge to sniff her sleeve and ate her porridge in short order.
When she rose, Mrs. Pincher asked, “You’re going out this morning, Miss Goodrich?”
“To the stage office, yes.”
“Your father is arriving?”
“I hope so.” It was the same conversation they had every morning, and it was wearing thin with both of them. “Then I’ll see if Mr. Gardner has come to town.” The man’s name seemed to carry weight, so she dropped it as often as she had to.
Please let him be here.
The sanctimonious Mrs. Pincher had started out amiable and motherly but had grown as frosty as these fall mornings when Temperance had been unable to pay her rent last Thursday. Papa wouldn’t have much more in his pockets than Temperance did, but his arrival would reassure Mrs. Pincher that they were, in fact, here to accept gainful employment.
Ifthese men from the Venturous Mining Company turned up as promised.
Temperance had been told the stage office here in Denver or the mercantile in Auraria were the best places to learn whether one of the partners had come to town. The stage office was closer, so she always started there.
“Shall I take Clarence with me?” Temperance asked after she had fetched her coat and gloves.
Mrs. Pincher made a noise that Temperance didn’t know how to decipher so she left him at home. It was too bad. The dog was good company when she made her daily trek. Not much protection, though. The yellow mutt had a tail that wagged the rest of him, and his mission was to buddy up to everyone he met.
Without his oblivious cheer lightening her step, a morose mood closed in on her. The weak sunshine held little warmth, and what leaves were left on the trees were yellow and burnt orange. There was a sense of urgency permeating the town that was almost tangible. Everyone knew that cold nights meant decisions had to be made. Would they stay and tough out the winter? Or go back to wherever they’d come from?
Then there were those infernal mountains, looming over her like a monstrous wave about to crest.
Twelve days ago, the sight of those distant peaks, vaguely reminiscent of the sails on ships in Chicago Harbor, had given Temperance a lift of hope. She had been relieved to see them as she came off the sea of the prairies to arrive at her destination.
They had continued to grow in height, though. So much height. She had seen the mountains of Upper Canada. They were nothing compared to these towering behemoths that stood as a formidable wall against the sky, hemming her in.
If the mountains made a mockery of her understanding of mountains, Denver City undercut her definition of a city. It was more like an ants’ nest turned over by a plow. People moved with purpose in every direction except for those who wandered aimlessly, begging.
That won’t be me. It won’t.
But she could still hear her stepmother saying, “You cannot stay in this house.”
A knot formed in Temperance’s stomach. She forced her attention to her surroundings again, amazed anew at how much growth seemed to happen overnight. Commercial buildings of all sorts were establishing themselves between the houses. Homesteads were in every stage of construction and were fashioned from every type of material. Some were ragged tents or sod huts dug into the earth. Others were rectangular structures of stacked logs or a weatherboard building like Mrs. Pincher’s. A few had a coat of whitewash and a garden. Two had an upper floor.
She had been warned that Pike’s Peak was a hardscrabble place. A humbug. Every emigrant she had passed on her way here became more credible by the day. There’s nothing there, they had said. No gold. No chance at a life. Nothing of civilized order.
A brawl on the boardwalk ahead of her proved it. She lifted her skirts and crossed the manure-strewn street to the other side.
Despite its primitive, rough-and-tumble reputation, the town wanted a railroad. At least, the Venturous Mining Company did, or so one of its owners, Mr. Gardner, had claimed in his correspondence with her father.
Temperance had written back to him, outlining her father’s credentials and his typical compensation with an additional allowance for travel expenses, accommodation, the hiring of guides, and other sundries.
If you make your way here, we can provide you meals and accommodation for the duration of your stay,Mr. Gardner had replied. Our partner, Tom, knows these mountains better than anyone. Once the report is finished, I will purchase you a stage ticket for your travel home. Either I, or one of my partners, visit Denver City weekly. You’ll have no trouble finding us on your arrival. We’re all well known.
She was trying not to lose faith in this entire endeavor, especially since coming here as summer waned had been her idea. Her father had wanted to wait until spring, but she’d been desperate to prove she wasn’t a burden or a shame to her family.
She was a necessary assistant to him. She was a valuable contributor to the family.
Well, not at the moment. Despite her daily inquiries, she hadn’t been able to locate the Venturous Mining partners. No one had seen any of them since the end of September. Apparently, Temperance had arrived the day after Mr. Gardner had married his wife and took her back to their camp—which was some forty miles away.
Given how her luck was running these days, she presumed they’d all contracted cholera and perished, leaving her doomed to a similar fate.
She paused across the street from the Leavenworth and Pike’s Peak Express office, taking in the painful fact that her father wasn’t among those lingering on the boardwalk with trunks and other luggage. She hadn’t really expected him. That would take a small miracle.
A queue was forming, though, indicating the stagecoach and mail had arrived. She waited for a milk wagon to jangle past with its bed of empty cannisters before she crossed and took her place at the end.
She dug out her quarter while she waited, as though holding it pinched between her finger and thumb would ensure there was news from her father. Good news.
The queue moved in fits and starts as some men requested the postmaster read their letter to them to ensure it was really for him. It was a ruse many played. Some genuinely couldn’t read their own letter. Others wished to avoid paying for correspondence that carried bad news.
“Dear Francis,” she could hear the postmaster’s voice as she neared the window. “I write with the sorry news that your wife has taken up with the brewer at the public house?—”
“That’s not mine,” the man grumbled. He slapped his hat onto his head before storming off.
It was the third time she’d witnessed something similar.
Temperance touched the edge of her collar, waiting while the man’s companion stuck his head in the window to inquire about his own letters.
“Good morning, Buster. Can I buy your place in line?” a man asked behind her.
All the skin on her body seemed to tighten while a hot ball of sunshine burst within her. She knew that voice!
She snapped her head around to see Owen. He wore the faintest hint of golden stubble and his eyelids were heavy and lazy. He dominated her vision like those infernal, muscled mountain peaks, intimidating, yet somehow glittering and radiant. His eyes were bright blue, his smile knowing.
“Sure, Owen. Happy to.” The other man accepted the coins that Owen dropped into his palm.
“My business isn’t urgent.” Temperance tried to keep the ring of desperation out of her voice. “Why didn’t you ask me?”
“Then I wouldn’t have an excuse to stand here and chat with you, would I?”
Oh, she wished his deep voice didn’t rope her in so easily.
Him and his charm. She glanced ahead, hoping to be called to the window, but the miner there must have been happy with the contents of his letter. The postmaster was relaying the happy news that a baby girl had arrived safely.
“How are you today, Rose?”
Infuriated that Mr. Buster was walking to the end of the line with a dollar she sorely needed. The sound of his coins echoed in her ears while her face felt as though it was sunburned.
“So much better now you’re here.” She tucked a stray hair into the edge of her bonnet. “I hope I’ll see you later, as well?” She meant at the saloon where he would hopefully tip her again.
“Oy. Who’s that cutting in?” someone toward the end of the queue called out.
“Owen Stames,” replied the man behind Owen.
“That rounder! He was chasing skirt in the cathouse when I left it this morning. I suppose that’s why he’s too busy to wait in line like the rest of us?”
The cathouse. Temperance lifted her brows.
Owen Stames didn’t seem bothered by having his private habits made public. He was amused by the stir he’d caused and tried to turn Temperance into the embarrassed one by holding her gaze, daring her to remark on what she’d heard.
If she had been the virginal, upstanding woman of six months ago, she would have huffed with indignation and distanced herself. Instead, shewas a woman who had fallen from grace and was now banished from her home and the decent society her family had raised her in. She was a saloon girl facing a man who suffered no ill consequence for his congress out of wedlock. It was deeply unfair and made her want to stomp on his foot.
“Careful,” she said with a falsely sweet smile. “Chasing leads to catching.”
The noise that came out of him was somewhere between a sputter and the honk of a goose.
“Listen, Owen.” The grumbling behind him subsided as a bearded, dusty miner leaned forward to tug at Owen’s sleeve. “You can’t just pay the man at the front so you can cut in line and take up half our day while they sort your mail.”
“But I can, hoss,” he said over his shoulder. “If you’d like enough dust in your pocket to do the same, come see us. We’re always looking for hard workers. We pay a fair wage.”
“I have my own claim to work.”
“Offer’s always open,” Owen said mildly.
“Ma’am?” the postmaster called.
“Oh.” The man before her had finally moved on. Temperance quickly stepped forward with her most pleasant smile, even though she was still unsettled by Owen’s chasing skirt.
It only affirmed what a reprobate he was, but it still bothered her, probably because she couldn’t shake her infernal awareness of him. In fact, she felt as though his stare was traveling all over the crushed back of her gown.
“Good morning,” she greeted the clerk. “I’m wondering if you’ve received?—”
“Goodrich?” He recognized her.
“Yes.” She had her quarter at the ready.
“Nothing.”
“Oh.” She was exactly like these disappointed miners who turned away every day, heartbroken at receiving nothing. “And what of Mr. Gardner of the Venturous Mining company? Have you received any indication that he’s in town?”
“No, but that’s his partner, Owen Stames, right there.”
No. She wanted to close her eyes and die. She was so wilted by this awful news, her arm dropped to her side, and she accidentally let her quarter slip from her nerveless fingers.
“No!” She had to chase it as it rolled, threatening to wobble through a crack in the boardwalk.
A boot stepped on it, trapping it before it fell.
No, no, noooo.
Had he heard the man tell her who he was? She straightened, flushed and disconcerted. The heat from his intense blue eyes pierced her straight in her chest.
He bent and picked up the coin, pausing when she opened her palm for it.
For one second, she thought he was going to keep it. Despair rose so thick in her throat, she stopped breathing.
“No use soiling your gloves.” He indicated she should open her purse while he gave the coin a rub on his pant leg, as though imbuing it with luck before he dropped it in.
“Thank you.” Her throat had become a shadow of its former self.
“If you’re answering one of Virgil’s ads for a bride, you’ll have to get in a line longer than this one,” Owen drawled, thumbing toward the queue.
“That’s a good one, Owen,” the man behind him said with a chuckle.
“Are you finished at the window?” Owen asked.
“Y-yes.” Ugh. He had heard she was looking for his partner. How mortifying.
But as much as she would have loved to run straight back to Mrs. Pincher’s and scream into a pillow, she didn’t have that luxury. She had been waiting nearly two weeks for one of these men to show up.
“I actually have business with you and your partners.”
“Oh?” Owen hitched his elbow on the sill while he waited for his letters to be gathered.
How did the dance of his gaze over her figure feel so much like a physical caress? Her entire body tingled to life.
This was what carnal knowledge did to a woman. She used to blush if a man looked at her, confused by it, not fully understanding why she felt singled out and uncomfortable. Now, as Owen Stames gave her his full attention, she flushed in an entirely different way. She was accosted by a breathless awareness and a sense of possibility. She thought things. How would it feel to do those things with him?
...chasing skirt at the cat house...
Her veins stung and she hardened herself against him, making herself stand taller.
“Actually, your Mr. Gardner invited my father, Reginald Goodrich, to write a report for him. I have the letter here.” She started to retrieve it from her purse.
“Don’t bother.” He grew more circumspect. “You can tell me what it says.”
“It promises that your company will underwrite his feasibility study for a railroad.”
“Are we getting a railroad, Owen?” the next man in the queue asked.
The word railroad went down the line like a chugging steam engine, eliciting a few hoots along the way.
“You know I want in on that, Owen,” someone called from the caboose. “Come see me when you’re looking for investors.”
Owen glanced in that direction, then back at her. He looked her up and down again, but this time it was an assessment that was more objective, judging her character in a way that made her want to shift in discomfort.
“Is your father here?” he asked.
“In Denver? Not yet.” She realized another bead had fallen off her purse, leaving a loose thread. “He fell from his horse while we were on the trail. He’s recovering in Fort Kearney. He can’t ride, so he sent me ahead to request funds for a stage ticket, to bring him the rest of the way.” Oh, it felt good to finally make that request to the men who would grant it. All her pent-up worries began to subside.
“A stage ticket.” He accepted his bundle of letters and shook his head at the man inside, who had perked up at the words. “No, I’m not buying one right now.”
“Wait!” Temperance cried, even though Owen only stepped away from the window, so the next man could move up.
Tremendous.She could feel every pair of eyes on her now, as though she were performing a piece of street theatre for their entertainment. She stepped further along the boardwalk, seeking a shred of privacy.
“It’s only from Fort Kearney. Mr. Gardner made an arrangement with my father. He promised that if Papa made his way here, your company would cover his expenses for the duration of his stay.”
“If that’s what Virgil promised, then that’s what we’ll do,” Owen said with an amiable nod that lifted her hopes again. “But your father has to make his way here.”
Was he enjoying this? He was wearing that subtle grin.
“I’m here.” She tapped the middle of her chest with so much force it hurt, but talking to him made her feel as though she was knocking against a brick wall.
“And who are you?”
“His daughter.” Obviously. “Temperance Goodrich.”
“I thought your name was Rose.” He canted his head and gave her a narrow look from the corner of his eye, as though he’d caught her in a lie.
“Rose is my second name,” she said with indignation.
“Uh huh.”
“It is,” she insisted. “Now, if we could sit down somewhere to discuss the particulars?—”
“Which particulars?”
Was he genuinely obtuse or playing dumb? She gathered her patience.
“Your Mr. Gardner promised my father accommodation and the necessary funds to outfit him for the report he’ll write. Supplies. A guide if he needs to traverse into the mountains, etcetera.”
“But your father isn’t here.”
“Yes, but he will be,” she insisted. “And I need to pay my rent until he arrives.”
“I see what you’re saying.” He nodded.
“Thank you.” She let out a fresh breath of relief.
“That isn’t the deal Virgil struck, though.” Owen adjusted his hat on his head.
“It is.” She wanted to stomp her foot. “He offered my father a contract.” She strained to speak calmly and firmly, the way she would if one of her younger brothers needed straightening out. “He says here,” she retrieved the letter, “that he will provide accommodation and meals for the duration of his stay, plus suitable compensation for the report.”
“To your father,” he clarified without so much as glancing at the letter. He was giving her the same dispassionate look she gave the grocer when he tried to sell her fish that reeked because it had turned. He was listening politely, but nothing she said would induce him to buy. She could tell.
Panic began seeping into her blood and stalling the air in her lungs.
“I help my father,” she pressed on, hearing the distress thinning her voice. “I ensure we have a comfortable place to stay and compile his notes.”
“I’ll bet you’ll ensure you’re comfortable,” he said with a snort of irony.
“What are you suggesting?” She dropped her arm, so the letter rustled against her skirt. “That this is all a ruse? You’re accusing a complete stranger of being crooked?” She leaned forward and hissed, “Is this because we met in a saloon last night?”
“That does give me cause to wonder.” He scratched the side of his nose. “People do what they have to here. Maybe you came across a misdirected letter and thought, ‘What the heck? I’ll see if I can turn this into something.’”
“I don’t know if I’m insulted or flattered,” she said with undisguised sarcasm, because she was definitely insulted. “Who in their right mind would come all this way on the possibility of a successful flimflam?” She waved the letter.
“Everyone?” He turned to call toward the queue, “Who here has been swindled in some way since they arrived in Denver?”
Every hand went up.
“Claiming there’s gold here is the biggest lie of all,” one man said glumly. Heads nodded, and there was a murmur of agreement.
“For heaven’s sake!” she cried.
“I have errands to finish.” Owen waggled his letters in a salute. “But I will definitely see you tonight.” He winked at her as he sauntered away.