That still hadn't been enough, though, to make her "unnoticeable," which was the goal she'd been shooting for. Until her next bright idea. The result was a pair of spectacles that when in proper position magnified the size of her eyes, giving her an owlish, unbecoming look. Of course she couldn't see a thing through them, everything being a blur, which caused her to seem quite accident-prone. And people naturally tended to stay clear of people who bumped into things on a regular basis.
Now, the three dogs in town gave warning that someone was approaching. The barking was far off in the distance though, and since those dogs seemed to bark at nothing and each other on a regular basis, Marian didn't really pay attention. She was reading an old newspaper she'd found on the porch of the hotel, only because it was a blistering hot day and there was a slight breeze coming down the main, or rather, only street.
She did take notice, however, when each of the townsfolk came out of their respective buildings and started staring toward the entrance of the town. They apparently could tell the difference in the sound of the barking, to know that the animals weren't just making noise because they could, but had found something of real interest.
Amanda was napping in the stagecoach in the middle of the street. She'd actually worn herself out with her complaining, though the exceptional heat of the last few days had probably helped. And she'd gotten so badly bitten by the fleas in their room that she'd taken to sleeping in the coach each night and napping there in the hottest part of each day.
The barking didn't awaken Amanda, but the first words spoken nearby did. The baker wasn't baking today and had come out on the hotel porch to stand next to Marian. Both of them were shading their eyes to get a better look at the stranger riding down the street.
He rode a very fine-looking animal, the kind rich men back home would sell for horse racing. Golden in color, with a pure white mane and tail, he was a large, sleek stallion, a good-sized horse for a man on the tall side. As for the man himself, his wide-brimmed Western hat shaded too much of his face for anyone to tell what he looked like yet, other than that he had a wide chest and shoulders under a faded blue shirt, black pants and vest, and a dark blue neckerchief or bandana as they were called in these parts, an item that seemed to serve all kinds of purposes on the range.
"Just a cowboy," the baker, Ed Harding remarked next to Marian. "Doesn't have the look of a gun-fighter."
"He's wearing guns," Marian pointed out, her eyes still on the stranger.
"Everyone wears guns out here, Missy."
"You don't."
"I'm not everyone."
These old-timers tended to say a lot of strange things like that, Marian observed. They were a wealth of interesting information though, about the West, and she enjoyed talking with them when they weren't busy.
The dogs continued to bark and follow the stranger into town. They bothered the horse not at all. The man glanced at them occasionally, but otherwise seemed to ignore them, too. He stopped when he reached the stagecoach, still parked in the middle of the street. He tipped his hat toward Marian, a mere matter of courtesy, before he set it back on his head and stared at Ed Harding.
"I'm looking for the Laton girls. And this looks to be the stage they were last known to be traveling on.
"You got that right, Mister," Ed replied. "You from the stage line?"
"No, from their aunt, here to fetch them to her,"
"And about damn time," Amanda was heard from, and in one of her more disagreeable tones as she pushed open the door to the coach and climbed down to the street.
The man lowered his hat to tip it in Amanda's direction, then with one finger pushed it back behind his forehead again. "Have the girls been a nuisance, ma'am?" he asked her in reference to her remark.
She stared at him as if he were daft. Marian was too busy staring agape at him as well, but not over what he'd said. That hadn't even registered yet. No, from the moment he'd raised his hat so his face became fully visible, she'd been arrested by a set of very handsome features.
Lean, smooth-shaven cheeks, square jaw, a straight nose over a mustache kept neatly trimmed. He had the same two-toned shade of skin on his forehead that most of these Westerners seemed to have as a result of working under the hot sun with their hats on. His tan line was barely discernible actually, though he was nicely bronzed, suggesting he didn't always wear the hat—or kept it pushed back a lot, like he had it now.
His hair was darkest black, though speckled with trail dust at the moment. Not too long, his hair fell just an inch or so below his nape. Marian guessed he might usually wear it slicked back as many men did, but presently it was parted, a curly lock leaning toward each temple. Thick black brows arched over pure gray eyes the shade of summer rain clouds, with no tinge of blue in them.
It was a good thing that her overall appearance was so very unremarkable, because for once, Marian completely forgot to shove her spectacles back up her nose. But the man hadn't spared her more than a fleeting glance before speaking to Mr. Harding, and now, his gaze, typically, remained on Amanda.
Even wilted by the heat, with sweat running down her temples, soaked into the cloth beneath her armpits, and some of her flyaway bangs matted from it, Amanda was still flamboyantly lovely. It wasn't surprising he was still staring at her, even if she hadn't answered his question yet, and he could simply be waiting on that answer.
When Marian realized that she was staring, she did three things in quick order. Got her spectacles back in their camouflaging position, made sure her hair was still severely drawn back, and started fanning herself with the old newspaper she had in hand.
She was going to wait for Amanda to recover and do the talking, another thing she was used to doing, to keep attention off herself. But Amanda, having just woken from her nap, was still slightly disoriented and giving no indication that she would.
The continued silence, aside from the yapping dogs, was getting ridiculous, so Marian finally said, albeit hesitantly, "I have the feeling you were expecting younger—children perhaps?"
He was quick, he didn't ask what she meant, just said, "Well, hell," as he glanced her way, then back toward Amanda again.
For the first time, Marian actually felt annoyed, to be so totally ignored. Which was crazy. She strived so hard to achieve that very result. And it would serve absolutely no good purpose to gain his attention. In fact, doing so would be detrimental to this man's peace of mind as well as hers.
So it was a good thing, at least to Marian's way of thinking, that Amanda finally collected her scattered thoughts, and asked, "Who are you?"
"Chad Kinkaid. For the time being, I work for your aunt."
There was no quicker way to get dismissed from Amanda's mind as a male worthy of her attention than to mention you were a mere employee—of any sort. Amanda didn't waste her time on anyone who wasn't richer than she was.
Without giving him another look, she crossed the narrow strip of dirt road between the stage and the hotel to reach the shade on the porch. Chad Kinkaid was in the process of dismounting. Amanda's belligerent employer-to-employee tone of voice stopped him.
"There are a total of seven trunks that need to be reloaded on the stage. Do get started, so we can depart this sorry excuse for a town immediately."
He sat back in the saddle, glanced at the stagecoach again. "You expect to travel in that?"
"I repeat, seven large trunks, Mr. Kinkaid, and not a single vehicle in this town able to transport them other than this stage."
"Then they get left behind."
A gasp. "Absolutely not!"
He and Amanda stared, or ratiier, glared at each other for a moment, a brief battle of wills. He ended up sighing, probably figuring it wasn't worth the effort to argue the point.
Marian thought it prudent to ask, "You do know how to drive this stage, don't you?"
"No, ma'am, but I reckon I can figure it out. Where are the horses? The stable looked boarded up and empty as I passed it."
"Indeed, like many other buildings here, it was abandoned long ago," she informed him. "So the animals were set loose in the field behind town."
A moment later, the gunshot startled them all, well, all of them except Chad Kinkaid, who fired it. The dogs that had followed him in had still been barking around his horse's feet. The shot hit the dirt near them and sent them hightailing it elsewhere.
Amanda had squealed in surprise, one hand had flown to her chest and was still there. "Was that really necessary?" she asked derisively.
Chad Kinkaid pulled his hat back down over his forehead, gathered his reins in preparation of riding off, and with a lazy smile, said, "No, ma'am. It was a pleasure though."
Chapter 6
INSUFFERABLE LOUT," AMANDA MUMBLED before she went inside to repack the few things she had unpacked.
Chad Kinkaid had ridden off, but, apparently, Amanda didn't think that he would abandon them there as their driver had done. That would never occur to someone as self-centered as Amanda.
Marian wasn't nearly as positive of that and quickly walked around the hotel to the back of it to make sure he was just going to collect the stage horses. She gave a sigh of relief a few moments later when he rode out from between two of the buildings farther down the street and into the field where the horses were grazing. All five of them were still there, too, though widely scattered.
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