Three Days
Later, Alhambra Theater, Pueblo, Colorado
“No, Hilary!” Scott shook his head. They were striking the sets
and getting ready to move on to their next location when the
messenger boy arrived with the letter. “I can't go there! Pruitt
didn't invite us because he thinks we're good actors. He wants to
kill me...or worse!”
“But it's a great opportunity!” Hilary sighed. “It may just be
a little county fair, but they'll be hundreds of people there. Maybe
even critics from larger cities. We'll be able to see and be seen.”
“Hilary's right,” Jeff added. “We could get more people to pack
the seats in a few days at a fair than we could for an entire week's
run at some tiny town in the middle of nowhere.”
“I don't know.” Eugenia looked pale. “They've already tried to
kill Mr. Sherwood twice. What if they try again?”
Jeff raised his chin in determination. “We'll be ready for them.
Hilary and I won't let this Pruitt hurt a member of our troupe.” He
grinned at Scott. “Besides, he's gotten some decent notices as the
huntsman. This would be a great shot at publicity for the troupe.”
“Publicity is the last thing I want.” Scott started pacing.
“What if we hid him somewhere?” Mr. Eldridge said. “Like a
closet?”
Hilary grinned. “Or in plain sight.” She hurried to the wings and
started rummaging through a costume trunk.
Jeff raised an eyebrow at the things his wife was tossing around.
“Hilary, what are you doing?”
“Ah ha!” Hilary finally emerged from the trunk, carrying a wig
with coarse, butter-yellow curls. “I knew we still had it from the
time Jeff played Cupid in Cupid and Psyche.”
“That wig?” Jeff made a face. “Hilary, that thing so itchy! I
had to resist scratching my head every night I wore it.”
“It's just for when he's in town.”
Scott stepped back. “I don't know if this is a good idea...”
“It's better than you hiding in a closet. We're going to need you
for the show.” Hilary plopped the wig on his head. “Eugenia, help
me with his make-up. This will be my finest creation since I played
Ariel in The Tempest.”
Wennton,
Colorado, A Week Later
The county fair was the biggest event held at Wennton. Every year,
people from towns for miles around brought their finest livestock,
jams, jellies, relishes, and baked goods to be sold and judged. The
rodeo attracted cowboys from as far away as Denver to win the
cash-prize the Bar S put out. Booths and tents sold bright Indian
jewelry, soft woven blankets, thick woolen socks, herbal-smelling
soaps, and the most delicious fruits and vegetables the local farms
had to offer. It was a lot just for Betty Prince to take in.
“This is really amazing, isn't it?” Doug Thompson asked. “I'm
glad I agreed to join you while you worked on this article.”
“I thought it would be interesting to hear about the fair from a
man's perspective as well as a woman's.” She looked over her notes.
“I think I have enough. I talked to the jam sellers and the winner
of the corn-relish-making contest and the owner of the largest steers
and the fattest hogs. The rodeo will be later, and I need to
interview the acting troupe that's in town for the fair.”
They stopped by a slightly weathered wooden building in the center of
Wennton's main drag. “Wennton Weekly Gazette” could be seen
painted in curling golden letters on the second floor. “I need to
pick up those papers the surveyor sent. I don't care what my boss
says. I think I have proof that he's after a lot more than a couple
of cattle spreads. I think there's something in the very dirt the
town's built on.”
Doug took her hand. “Betty, be careful. Pruitt's ruthless. They
talk about him and his dirty dealings in Pueblo. He'll do anything to
get what he wants, including murder.”
Betty smiled. “I'll be ok.” As she headed for the office, she
noticed a poster hanging on the wall next to the little hat shop on
the first floor. It was an advertisement for the Valiant Journey
Acting Troupe. She took it down, studying it. She recognized Scott
White. She had when she and Doug had gone to see the group last week.
Scott White had to be Scott Sherwood, the man she met on the train,
the one who ended up working as a farm hand on the Bar S. The one who
wanted to find out what happened to his mother. How did he end up
joining an acting troupe? He didn't say anything about being an
actor.
She put the poster under her arm. There was more to this than met the
eye. Now she really wanted to interview the troupe. Scott had said he
thought his mother had been killed to get her land. Had he ever found
out the truth? Her inquiring mind had to know.
Later That Day,
Wennton Town Hall
“I feel like a clown. I should be keeping guys from getting stepped
on at the rodeo.” Scott sat in the carriage with Eugenia and
Hilary. He wore the yellow wig, a checked shirt, a plaid jacket, an
old pair of Mackie's pants, and a pair of old boots.
“Oh, stop complaining. You were the one who was worried about being
recognized.” Hilary sighed. “You could always say it's part of
our act.”
They were sitting in the carriages in the back of the Town Hall. The
Town Hall had no dressing rooms. It was rare that Wennton hosted even
a semi-professional acting troupe. It's stage was mainly used for
assemblies, town meetings, and the local school's holiday pageants.
“I think you look very unique, Mr. White.” Eugenia fluffed
Scott's wig.
“Is that a euphemism for 'weird,' Miss Bremer?” Scott grinned and
raised his eyebrow. She giggled.
“Hilary, are you ready to...” Jeff took one look at Scott and
doubled over laughing.
Scott glared at Hilary. “I knew this wasn't going to work.”
“Jeffrey Singer, stop that!” Hilary lightly cuffed his shoulder.
“I think he looks quite debonair.”
Mackie came in behind him. “Hey Scott, which way to the circus?”
“Very funny.” Scott took off the wig. “I'm not wearing that. It
itches like crazy!”
“I told Hilary to get rid of that wig,” Jeff added between
guffaws.
“Do you have any better ideas?” Hilary grumbled to her highly
amused husband.
Scott dumped the wig in a trunk behind him. “Hilary, I need to look
up a friend while I'm here. I promise, I'll be back well before we
start rehearsals.”
Hilary nodded. “All right.” She turned to the small crowd
gathered around her. “The rest of you have the next two hours to
yourselves. You can do what you want. Just come back here in time to
prepare for tonight's show.”
Jeff took Hilary's arm. “I know what I'd like to do with you, Miss
Booth. I'd like to take you out there and show you a shady area under
the bandstand that would be perfect for some...private time.”
Hilary grinned back at him. “Sounds like a lot more fun than
watching people decide between two identical pigs or jars of
blackberry jam.”
“Don't wait up for us.” Jeff winked at them as they headed for
the bandstand. “We'll be busy.”
Scott followed the others through the Town Hall and onto the main
street. “So Scotty,” Mackie started, “who is this friend of
yours you need to talk to?” He gave him a sly grin. “Man friend
or lady friend?”
“Lady friend.”
Mackie saw the look on Scott's face. “Is she pretty?”
Scott nodded. “Beautiful. She's the prettiest thing in the entire
state of Colorado.” He sighed and shook his head. “But right now,
I just need to ask her some questions.”
“Do what you want.” Hilary straightened her lavender hat trimmed
with flowers. “Just be back in time for rehearsal.”
“Don't worry, Hilary.” Scott chuckled. “I'll be there.”
That Day, Office
at the Wennton Daily Gazette
Betty's eyes widened as she read the papers. “Oh my....” She
couldn't believe it. “That's it! That's why Pruitt wants the land.”
She frowned. “And Victor knew, too. That must be why...” She
looked over the copy of the deed from the Bar S Ranch she'd picked up
the day before. “Those metals would be valuable. This is what Scott
wanted. This is why Victor was killed.” She looked at the coroner's
reports and felt woozy. “And Fiona Pruitt, too. She wasn't killed
for her land. She was killed for what was under it.”
“This is really important.” She pushed the papers into a folder
and shoved it under her arm. “I have to talk to Pruitt and find
Scott Sherwood. I can't believe he...Scott's the owner of that
spread! Why was he really working as a ranch hand? To get the goods
on Pruitt? And where has he been?”
She was surprised to see the answer to her questions sitting in the
lobby. “Betty?” Scott stood. He wore a plain, ill-fitting suit,
with trousers so long, he had to roll them up to keep from tripping
on them. Someone had made him up to be more rosy-cheeked and
red-lipped, but it was still plainly him. “I'm glad you're here! I
was hoping to talk to you.”
Betty nodded. “And I wanted to talk to you.” She pulled out the
papers. “Scott, I talked to the coroner. He was supposed to repress
his findings.” She gave him a little smirk. “A five dollar bill
does wonders to change a person's mind. Your mother was poisoned, but
not by anything that came from an animal. There was no rattlesnake.
They don't know where the poison was, only that it was taken
internally.”
Scott's fists curled. “I knew it. Pruitt was lying through his
teeth. He just wanted Mom's money. He probably put poison in wine or
juice and gave that to her.” He growled. “Damn it! I want to go
down there and rip the smirk right off the face of that pompous ass!”
“Scott, your language.” Betty shook her head. “We don't know
this for certain. There has to be a way we can trap him.”
“Can we kill him first, then trap him?”
“No, Scott.” She sighed. “Where have you been the last few
months, anyway? How did you end up joining an acting troupe?”
Scott raised an eyebrow. “How did you know about that?”
Betty smiled. “I saw you at the Alhambra Theater in Pueblo with a
friend. You're not a bad actor, by the way. You made a wonderful
huntsman. I was in tears when you broke down and told Snow White she
was too innocent for you to kill her.” She crossed her arms. “Are
you avoiding your stepfather?”
Scott nodded. “Yeah. Not that it's done much good. Pruitt's done
everything short of outright shooting me to get rid of me. He sent a
bounty hunter after me. Thankfully, she was a friend of mine and let
me go. He had goons ambush me and two of the actors from the troupe.
They wanted to choke me to death, but the guys chased them off. He
sent some old woman to sell me a comb soaked in poison. The head of
the troupe and the musician and prop man got that out.”
She looked around. “If he's that desperate, I don't think you
should be here. Maybe you should really be back with the troupe. They
sound like they'll protect you.”
“I had to find out what happened to Mom.” He gently pulled her
closer. “And I wanted to see you. I've thought about you a lot in
the last few months.”
Betty blushed. “You...you have?”
He nodded. “All I want is to get the Bar S back. I don't know if
I'll stay there or sell it and use the money...but I do know that
whatever happens, I want you to be with me.” He took her hand and
kissed it. “I fell for you when I saw you on the train.”
Betty's face was as red as the apples on the tree by the main house
at the Bar S. “I...I don't know what to say.” She played with the
folder. “I've thought about you a lot, too. You were so mysterious,
so handsome, so smart....” She frowned. “It was like losing
Victor all over again when you took off. I dated other men, but....I
couldn't stop thinking about you.”
“Betty, I...” He couldn't help himself. He kissed her hard...just
as Doug Thompson walked into the room.
Doug's eyes were wide. “Betty? Who's this?”
Betty looked dazed. “Doug, this is Scott...”
“White.” Scott took Doug's hand and shook it. “I'm with the
acting troupe here. How about you? You one of Betty's fellow
reporters?”
“Actually, I'm a lawyer. My office is two doors down, on the second
floor over the doctor's office.” He looked at Betty with a sheepish
smile. “Miss Prince and I kind of have a date today.”
Scott frowned, crestfallen. “Oh, you do.” He turned to
Betty...but the love in the amber orbs just a few minutes before had
been replaced by solid steel. “I'm sorry to have bothered you, Miss
Prince. Thank you for your help. I'm sure you don't need a ranch hand
as an informant.”
“Scott...” He left before she could tell him that Doug was just a
friend. She could see that he was hurt, but...well, he just kissed
her! How could he be so bold? They weren't lovers. They barely knew
each other, no matter how attracted she was to him or he to her.
“So, he's a ranch hand.” Doug watched Scott stomp down the
stairs. “Where does he work? I haven't seen him at the rodeo or
selling anything the booths for the local ranches.”
“He works at the Bar S.” Betty set her own slender jaw. “We
have to find him. He's in grave danger.” She looked at the papers
under her arm. “And when word about this gets out, I may be in
danger, too.”
Main Street,
Wennton, Colorado, A Few Minutes Later
Scott stomped back to the town hall. “I should have known,” he
muttered to himself. “She never loved me. She just smelled a story.
She's a reporter. That's all they care about. I'll bet she has five
guys on the side.”
Booths for local wares lined the streets. Scott hadn't noticed the
one set up next to the town hall. It was lined with every type of
apple treat ever made. He just barely noticed apple fritters, apple
turnovers, fresh apples, apple dumplings, apple tarts, and two large,
luscious apple pies topped with cinnamon. A large man in a huge hat,
his face covered in heavy make-up, was going over the booth's
profits. He could barely contain his smirk when Scott appeared.
He pulled out a tart. “Fresh apples!” He said in a rather badly
done western accent. “Apple tart, apple turnover, apple dumplings.
We have everything you could make of an apple. Why, the missus made
these here pies fresh this morning.”
“I'm not hungry.” Scott frowned. This guy seemed too familiar.
Especially that voice. “You got anything a little...harder? To hell
with Hildy's rules. I want to forget my troubles. I want to forget
Betty Prince ever existed.”
“Ahh. Woman trouble.” He smirked and pulled out an earthenware
jug from under the booth's counter. “I have just the thing.” He
patted the jug fondly. “Hard apple cider! My cowboys pulled it out
of the distillery just this morning. It has just a
little...kick...that will make all your troubles disappear.”
“That's what I want.” Scott put three nickels on the counter.
“Make it a triple.”
“How about four, then?” He could barely contain his smirk. “I'll
join you. We could go in the Town Hall.” He wiped his forehead.
“It's mighty hot outside today. A man could roast out here.” He
put a “closed” sign on the booth and strode out with the three
drinks.
Scott wiped at the sweat trickling down his own neck. “Yeah.” He
followed the man into the Town Hall. A thought nagged at the back of
Scott's brain. He'd seen that man's swagger before. His instinct was
telling him to bolt. He ignored it. He just wanted to get drunk. If
Betty Prince was going to take up with some cutesy lawyer, he didn't
want to think about her again.
What Scott didn't see was the man duck into a dark alley between the
Town Hall and the livery stable. He sprinkled a strange white powder
into Scott's third drink before hurrying inside.
Town Hall,
Wennton, Colorado
The Town Hall was all one room. It was mainly a small stage, with
benches set out for the audience, and a small area for a band or
orchestra. The two men settled in the first row of benches.
The apple seller handed Scott the drinks. “Here you go, my boy. Get
your mind off whatever devious creature has caused you pain and
heartache. I can see you're hurting. Perhaps your wife left you?”
“No, not wife. Never been married.” He sighed and gulped down his
first cider. “I met her on the train coming here. I fell for her
right the moment I met her. I thought she might even have liked me,
but...” he shook his head, “of course, she was already taken. I
made a fool of myself, thinking that a smart, beautiful girl like her
could love someone like me.”
“We're all fools for love, once in a while.” He sipped his drink
as Scott gulped his second one. “Why don't you try that third one?
I added extra seasoning. A man with heartache like yours needs a
little extra something.”
Scott nodded. Maybe his brain was already feeling the effects of the
cider, but this guy was almost looking like Pruitt. He smirked like
Pruitt. No, it couldn't be. Pruitt wouldn't stoop to selling liquor
in some podunk Colorado village's county fair. “Well, down the
hatch. Here's to all the dames who love you, then love lawyers.”
The apple seller watched with unbridled glee as Scott drained the
last glass down to the very final drop. He grinned. “Hey, you're
right! That wasn't...” Suddenly, he felt sick to his stomach. He
was overwhelmed by nausea. He wanted to vomit, but all he'd had that
day was the apple cider. His head was hot, but his body felt cold. He
tried to stand, but the apple seller swept his feet out from under
him. “I...dizzy...feel sick...the cider...” The glass fell from
his fingers, rolling to one side.
“Got him, boss?” Frank and one of his boys came out, just as
Scott hit the floor.
Scott barely saw the man remove his hat, revealing Pruitt in a ton of
greasepaint. “Yes, I did.” He knelt and grabbed Scott by his
hair, yanking his head up to his face. “Like mother, like son.
Fiona was just as foolish as you. I married her for her money. She
was beautiful to look at, but much too feisty. I had to get rid of
her. She found out what I had planned for the town and the ranch. She
died the same way you did – drinking a glass of apple cider
lovingly prepared by her husband. One that just happened to contain
the poison from crushed apple seeds.” He shook his head. “Now I'm
the only handsome man at the Bar S...and I'm going to stay that way.”
“N...no...” Scott tried to fight the waves of nausea, but they
finally overwhelmed him. “Mom...B..betty...” His head lolled
back, and his eyes finally closed.
“What are we gonna do with him, boss?”
“Leave him here. Let those idiot actors he was so fond of deal with
him.” He pulled off the apple seller's apron. “What about the
explosives? Are they under the stage?”
“Sure are! They're set to go off right at 7 o'clock. Everyone
should be there by then, watchin' the play...includin' the mayor and
all the town officials.”
Pruitt smirked. “With them out of the way, I'll be able to buy off
the rest of the land and start strip mining it. There's a vast store
of copper and aluminum ore right where we're standing. I could sell
it back east and make a fortune, more than I ever could branding
cattle at the Bar S.”
“What about us, boss?”
He smirked. “Oh, we won't be at the show. We'll be at the Bar S,
getting ready to go back east.” He sighed. “A tragedy is going to
befall the town. The Professor's Gang is going to destroy the Town
Hall. I'll be gracious enough to buy up all that now-worthless land
that the poor, grieving families will be encouraged to sell.”
Pruitt's evil laughter was the last thing Scott Sherwood heard before
he lost consciousness.
Town Hall, A Few
Minutes Later
Mackie, Hilary, and Jeff came in first. Hilary was patting her
perfect auburn hairstyle back into place. “Those cowboys have
absolutely no sense of humor,” the actress complained. “We were
just having a bit of fun under the bleachers!”
Mackie rolled his eyes. “Hilary, you and Jeff were spooking the
horses.”
“You'd think they wouldn't have that spot right there.” Jeff
dusted off his jacket. “It's an open invitation to neck.”
The trio made their way to the back of the auditorium. Mackie rolled
his eyes. “You two think high noon in the middle of town is an open
invitation to neck.”
“Don't be silly, Mackie.” Hilary put an arm around Jeff. “We're
just enjoying each others' company.”
“Yeah, when you're not screaming loud enough to be heard in Arizona
and Nebraska.” Mackie nearly tripped over a glass as he passed the
first row. “Someone left this laying around...” His eyes followed
the glass to a hand on the floor. “What's this?”
Hilary and Jeff both rushed up at once when they heard Mackie scream
in horror. Long-legged Jeff got there first. “What's wrong,
Mackie?”
Mackie looked up, his eyes shocked under his round spectacles.
“Hilary, Jeff, I think Scott's dead!”
“What?” Hilary and Jeff joined Mackie on the floor beside the
prostrate man. Jeff took off his jacket and stuffed it under Scott's
head.
Hilary looked at her husband. “Jeff, get a doctor.”
He nodded and hurried off as Betty and Doug hurried in. “Excuse me,
but I wanted to talk to...” Betty gasped when she saw Scott on the
floor. “Oh my god! Who did this?”
“We don't know. We came in and found him passed out.” Hilary
checked his pulse and went white. “I don't feel anything!”
“No!” Betty decided she'd try to do the life-saving operation
she'd learned during a first-aid class when she still lived on the
farm in Indiana. She was glad she'd let her mother talk her into
that. “Doug, keep everyone back.”
Mackie raised his eyebrows as Betty leaned over and pressed her lips
against Scott's...though she was red as a tomato the entire time.
“What is she doing?”
Doug frowned. “Saving his life.”
Eugenia and Foley hurried in, with Jeff and an older man on their
heels. Hilary came over with the glass as the doctor went to the duo
on the floor. “I smell apple cider in this. Darn it, I told him not
to drink before rehearsal!”
“I think that's sort of, um, our fault,” Doug admitted with a
sign. “He saw Betty and me and got upset.”
“Upset enough to drown himself in what I assume was hard apple
cider?”
Now Doug was the one who was red in the face. “I sort of caught
them, um, kissing in the Daily Gazette office.”
Hilary raised an eyebrow. “Not the most romantic place for a secret
rendezvous, but if that's how he wants it...”
C.J and Mr. Eldridge hurried in next. “What's going on?”
They came just in time to hear coughing. Betty had been pushing on
his chest as hard as she could. Scott finally turned over, hacking up
what sounded like gallons of hard apple cider. Betty and the doctor
rubbed his back.
“Oh god...” Scott turned to Betty. “Thanks...Betty...Doc....”
The doctor frowned as Betty told Eugenia and Foley to bring towels to
wipe up the mess. “Son, what happened here? Did you overindulge?
There was an apple seller near here an hour or so ago...”
“No...well, yes, but it was only three ciders.” Betty and the doctor helped him to his feet. “That last one was poisoned. He told me himself.” He grabbed hold of the stage. “Pruitt told me. He was the apple seller.”
Doug's normally pleasant face darkened. “I'm going to see if the
apple seller is still there.” He hurried out of the hall.
“We didn't see anyone when we came in,” Eugenia added. “There
was a booth, but it was empty.” Mr. Foley nodded in agreement.
Hilary and Betty sat on either side of Scott. Scott would have
grinned at the sight of Betty holding his hand if he felt better.
“This is the third attack on your person in the last month, Scott.”
Hilary made a face. “You're too popular with the wrong people. You
need to start running with a crowd that's less fond of poisons and
strangulation.”
Scott looked up at Betty, his eyes troubled. “Pruitt wants the Bar
S and the whole town. He killed my mom to get the Bar S.”
Betty nodded. “I've suspected for months that Pruitt was after the
land for a reason. We got the message from the surveyors this
afternoon. There's thousands, maybe millions of dollars worth of
valuable minerals under this area, including Wennton and the Bar S.
Pruitt wants to strip-mine the area and send it off to the highest
bidder.”
“And I've suspected for months that Pruitt didn't marry Mom because
he loved her. He wanted the ranch...and the minerals.” That was
when Scott remembered the rest of Pruitt's talk to his men before he
lost consciousness. He jumped up...then wound up back on the bench
when his head started swimming again. “The..the stage! There's a
bomb down there!”
“A bomb?” Mackie jumped away from the stage as if he was stung.
Scott stumbled over to the stage. He ran his fingernails along the
edges, trying to feel for a loose board. “C.J, Mackie, help me out
here.”
“All right, Scott.” Mackie took one side of the stage, C.J the
other. “But if we get blown up right here and now, I'm holding you
responsible!”
All three men checked all along the stage for a few minutes. C.J
finally let out a surprised squawk. “Found it!” He yanked the
board off. Scott, Mackie, Hilary, and Jeff hurried over. The object
in the dark area under the stage looked like a large clock attached
to explosives with wires. It ticked away ominously.
Betty gasped. “There's enough dynamite there to destroy the entire
town!”
Hilary's eyes widened. “That thing could have given us all a very
early retirement.”
“Don't touch it!” Mackie ducked back. “It might go off!”
Scott nodded. “Jeff, Hilary, go get the Sheriff. We have to
dismantle this thing, before it really does blow.”
They left as Doug came back in. “Your friends are right,” he
admitted. “There is a booth next to the Town Hall, but it's empty.
There isn't even anything for sale anymore. I asked a few people, and
they did say there was an apple seller in that spot earlier. No one
knows when he closed or where he went.”
“He left because Pruitt thinks he got what he wanted.” Scott's
eyes sparkled. “Or he thinks he did.” He turned to Mackie. “Do
you remember the ghost act I put on the day you hired me?”
Mackie raised an eyebrow. “Ok, Scotty, out with it. I know that
look. You've got an idea running around in there.”
He turned his grin to Betty first. “How's your acting?”
“I played Cinderella once in third-grade.”
“Close enough.” He took her hand. “Betty, betty, betty, you're
gonna get the story of the century!” He grinned at Mackie. “And
you're gonna get yourself a nice little acting challenge.” He went
to C.J, who was returning the loose board to the stage. “Do you
have some wire and that glowing white stuff? You used it on me when I
played the ghost in Hamlet.”
“You mean phosphorous?” C.J nodded. “I just bought some more
not long ago, in fact.”
“Good. We're gonna need it.” He turned to Betty again. “Pruitt
thinks we're all gonna be dead after tonight's show, right?”
Betty nodded. “Right.”
“Why don't we just let him go on thinking we're all dead?”
C.J and Betty exchanged surprised looks. Betty could only blurt out
“Say what?”
Scott just gave them his famous cat-ate-the-canary grin. “Very
exciting!”
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