and there was no telling what color he was, or if he leaned toward any particular breed.
âYou come on with me, if you can walk,â Clay said. âI brought home what was left of my supper, and it seems to me you could use a decent meal.â
With that, he turned to head back toward the sidewalk. The dog limped after him, pausing every few moments, as though afraid heâd committed some transgression without knowing about it.
Back at the jailhouse, Clay got a better look at the dog, after lighting a lantern to see by, but seeing didnât help much. The creature was neither big nor little, and he had floppy ears, but that was the extent of what Clay could make out.
Glad to have something to do, not to mention some companionship, Clay poured the remains of his chickenand dumplings onto the one tin plate he possessed and set it on the floor, near the stove.
The dog sniffed at the food, looked up at Clay with the kind of uncertainty that breaks a decent personâs heart and waited.
âYou go ahead and have supper,â Clay said gently. âI imagine you could use some water, too.â
Slowly, cautiously, the dog lowered his muzzle and began to eat.
Clay walked softly, approaching the water bucket, and ladled up a dipperful.
The dog lapped thirstily from the well of the dipper, then returned to his supper, clearly ravenous, licking the plate clean as a whistle.
Clay carried in more water from the pump out back, heated it bucket by bucket on the potbellied stove and finally filled the washtub heâd found in one of the cells. He eased the dog into the warm water and sluiced him down before lathering his hide with his own bar of soap.
The animal didnât raise any fuss, he simply stood there, shivering and looking like nothing so much as a half-drowned rat. Gradually, it became clear that his coat was brown and white, speckled like a pinto horse.
Clay dried him off with one of the two towels heâd purchased earlier, over at the mercantile, hefted him out of the tub and set him gently on his feet, near the stove.
The dog looked up at him curiously, head tilted to one side.
Clay chuckled. âNow, then,â he said. âYou look a lot more presentable than you did before.â
The dog gave a single, tentative woof, obviously unsure how the remark would be received in present company.
Clay leaned to pat the animalâs damp head. âWhat you are,â he said, âis a coincidence. Like I told you, I was thinking about how much Iâd like to have a dog, and then you and I made our acquaintance. But since âcoincidenceâ would be too much trouble for a name, I figure Iâll call you Chester.â
âWoof,â said Chester, with more confidence than before.
Clay laughed. âChester it is, then,â he agreed.
Using a rough blanket from the cot in the jail cell, Clay fashioned a bed for the dog, close to the stove. Chester sniffed the cloth, stepped gingerly onto it, made a circle and settled down with a sigh.
ââNight,â Clay said.
Chester closed his eyes, sighed again and slept.
Â
T HE HENS HAD ONLY LAID three eggs between the lot of them, Dara Rose discovered the next morning, when she visited the chicken coop, but she wasnât as disappointed by this as she normally would have been.
She had ten dollars tucked between the leaves of her Bibleâa fortune.
And she had a future, a bright one, as Blue River, Texasâs sole distributor of Wildflower Salve. All she had to do was fill out the coupon and mail it in, and before the New Year, sheâd be in business.
Granted, there werenât a lot of people in Blue River, but there were plenty of surrounding farms and ranches, and those isolated women would be thrilled to purchase salve in a pretty tin, especially after she explained the benefits of regular use.
Not that she knew exactly what those benefits were, but the Wildflower Salve people had promised to send