He shook off her hand. “I don’t need your help. This isn’t over, Sawyer. I’ll see you tomorrow evening, Jill.” He marched out to his truck and drove away.
“One of y’all want to tell me what happened? Who are you and where is Gladys?” Betsy asked.
“Jill, meet Betsy Gallagher. Betsy, this is Jill Cleary, Gladys’s niece who’s come to live on Fiddle Creek and learn the business.”
Jill wiped her hands and came out from the back of the meat counter. “Pleased to meet you.”
“Likewise.” Betsy nodded. “I heard you were coming to our place tomorrow and that you were here to help Gladys with Fiddle Creek. And I heard Polly broke her ankle. That mean you’ll be takin’ care of the bar, instead of the ranch?” She turned to look at Sawyer as if she could start a make-out session right there in the store. “I bet a big strong cowboy like Sawyer can take care of this little bitty spread all by himself.”
Sawyer picked up an armload of cans and put them in a cart. “I’ll be taking care of the bar. Jill is going to run the store so Gladys can help with Polly. And you can tell your kinfolk that there better not be any more altercations around here. Gladys didn’t abide it, and we won’t either.”
“Boys will be boys.” She laughed, and with a wave over her shoulder, she was gone.
“Good grief, Sawyer. What have we gotten ourselves into? I thought I was going to be helping run a ranch, not having to deal with these people on an everyday basis. I’m glad you were here. I would have never gotten those two apart without you, and I have no doubt they would have torn the place apart. Thanks for helping to get this corn all gathered up.”
Sawyer continued picking up the cans that had rolled every which way. “We have to deal with them, but we’ll keep it professional. Just put all the corn into a basket, and we’ll push it into the back room. We’ll restock the shelves as we need it, and we’ll forget about a pyramid display.”
“Sounds good to me, but tomorrow won’t be professional. Dinner and supper with families, that’s personal.”
Sawyer put four more cans into the cart. “We’ll get through it, and we won’t ever let them corner us again. We need two pounds of bacon and honey. If I’m cooking breakfast, then you are making some kind of muffins for breakfast dessert. I’m real partial to blueberry, but I won’t fuss about banana nut.”
“I like western omelets with peppers, onions, and tomatoes,” she said.
“For blueberry muffins, I can make an omelet that will melt in your mouth.”
“They’ll have to be from frozen berries. There’s no fresh at this time of year.”
“I’m not that particular. It can even be out of one of those boxed mixes.” Sawyer picked up a piece of paper and wrote a number on it. “This is my cell phone. It’s in my pocket all the time. If you need me, call and I’ll be here in less than five minutes.”
“Thanks, Sawyer. Seems like I’ve said that more in the past twenty-four hours than I have my whole life.”
Sawyer left with the groceries, and not another soul came into the store. Gladys called twice to give Jill updates on Polly. They had to put pins in the ankle, and it would be at least two months before she could put weight on it.
Jill sighed and looked at the clock. It was only two hours until she could leave, and she had a pie and a cake to make, but her heart wasn’t it in. Not even to prove to Sawyer that she could make a damn fine apple pie. Just thinking about sitting in that store, day in and day out for two whole months, maybe even longer, put her in a Jesus mood…that’s the worst kind of mood, one where even Jesus couldn’t live with her.
Chapter 4
Not many folks were interested in food that Saturday night. They wanted cold beers, either by the pitchers or red plastic cups, and dollar bills or quarters to plug into the jukebox so they could dance. Other than a couple of burger baskets, Sawyer was pulling beer or else pouring whiskey all evening. Jill called early in the evening to tell him that the surgery was over and they expected Polly to be fine, but to heal slowly at her age.
It was after nine when Betsy Gallagher claimed the only empty bar stool in the place, right beside her cousin, Tyrell.
“Hey, good-lookin’,” Betsy yelled over the top of the loud jukebox.
“You talkin’ to me?” Sawyer asked.
“Ain’t nobody else back there, is there?” Betsy said. “Take a break and dance with me.”
“Rule Number One, according to Aunt Polly, is that work and pleasure do not mix. What can I get you to drink, Betsy?”
“You aren’t a nice cowboy. Are you going to break my heart so bad that I have to write a country song about it?”
Sawyer smiled. “Sounds like a plan to me. Call me when it hits the charts, and I’ll have Polly put it on the jukebox. Beer?”
“Double shot of whiskey. I’m a whiskey girl, and when I have had about three shots, I get very, very horny,” Betsy said.
“Then I’d advise you to stay away from Quaid Brennan. That could cause a whole new phase to the war.”
“Quaid is a pansy. He wouldn’t know what to do with a real woman.”
One second she was grinning at Sawyer. The next, Kinsey Brennan had jerked her off the stool and was screaming something about not calling her cousin names. Fists were flying, right along with hunks of hair, by the time Sawyer made his way around the end of the bar. His first thought was that women fought dirtier than men, because they were going at each other’s eyeballs, scratching at whatever skin was bare and landing wild punches everywhere. It put a whole new meaning to catfight, and not a single soul was doing a thing to stop it.
He tried to get ahold of either one of them, but it was like holding onto a greased hog. One minute he had an arm or his hands around a waist, the next it was gone, and there was more screaming and hair pulling. Then out of the blue, Jill Cleary was there beside him.
For a full thirty seconds she watched the fight, and then she went behind the bar, drew up a pitcher of beer, and carried it back around to the floor where a circle of people had gathered. Dollars exchanged hands as to who would come out the winner. The Brennans cheered for Kinsey; the Gallaghers for Betsy. The neutral folks cheered for whoever was on top.
Jill pushed through the people until she was right above the rolling mass of red and blond hair and dumped an entire pitcher of beer right on their heads. They came up spitting and sputtering, and the fight ended. People headed back to their tables or claimed a bar stool. Betsy’s red hair hung in limp strands around her face. Her lacy shirt hung like a dishrag on her body, and pure old unadulterated anger flashed from her eyes.
Kinsey started toward Jill, but Sawyer stepped between them. “It’s over. You two get on out of here for tonight. I’ll tell you the same thing I told your two cousins. Take it out in the road and kill each other. That way I don’t have to go to dinner or supper with either of you tomorrow.”
“Well, that’s real sweet”—Betsy pointed at Kinsey—“but believe me, darlin’, you won’t want to touch that once you’ve seen what I’ve got to offer.”
“You bitch,” Kinsey said.
Jill pointed. “Outside, or I’ll fill up another pitcher of beer. Sawyer, if you’ll go on back to the bar business, I’ll take care of the mess.”
She took a mop from a closet, filled it with water from the bathroom, and cleaned up the beer, then joined Sawyer behind the bar.
“This is horrible. I can’t imagine grown people acting like this for anything or anyone,” Jill said.
“I told you earlier. First and foremost it’s Fiddle Creek,” Sawyer said. “You will inherit, and they both want it, plus you are a prize even without Fiddle Creek. Either one would crow that they’d won you away from the other side. And right now, the feud is in full-blast hot fire. Take your choice. Either one can make your wildest dreams come true. But I’ve got to tell you, Jill, that pitcher of beer was sheer genius.”