reason to believe she was telling the truth now. And yet he did believe her. He was either the most gullible man in the world or just plumb crazy. Regardless, he trusted her.

She wasn't a thief. Therefore, there had to be a logical explanation for why she just happened to have all that money with her, and just as soon as possible, he was going to sit her down and demand that she tell him everything.

He didn't speak to her again until they made camp about twelve miles south of Gramby. He asked her to get a fire started while he backtracked to find out if they were being followed. By the time he returned to the campsite, she had the bedrolls laid out and a pot of coffee brewing over the flames.

She waited until after he had taken care of the horses and had eaten his supper to bring up the topic she was sure would give him indigestion.

'I don't think it's a good idea to keep the money in my satchel, because that's the first place Ezekiel will look for it.'

'Hopefully he won't get close enough to look.'

He glanced around the campsite. He remembered dropping the satchel next to the bedrolls, but it wasn't there now.

'What'd you do with the money?'

She pointed to a jagged boulder about twenty feet away from where she was seated. 'I hid the satchel behind that rock under some bushes.'

He dropped down beside her and added some twigs to the fire. She offered him an apple, and when he shook his head, she put it back in her lap.

'Could you tell if Ezekiel was following us or not?'

'No,' he replied. 'The clouds were already moving in. If he is, he's going to have a hell of a time seeing our tracks.'

'Won't he see the smoke from our fire?'

'With all this mist? No, he won't see it.'

'Why is it so damp here?'

'We're close to Juniper Falls,' he replied. 'Genevieve, what could you have been thinking, carrying all that money? My God, you left it in the stable with the horses.'

'No one ever steals an old bedroll,' she said. 'It was safer there than in the saloon.'

He was trying to keep his temper under control. 'I think you'd better start explaining. If you didn't steal the money from Ezekiel, then where did you get it?'

'Oh, I stole the money from him all right.'

His mouth dropped open. 'You what?'

She put her hand on his knee in an attempt to calm him. 'Don't get mad until you've heard everything. I did take the money from Ezekiel, but it never belonged to him. I guess you could say I stole from a thief. Yes, that's exactly what I did,' she added with a nod.

'Start at the beginning and try to make sense.'

'I just hate it when you snap orders at me like that.'

'Start talking, Genevieve.'

His impatience irritated her. She put the apple back in the burlap sack and folded her hands in her lap.

'I was duped, just like everyone else. I remember telling you that I attended the same church your mother had joined and that I sang in the choir,' she said. 'Once a year, on Palm Sunday, an assembly of preachers would join the congregation and one would be chosen by our preacher to give the sermon. On one such occasion, the Reverend Thomas Kerriman spoke. He was begging for our help and told us that he was going to lead a large group of families to Kansas to join a settlement there. The families were in a hard way, Adam. They didn't have money or clothes or food, but what they did have was a will to start over again and build a new life. Reverend Kerriman was their Moses.'

'And was he like Ezekiel Jones?'

'Oh, no, he's the complete opposite. I knew Thomas before he became a preacher. We grew up together in the same parish, and I know for a fact that he's a good and decent man. He would never dupe anyone.'

'So what happened?'

'Ezekiel was also in the congregation that day. He stepped forward and promised Kerriman that he had a sure way to help him. He pointed to the choir and said that if the members agreed, he would take us from town to town to sing, and all the donations would go to Kerriman's cause. He singled me out and said that my voice alone would guarantee large donations.' She sounded ashamed.

'You have a beautiful voice, Genevieve,' Adam remarked.

'Thank you,' she replied. 'My father used to tell me that God gives each one of us a special talent and it's up to us to decide if we will use that talent for good or evil. I didn't understand at the time what he meant. I do now.'

'Because of Ezekiel?'

'No, because of me. I let him turn my head with all his compliments. I liked being singled out, Adam, and I started dreaming about fame and fortune. He easily drew me into his scheme. I was very full of myself back then, and Ezekiel fed my pride. I'm very ashamed of the person I became. I acted like a spoiled child,' she added. 'Fame went to my head, and before long the only friend I had left in the choir was Lottie.'

'The woman who sent you the wire.'

'Yes,' she replied.

'So you went from town to town singing and collecting money.'

'Yes,' she said. 'Ezekiel became more and more demanding. I was never allowed to go anywhere by myself or with my friend. He hired men to watch over me…'

'Lewis and Herman?'

She nodded. 'Ezekiel told me they were there to protect me, but I was more afraid of them than the men they were protecting me from. I still stubbornly clung to my dream of being famous, and then something happened and I saw how shallow and empty my life was becoming.'

'What happened?'

'My mother died and I didn't even know about it until two weeks after her funeral. We were singing in Birmingham, and one of her friends come all that way to tell me. I found out later that she had sent a wire to Ezekiel when my mother became ill, but he hid it from me. I will never forgive myself or him.'

'If you didn't know-'

'I should have known,' she whispered. 'I should have gone home more often to see her, but I was so caught up in my own dreams I forgot what was the most important thing of all.'

'Family.'

'Yes, family.'

'Would Ezekiel have let you leave?'

'No, but I could have found a way.'

He put his arm around her shoulders and pulled her into his side. 'What about your father?'

'He died a year before my mother.'

He let out a sigh. 'I understand why you want to go to Paris. Your grandfather's the only family left, isn't he?'

'I didn't exactly tell you the truth about my grandfather. He is in Paris…'

'But?'

'He died a long time ago. I'm going there to pay my respects.'

'Why did you let me think he was alive?'

She glanced over at him. 'If you had thought I was all alone in the world, you would have felt sorry for me, and I didn't want that to happen.'

The tenderness in his eyes made her want to curl up in his lap and cling to him. She turned away, resisting the lure, and said, 'Lots of people are alone, so stop looking at me like that. Now, do you want to hear the rest of this or not?'

'Yes, I want to hear the rest of it.'

He was gently rubbing her arm. She never wanted him to stop, and as soon as that thought came into her

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