“Wedding?” Kaederman interrupted, startled.
A pretty girl in a muslin gown blushed crimson and leaned against a tall, gangly kid in buckskins. He grinned. “Got ourselves hitched proper, brought a preacher with us and all, held the ceremony over at the trading post last week.”
“Oh, it was so wonderful!” his bride put in excitedly. “There were real Indians and mountain men and everything! And the silliest salesman you ever saw, selling ordinary crescent wrenches, called them a new high-tech invention out of Sweden, patented only three years ago. People were paying outrageous prices for them! It was amazing, I’d never seen anything like it, fur trappers and miners buying crescent wrenches!” The blushing bride was clearly determined not to let the tragedy of a double murder mar her honeymoon.
Kit smiled. “Congratulations, I’m sure it was a wedding to remember. Now, what the hell happened?” He swung his gaze back to the Time Tours guide.
Travers sighed. “The action and endurance course runs through the hills and gullies around town. The idea is, you stalk and shoot every full round of the course over a period of several hours, to test your endurance and accuracy under pressure. Well, Cassie Coventina, or rather, the kid we thought was Cassie Coventina, was moving steadily through it on horseback, just as planned. We put spotters out along the route to act as judges and scorekeepers, but she—I mean he—never made it to the first target. Let me tell you, it was one helluva shock, when Dr. Booker stripped that kid off and we discovered Cassie Coventina was a teenage boy in drag!”