trees, a barber shop and a soda fountain advertising old-fashioned milkshakes. Tulips and crocuses grew in window boxes in front of the various businesses.
âThe town is beautiful,â Charity said as they crossed the street and headed for the restaurant on the corner. They walked around an open manhole cover where two female city workers set up equipment.
âQuiet,â Marsha murmured. âToo quiet.â
âPart of the reason you hired me.â Charity smiled. âTo bring in businesses and with them employment.â
âExactly.â
âIâve brainstormed some ideas,â Charity told her, not sure if this was a working lunch or a get-to-know-you lunch.
âHow many of them are run by and employ mostly men?â
Charity paused in front of the restaurant, sure sheâd misunderstood the mayorâs question. âExcuse me?â
Marshaâs dark blue eyes danced with amusement. âI asked about men. Oh, donât get frightened. Not for me. For the town. You havenât noticed?â
Charity slowly shook her head, wondering if the otherwise together mayor had hit her head or taken some questionable medication. âNoticed what?â
âLook around,â the mayor told her. âShow me where the men are.â
Charity had no idea what she was talking about. Men, as in men?
She slowly scanned the street around them. There were two female city workers, a woman in a postal service uniform delivering mail, a young woman painting a store window.
âI donât see any.â
âExactly. Foolâs Gold has a serious man shortage. Itâs part of the reason I hired you. To bring more men to our town.â
CHAPTER TWO
T HE F OX AND H OUND Restaurant was decorated the an American version of a classic English pub. Deep booths, a long wooden bar and English hunting prints on the wall. Charity was sure it was lovely, and later, when she was able to focus better, she would take it all in. Now all she could do was trail after the mayor as they were led to a quiet table by the window.
Charity took her seat across from the older woman and pressed her lips together. She wasnât going to say a word until Marsha had explained herself.
Marsha began right away. âThe problem started years ago. Men left to find better jobs and never came back. That was in my day and for some reason, itâs not getting better. The preliminary census numbers are a disaster. When the actual 2010 census comes out, itâs going to be a disasterâboth in the press and in how the town sees itself. If we donât get some men here for our young women to marry, theyâll start leaving, too, and then the town will die. Thatâs not going to happen on my watch.â
The mayor sounded fierce as she spoke. And determined.
Charity had reached for her water, mostly to buy time. A man shortage? Was this a joke? Part of a small-town initiation ritual?
âThere are plenty of businesses that traditionally employ men,â she began slowly. âIf youâre serious about this.â
âI am.â Marsha leaned toward her. âFoolâs Gold was a gold rush town, founded in the 1870s. It grew and prospered, and when the gold ran out, just after the turn of the century, it started to have problems.â
A waitress appeared with menus. She took their drink orders and left.
âGeographically, weâre blessed,â Marsha continued. âThat kept us from disappearing completely. The original ski resort was built in the fifties, the vineyards west of here are at least sixty years old. So far weâre holding our own. There are plenty of service industries, some small businesses. Ethan Hendrix owns a construction company that has branched out into windmills, so he brings in a few men, but itâs not enough.â
Marsha shrugged. âI tell myself I should be thrilled by the women he employs. Equality and all that, but I canât. Men