Bedder G. Stagwood came to Mercy Junction looking for an easier way to die than ranch work. What he found was a sample case, a town full of sharp tongues, a smooth rival salesman, and Lila Jones-a woman too steady to be sold nonsense. Bedder is no polished merchant. He is hungry, plainspoken, awkward with charm, and more likely to talk a customer out of buying than into it. But in a town where every penny matters, his odd way of selling begins to matter too.
He asks what fits. He writes clear receipts. He learns that honest work is not just refusing crookedness-it is knowing when a costly thing is truly worth it. Then Boone Tackett arrives. Boone is everything Bedder is not: smooth, successful, admired, and dangerous in ways that are hard to prove. He sells fear as preparedness, shame as privacy, and hidden charges as service. His goods are useful. His words are reasonable.
His receipts are not always clean. When women in Mercy Junction begin comparing papers, the town discovers Boone's real trick: he never made one customer feel cheated. He made each one feel alone. As Bedder, Lila, Alma Fitch, and the townspeople follow the paper trail, Mercy Junction must decide what kind of business it wants-and what kind of truth it can afford. At the same time, Bedder and Lila's bond grows carefully, publicly, and against the pressure of a town that thinks it has a right to judge what love is allowed to stand.
Funny, sharp, and full of heart, The Wiles of a Salesman is a Western comedy about clean work, crooked charm, hard-earned trust, and two people choosing love without apology.
Bedder G. Stagwood came to Mercy Junction looking for an easier way to die than ranch work. What he found was a sample case, a town full of sharp tongues, a smooth rival salesman, and Lila Jones-a woman too steady to be sold nonsense. Bedder is no polished merchant. He is hungry, plainspoken, awkward with charm, and more likely to talk a customer out of buying than into it. But in a town where every penny matters, his odd way of selling begins to matter too.
He asks what fits. He writes clear receipts. He learns that honest work is not just refusing crookedness-it is knowing when a costly thing is truly worth it. Then Boone Tackett arrives. Boone is everything Bedder is not: smooth, successful, admired, and dangerous in ways that are hard to prove. He sells fear as preparedness, shame as privacy, and hidden charges as service. His goods are useful. His words are reasonable.
His receipts are not always clean. When women in Mercy Junction begin comparing papers, the town discovers Boone's real trick: he never made one customer feel cheated. He made each one feel alone. As Bedder, Lila, Alma Fitch, and the townspeople follow the paper trail, Mercy Junction must decide what kind of business it wants-and what kind of truth it can afford. At the same time, Bedder and Lila's bond grows carefully, publicly, and against the pressure of a town that thinks it has a right to judge what love is allowed to stand.
Funny, sharp, and full of heart, The Wiles of a Salesman is a Western comedy about clean work, crooked charm, hard-earned trust, and two people choosing love without apology.