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Chapter 7

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The dust churned by the buckboard the next afternoon signaled his crew’s return from Mason. He relaxed when he saw both women on the seat and another in the back. Good. Susie must have found some help. Reg and J.C. were loping ahead of them.

The boys dropped off their horses at the corral.

“Well,” Reg said. “They’re bringing their bodies back. We seen them in Mason with three pine boxes. Funeral’s tomorrow. We going to go?”

“I guess we should pay our respects to the dead,” Chet said.

“Hell, have we got to wear ties and coats?”

Chet nodded. “Won’t kill us.”

“One of you boys go help Susie unload,” Dale Allen said to them.

Reg started to say something, then handed his reins to his brother and set out for the house. Why did Dale Allen order those boys around like that? It made Chet about half mad, too. Everyone pitched in and helped, but that surly way Dale Allen had of speaking to them got under Chet’s hide, too.

“I guess we all could go help her,” Chet said, and started that way as J.D. began to unsaddle.

“I got these, Chet,” said J.D.

“Good.”

“How was Mason?”’ Chet asked Reg as they walked across the yard.

“Fine, but I saw something there.” He looked around and then lowered his voice. “Jake Porter was up there. I seen his team in a lot. You’d recognize them a mile away.”

“What was he doing?”

Reg shrugged and then grinned big. “He was staying there at some widow woman’s house. It’s a big fancy place. They called it Colonel Bridges House. Two-story and brick. He never came out while we were there.”

“Hmmm,” Chet said. “That’s kind of open, isn’t it?”

“I guess he had his reasons.”

“Yeah,” Reg said. “Like that fella up north has with that Mexican woman.”

Dale Allen frowned at what they meant, but the rest laughed.

“Susie get someone to help?” Chet asked.

Reg nodded. “Her name’s Astria.”

“Good.”

“Susie, how did it go?” Chet said as she came out and pushed a wave of brown hair back from her face with a smile.

“I found material, some items I couldn’t get in Mayfield, and I hired Astria Valdez.”

The men swept off their hats for the girl in her teens on the porch who looked very self-conscious biting her lip and nodding at them. Slender and maybe fourteen, she looked taken aback by all the people that Susie introduced. Then everyone took something inside.

Chet spoke to her in Spanish. “We are glad to have you here, Astria.”

“I am grateful that the señorita hired me. This is a large hacienda and a pretty place to live. Gracias.”

“You will be a family member here.”

“I will try, señor.”

“No, Susie is very fair. You will like her.”

“Oh, I do already.”

He nodded and took a load of purchases inside. He still did not understand what Jake Porter was doing in Mason at some widow’s house when he’d told Marla he was going to San Antonio. Would that knowledge change Marla’s mind about leaving him? Chet better not tell her. Telling gossip wasn’t his game. She’d find out. Someone would slip and Chet would be there. The notion made him feel stronger about reaching some permanent arrangement with her.

On the living room rocker, May was nursing six-month-old Donna. She smiled at Chet as she hoisted the baby up for a better position.

“Well, your help’s back,” he said to her.

“Yes. I missed them.” She shook her head like she was tired of being chief cook and bottle washer. Besides nursing her own, she had eighteen-month-old Rachel crawling around, getting into everything. “I’m glad Susie brought us some help.”

The poor girl had come from being a pampered banker’s daughter to becoming a mother of two—one was Rachel, whose birth cost Nancy her life, and the second one arrived nine months after the wedding. May still carried some baby fat. Not as pretty as Nancy, she still tried hard in Chet’s book, and did not receive a lot of help or attention from his brother—her husband.

“Louise and I are making new shirts for the men,” Susie announced, showing him the bolt of blue denim. “We have material for dresses for the spring and even for Mother.”

Louise stood back silent and helped unpack staples like coffee and baking powder from the wooden crates. She’d not said one word to Chet since the schoolyard, and he could see behind her darting brown eyes that she wanted to rake him over the coals again.

“There’s a new doctor in Mason,” said Susie.

“Good. Always can use one to them,” Chet said, making room to set his load on the table. “I understand the funeral is tomorrow. I think we should go and pay our respects.”

“Isn’t that hypocritical?” Louise asked.

“You don’t have to go if you feel that way,” Chet said.

“You’re right, Chet Byrnes. I don’t have to do one thing that you tell me to do. I have wired an attorney in Shreveport and asked him what my rights were.”

“Does that mean you are leaving, Louise?”

“I want my sons to grow up in a more civilized place than this outpost in hell.”

“You sure they want to leave here?”

“They are both under eighteen and they will do as I say.”

“Fine, when you get that letter from that lawyer, show it to me. You have not seen Shreveport in a number of years. May I suggest you go there on a visit and see it first? I understand that much of the South is still so torn up from the war, it hardly is the same.”

“You want rid of me, is that it?”

“No, ma’am, but you don’t know what the South is like today. We may live in hell, but there are worse places.”

“How would I get the means?”

“We can pay for it.” He waited for her answer.

She turned on her heel to leave, would not look back at him, and tossed her words at him while leaving. “I will consider it.”

Reg dried his palms on the front of his pants. “I damn sure ain’t going along with her.”

Chet shook his head to quiet him. A trip to Shreveport might settle her for a while. At least she would not be around to harass him; let her go see the slave-free South. All those once-rich people doing their own wash on boards in tubs. She might think the ranch wasn’t so bad after all.

The taste and quality of the food picked up with Susie back, and so did everyone’s appetite at the supper table. After the meal, he excused himself, slipped off, saddled a horse, and rode out in the twilight. The short days wouldn’t be getting longer for months.

He rode up on the ridge under the stars, listened to the coyotes. Huddled in his jumper shell, he wished he’d worn more clothing. A new cold front had moved in and no rain. His thirsty ranch needed all the rain he could get for it.

This mess with the Reynolds clan might hurt his spring cattle drive. People might be challenged not to use his services. Those extra thousand head paid the expenses for the drive. There was still money going north with a herd of his own, but the extra insured a profit. Time would tell.

At the end of the ridge, he looked off across the pearl-lighted country. Better forget about seeing Marla for the night and head home. He short-loped the good horse for the house.

When the roan was put up, he realized that that late smoke was coming from the fireplace and a light was on in the living room. The notion of warming up at the hearth made him head for the main house’s front door. He opened it quietly and in the rosy glow from the hearth, May was rocking the older girl in her lap.

“Baby sick?” he asked quietly. Pulling off his thin gloves, he held his hands out to the radiant heat.

“I am afraid Rachel’s not the healthiest baby. I try. I make sure she gets food, but it upsets her stomach a lot and she must have had a bad dream tonight.” May made the rocker go faster and hugged the child closer. “Do you think she will go?”

He turned and frowned at her.

“Louise—you said she could go on a visit to Louisiana. You’d pay her way.”

He shrugged. Why did that sound so important to May? “Yes.”

“Maybe when she’s gone away, my husband will share our bed again.”

Shocked, he stopped warming himself. Was she telling the truth? Why wouldn’t she? Slowly, he nodded, “I’m sorry, May. You have a large cross to bear.”

“I just want to be his wife.”

He saw the tears in her eyes. Two days doing Susie’s job and all the rest had worn her out—but his brother’s spurning her had hurt her the worst.

“I will press her to go on that visit.”

“Thank you,” she said, and rocked harder.

All the way to the bunkhouse, he wondered what he should do next. Damn Dale Allen’s worthless soul.

Texas Blood Feud

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