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Chapter Five

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Sam was whistling as he strolled over to the Drover’s Cottage after watching Mercy and her sister walk away down the street. The night hadn’t turned out so badly, after all. He’d met Mercedes LaFleche, the subject of the cardsharp’s dare, and he had an appointment to take her to supper tomorrow evening at nine o’clock.

This evening, he corrected himself with a grin, realizing it was after midnight. By the time the clock struck midnight again, he would have had an enjoyable supper with a beautiful woman whose sister he had rescued—a chivalrous act that should weigh heavily in his favor—and if his luck held, by the next morning he just might already have won the wager.

“Mercy, Mercy, have mercy,” he mused aloud, grinning all over again as he remembered how her green eyes had flashed sparks at him for making a play on words with her name. So her real name is Fairweather, hmm? Yet she goes by Mercy, rather than Mercedes… The sparks—of anger? of challenge?—hadn’t dismayed him. Sam liked a woman to have some fire in her nature. It usually made the time in bed a lot more worthwhile, and the morning after a hell of a lot more interesting.

So her sister wasn’t a prostitute—yet, he amended. His quick impression of Charity Fairweather, made when she had been sitting at the table with the boys and himself and flirting with all of them, was that the foolish little blonde was the natural harlot, not Mercy. Still, Charity’s distress at Culhane’s pawing had seemed genuine enough. But you could never tell with sporting women. It may have just been a matter of her asking more money than Tom wanted to pay.

What was clear enough to Sam, though, was that Mercy didn’t want her sister in the business, and to him that indicated a basic goodness in her that he found very likable. He thought he would enjoy their little supper tomorrow, quite apart from considerations of winning the bet.

He hoped she’d wear that green dress again, or something like it. The neckline of that dress had been just high enough to make her look like a lady, so that he could take her to dinner at Abilene’s one respectable hotel, and just low enough to hint at the delights that awaited him later. Farther down, its silken folds had clung lovingly to a slender waistline above enticingly feminine hips. He liked the fact, too, that she didn’t seem to paint her face like the other sporting women did; in fact, unless he missed his guess, Mercy’s face was completely clear of paint. But then, some women didn’t need paint to make them appealing, and perhaps this woman was one of the few who realized that fact. Though not classically beautiful, she was pretty in her own way.

She had told him she would meet him at the hotel. She hadn’t wanted him to come and escort her from her rooms above the Alamo, and he wondered why. He didn’t think she was worried about him seeing some other well-satisfied customer leaving her. Most saloon girls didn’t start working, so to speak, until later in the evening.

Was it possible she was attracted to him, and saw his invitation to dinner as romantic, rather than just business? If so, she might not want to remind him of what she was by having him pick her up at her place of employment. He hoped that was the reason, and his hope had little to do with the money he had a chance to regain by succeeding with the lovely Mercedes.

Mercy waited until they’d walked a block from the Alamo Saloon before rounding on her sister. “How could you? How could you, Charity? After all Papa has told us about the things those cowboys get up to! You could have been…well, violated out there, Charity, did you realize that? How do you like your yellow-headed cowboy now?”

Charity shuddered. “He was horrible, Mercy. He said he just wanted to go for a stroll! His breath stank of whiskey and tobacco, and his teeth were yellow. And his hands—I swear, Mercy, he had more hands than that octopus in our old picture book! And the way he kissed me, Mercy—it started out kinda nice, and then all at once he stuck his tongue right in my mouth! It was awful! Mercy, I’m not ever g-going near a m-man again!” Her breath caught on a renewed sob.

Mercy put her arm bracingly around her sister’s shaking shoulders bracingly, and spoke in softer tones. “Yes, you will, honey. They’re not all lecherous beasts like that cowboy. You’ll find a good, decent man someday. But in the meantime, we need to have a talk about men…”

“When we get home?”

“No, silly. It’s going to be tough enough to get us both back inside without waking Papa, if he’s not already awake and waiting up with a switch, that is. No, we’ll have that talk soon, I promise, but tonight we need to get some sleep. That ol’ rooster’s going to crow before you know it.”

“I don’t think I could sleep now,” Charity confessed as they walked through the darkened streets of Abilene. Here and there lamplight spilled through a saloon window, illuminating a patch of the hard-packed dirt beneath their feet, enabling them to see and step around piles of horse droppings and, in one case, a snoring cowboy, obviously the worse for wear after an excess of tanglefoot.

Mercy didn’t think she could sleep tonight, either. As she lay in bed, she was sure she would be thinking about the darkly handsome Sam Houston Devlin, with those dangerous, deep blue eyes and that predatory smile.

She found it difficult to believe she’d agreed to go to supper with him. A frisson of terrified delight tingled all the way down her spine. She knew instinctively that he was dangerous to her, though she could not define what that meant. And yet, she would not have given up trying to see him tomorrow night for the moon and the stars. But how on earth was she going to be able to manage to do it?

She’d almost lost her nerve when he’d asked to come pick her up. He’d raised an eyebrow curiously when she’d refused, and for a moment she’d been afraid he was going to ask her why not. She couldn’t very well tell him that the reason for her reluctance was a fire-breathing papa who’d shoot him on sight rather than let his daughter spend a minute in a Texas cowboy’s company.

But thankfully, he’d accepted her request without further comment, and now she just had to figure out a way to get out of the house tomorrow night, dressed appropriately for supper at Abilene’s Grand Hotel.

She’d wear Mama’s garnet silk dress with the bishop sleeves and the ivory lace trim, she decided, along with Mama’s garnet earbobs and black cameo on black velvet ribbon.

“Mercy…” began her sister, breaking into her thoughts.

“What?”

“What did Mr. Devlin say to you? If…if you don’t mind my askin’, that is.”

Mercy said nothing for several paces, so long that Charity finally spoke again. “Did he…did he say he thought I was an idiot? That I deserved what could have happened? He…he has such a fierce look about him, Mercy. You can’t tell for sure what he’s thinking, can you?”

Her words surprised Mercy. Charity could be such a featherhead so much of the time, and then she’d come up with these perceptions about people that were dead on target.

“No, he wasn’t saying anything about you at all, you silly,” Mercy said, putting her arm around her sister as they walked on toward their house. “I…I shouldn’t even tell you this, Charity, but he was asking me to supper.”

Charity stopped stock-still in the road for a minute, her mouth making an O of astonishment. Then a smile began to play about her lips.

“Are you going to go? Do you want to go?”

Mercy pretended to be concentrating on making her way past a particularly dark stretch between two buildings. “I shouldn’t even consider it for a heartbeat, and you know it, Charity. He’s just the sort of man Papa’s warned us about. He might be just like that Tom Culhane, in spite of the fact he helped me find you just in the nick of time tonight, and got rid of Culhane when he wanted to be ugly about it.”

“But?”

Mercy could hear the grin in her sister’s words, even though she couldn’t see her face just now.

“But I want to go, if there’s a way to get out without Papa knowing.”

Charity let out a whoop of glee, and hugged her sister. Mercy immediately put a hand over Charity’s mouth to smother her outcry. They were passing the house of Horace and Abigail Barnes. The fat would sure be in the fire if that gossipy matron found them out strolling through the streets at a time when respectable ladies were long abed! “

Good for you, Mercy! I’m glad to hear you have some grit, after all! I’ll help you get out of the house, somehow. We’ll think of a way!”

Mercy felt warmed by her sister’s approval, and amused by her choice of words. “You didn’t think I had any grit? What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Nothing bad,” Charity assured her sister. “It’s just that…well, you’ve always done what Papa says is right, and you’re always so good about taking care of him an’ me an’ the house. But it seems like you don’t ever do anything for yourself, Mercy. You don’t ever get out of line. I think you should go and have a wonderful time.”

“I don’t know…As you say, there’s something about this Sam Devlin that’s a little, um, scary. Something devilish in those eyes, Charity.”

“I know.” The idea seemed to produce shivers of delight in Charity, rather than the opposite. “He’s the trail boss of that outfit Tom Culhane rode in with, you know. They call him ‘Devil,’ and themselves the ‘Devil’s Boys.’“

“Oh.” All the more reason to think she must have been insane to agree to see him.

“Stop worrying, Mercy—I can practically see what you’re thinking,” Charity told her. “It’s only supper. Even if he does have any dishonorable notions, he can’t exactly carry them out over the supper table, can he?”

“And you thought you were just going for a walk with Tom Culhane, remember?” Mercy retorted.

“Oh, I knew that scalawag wanted to do a little spoonin’,” her sister had the grace to admit. “But I didn’t think he wouldn’t listen when I said no. Devlin isn’t Culhane, Mercy. He may look fierce, but I don’t believe he’d ever hurt a woman, you know? There’s something…something honorable about him, deep down.”

Mercy devoutly hoped her sister was right.

“Now, what are you planning to wear?” Charity asked, then ran on, “I think…” And suddenly they were both just girls again, discussing the age-old feminine concern.

Deacon Paxton was thoughtful as he wiped up spilled liquor with a damp cloth. That Texan—the trail boss who’d stood talking to him until the girl had come in—there was something familiar about him. Had they met before? In the year since Abilene had gotten the railhead and become the end point on the Chisholm Trail, hundreds of Texans had poured into the town and back out again. Maybe he’d been one he’d met last year, or maybe he just resembled one he’d met. They all started to look alike after a while, he mused-tall, lean, with weathered faces and wary, sun-narrowed eyes. And they sounded alike, too, men of few words, generally—though Devlin had been friendly enough once he’d seen Deacon was inclined to be likewise. But he hadn’t been inclined to say much about himself.

He wondered what the Reverend Jeremiah Fairweather’s daughters had been doing in here tonight. The blond one, the one they called Charity, was clearly headed for trouble. Should he tell the preacher about seeing her in here tonight, sitting with the cowboys?

He thought about the time he’d asked the preacher if he could attend his Sunday services, and the Reverend Mr. Fairweather had told him he was welcome—in fact, he’d consider making him a deacon in fact as well as name, soon as he quit his job working in the Alamo. Deacon was in Satan’s employ, didn’t Deacon know that?

Recollecting that conversation, Deacon didn’t think he’d be talking to the preacher about his blond daughter. Or the one with the dark red hair, either, come to think of it. He’d been even more surprised to see Mercy Fairweather show up, and then leave with the Texas trail boss, but she’d looked worried. He supposed she’d been searching for her scapegrace sister, and from his vantage point at the bar it looked as if Devlin had offered to help her find Charity.

But Deacon had also seen the way Sam Devlin had been looking at the preacher’s older daughter before he’d led her out of the Alamo. It was the look of a predator who’d spotted his prey.

Deacon wondered if the Texan knew that his quarry was the daughter of the only preacher in this wild cow town-and if he knew, if he actually gave a damn. But it was none of his business, Deacon decided—unless he actually saw Devlin acting in a shady way.

“Have a good night, Deacon?” a woman’s husky voice asked from the stairs that led right past the bar.

Mercedes LaFleche stood there, lighting a cheroot. Once she was sure of at least one male watching her entrance into the nearly empty main room of the saloon, she descended the final three stairs.

“Yes, Miss LaFleche, how about you?” he asked politely. He liked the woman well enough—Mercedes LaFleche was an amiable person, especially when her customers had paid well.

“Good enough. I haven’t wasted my time, I guess.” She looked around the room, gauging the remaining customers, and turned back to Deacon, obviously deciding that none of the die-hard drinkers was worth her time and attention. “Give me a beer, Deacon, would you?”

“Sure ‘nough, Miss Mercedes. Say, did Wyatt see you? He told me there was a Texan in here hoping to meet you, a drover.”

“Hey, what’s this ‘Miss Mercedes’ stuff? I’ve told you often enough it’s just ‘Mercedes,’ haven’t I?” the woman said with a lazy smile, which showed the dimple in one rouged cheek. “Naw, I didn’t see Wyatt any time I was downstairs, which wasn’t often, if you know what I mean. So some Texas drover wanted to meet me, hmm? How unusual, ” Mercedes said with a wry quirk to her mouth that robbed her sarcasm of any sting.

“He seemed like a real pleasant fella, Miss Mercedes,” Deacon insisted, handing the prostitute her beer and wondering why he bothered to defend the drover to her. “I believe he said his handle was Sam Devlin.”

“I’m sure he was a nice fella, Deacon,” Mercedes said, patting the bartender’s hand. “You’ve never steered me wrong yet. Well, if I see this Devlin, I’ll smile at him real pretty, and listen to what he has to say—if he hasn’t lost all his money to Wyatt by then, that is.”

Devil's Dare

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