Читать книгу A Western Christmas Homecoming - Lynna Banning, Kathryn Albright - Страница 15

Chapter Five

Оглавление

The campsite Rand chose for their first night was nestled in a grove of pine trees and protected by a half circle of large gray boulders. A shallow, gurgling stream meandered nearby.

After more than eight hours in the saddle, Alice’s derriere was numb and her thigh muscles felt hot and jumpy. Never in her life had she ridden a horse for more than an hour at a time; she never dreamed she could be this tired. She slid off the chestnut mare and had to grab on to the saddle to keep her legs from collapsing.

The marshal surveyed her from the fire pit he was digging. “You’ve had a long ride,” he remarked. “Want some of my liniment?”

When she nodded, he rummaged in his saddlebag and thrust a bottle of brown liquid into her hand. It smelled like the furniture polish Sarah used on the dining table at the boardinghouse. Maybe it was furniture polish.

She stumbled down to the stream, dropped her skirt and her under-drawers and sloshed some of the smelly stuff onto her aching backside. When she returned he had built a campfire and was digging a frying pan and some bacon out of his saddlebag.

“Hungry?” he asked without looking up.

“That is a rhetorical question, Marshal. Of course I am hungry.”

“And tired, too, I bet.”

“And crabby,” she admitted.

He didn’t answer, just sliced off some bacon and laid it in the pan. When the bacon was crisp he dumped in a can of chili beans, and that was supper. She wasn’t complaining. She was so tired and hungry she would eat anything, even a bear if it lumbered into camp. She shivered at the thought.

He dished up the mess into two tin plates and handed her a spoon, and for the next half hour they ate without talking. Whatever he called this concoction, it tasted wonderful! She gobbled it down, and when her plate was empty she unrolled her blankets and sat staring into the fire while Rand tramped off to the stream to wash the plates.

When he returned a mug of coffee appeared at her elbow.

“You sure don’t talk much,” he said, settling himself beside her.

“Neither do you,” she retorted.

“I guess that’s because I usually travel alone. I do talk to my horse sometimes, though.”

“And since I’m a librarian, I talk to my books.”

He laughed at that, and then answered the question she hadn’t asked yet. “Three days. It’ll take three days of riding to reach Silver City.”

“You mean I cannot bathe for three whole days? By then I will smell to high heaven!”

He bit back a smile. “Nah, you won’t. First of all, you’ve got a bottle of fancy-smelling stuff in your saddlebag. And second...” He paused to toss the dregs of his coffee into the fire. “There are lots of streams and rivers between here and Silver City where you can take a bath. As long as you don’t mind cold water,” he added with a grin.

“How do you know that, Marshal? About the rivers and streams, I mean?”

“Maps,” he said with a chuckle. “Books are full of ’em. I should think you’d know that, being a librarian.”

She studied him in the firelight. It was too dark to see his face, but his voice was full of laughter. Thank the Lord! There would be nothing worse than traveling for three days with a man who was dull in the head.

Suddenly she remembered why she was riding into the wilderness with the marshal and she sucked in her breath. Tears stung under her eyelids at the thought of her sister. Deliberately she turned her attention to something else.

Her traveling companion, Marshal Logan, for instance. He was a puzzle of a man in many ways. Well-mannered. Considerate. Knowledgeable. And obviously a dedicated lawman. And, she had discovered, he was a passable cook.

And yet she sensed a streak of something hard and unyielding in him; he was like a bar of iron wrapped in something soft, like velvet. She liked the way he listened to her, as if what she said mattered. But she was constantly aware of that core of inner toughness.

Something tu-whooed in a nearby pine tree and she jerked. “What was that?”

“Owl.”

She pointed at something rustling in the shrubbery behind them. “And that?”

“Don’t know. Probably something that’s more scared of us than we are of it.”

“That,” she said with a shudder, “is cold comfort. Do you think it’s something big, like a...mountain lion?”

“Nope. Probably the rabbit that owl is after. Alice, you’ve been cool and collected for the last ten hours. How come you’re so skittery all of a sudden?”

“Maybe because I just realized how alone we are way out here in the middle of nowhere. No lights. No sheriff. No...help.”

“Alone is good. A smart traveler is always wary of company on the trail. Besides, I’m a marshal, remember?”

His voice sounded overpatient. Surely she wasn’t being a trial. For the last twenty-four hours she had worked hard to appear calm and rational and brave. She couldn’t lose control now. She just couldn’t.

“Alice? Is something wrong?”

“No. Well, yes. I am—I am a bit frightened.” A little laugh escaped her. “Actually, I am a lot frightened!”

“That’s a relief,” he said. “I was beginning to think you were more stone statue than flesh-and-blood girl.”

“Oh.” His voice was not accusing; it was understanding, which was a relief. “I assure you, Marshal, I am quite human.”

Rand turned toward her. “For God’s sake, Alice, could you call me Rand instead of ‘Marshal’?”

She flinched, and Rand was instantly sorry he’d snapped at her.

“Of course,” she said quietly.

He strode off to the stream, and when he returned she was rolled up in her blankets like a sausage, her body curled close to the dying fire. He stood looking down at her for a long time, thinking how the firelight made everything look soft until it faded into blackness. And then he noticed the blanket was shaking.

She was crying. He couldn’t hear her, but he knew. He dragged his own bedroll from behind the saddle, shucked his boots and stuffed his Colt under the saddle at his head. Then he crawled next to her, wrapped himself in his bedroll and pulled the shuddering bundle into his arms.

“Alice, I’m sorry. Guess I’m tired, but I didn’t mean to snap at you.”

The blanket covered her face, but he could hear her still crying. Of all the things that he hated in life, hearing a woman cry was the worst.

“Alice.”

“I—I’m not crying because of anything you s-said, Mar—Rand. I’m crying b-because I’m exhausted and saddle-sore and s-scared.”

Relief surged through him. “Alice, if you weren’t scared, you’d be crazy.”

She gave a choked laugh. “Well, then, it would appear I am most certainly not crazy.”

“I’ve been scared plenty of times, Alice. Once on an army patrol we ran into a bunch of outlaws holed up in a canyon. It was my first campaign, and I was plenty scared. We managed to capture all but two of them, and I was scared the whole time.”

“What happened to the two you didn’t capture?”

He hesitated. “I shot them.”

“Were you frightened then?”

“The fear was there all the time. I just tried to move through it and keep going.”

She nodded and he heard a ragged sigh. “Thank you, Rand.”

He lay for a long time with his arms around her blanket-wrapped form. Finally her breathing evened out and he figured she’d fallen asleep. Just as he started to ease his arm out from under her, the blanket fell away and she opened her eyes and tried to smile.

“I have had a really terrible time since you told me about my sister. Most of the time I feel like screaming.”

“You want to give it up? Go back to Smoke River?”

There was a long silence. “No,” she said at last. “I want to keep on. I want to find whoever killed my sister.”


They rode east, toward Idaho Territory, and the landscape turned brown and dry and hot. Tiny stinging insects swarmed around Alice’s face, and no matter how much she swatted and flailed at them, they got caught in her hair. The streams grew narrower, and the shallow rivers they rode across flowed green and lazy. She desperately wanted a bath.

To occupy her mind, she studied Rand Logan. He was interesting in a lawman sort of way, with his rifle nestled in a saddle scabbard and a worn leather gun belt strapped low on his hip. His leather boots had spurs, which chinged when he walked, but she never saw him touch his horse with the rowels. Maybe the spurs were just for show.

Except that Marshal Logan didn’t seem to care about appearances. This morning he’d shaved hastily and sloppily, and the dark mustache over his upper lip looked a little raggedy. She liked his eyes, green as jade and always watchful. He certainly didn’t talk much, but when he did speak she paid attention. She had to pay attention, she acknowledged. This was the most frightening thing she had ever done.

As a librarian she’d led a very circumspect life. No bumps or surprises, just nice, quiet books in a nice, quiet building in a nice, quiet town. Books were her life, her reason for living. The printed word made sense of the world around her, of things she couldn’t control, like wars and floods and hunger and suffering.

And murder. She knew the only way she could help find Dottie’s murderer was to follow this man into God knows what, and that made her more than a little bit uneasy.

Halfway through the afternoon they turned north, toward the mountains. Now, instead of riding straight into the sun, its rays came from her right, and she quickly learned to keep her hat tilted and the shirtsleeve on that side rolled down to avoid sunburn.

But by midafternoon, the hot October sun was burning her skin right through the fabric.

Rand rode with his gray Stetson tipped down so far she wondered how he could see the trail ahead. Occasionally she glanced over at him, but he didn’t notice. Or didn’t seem to notice. He studied the trail ahead, his right hand always resting on the butt of his revolver. Force of habit, she guessed.

Hour after uneventful hour passed, but he still watched everything, even her. And she couldn’t help studying him when he wasn’t looking. His hair was overlong, just brushing his earlobes. And the hand holding his reins was lean and long-fingered. A surgeon’s hands. Why had he chosen to become a US Marshal rather than a doctor?

She flicked the chestnut’s reins and drew ahead of him, then waited for him to catch up.

“In a hurry?” he called.

“I get restless just plodding along with nothing to do but think.”

“If you want your horse to last in this heat, you’ll go slow.”

“Slow is hot,” she said.

“I figure there’s a stream a couple of miles ahead. We can stop there.”

“How could you possibly know that?”

“Trees.” He tipped his head. “Look yonder. Cottonwoods grow where it’s wet. Willows, too.”

Sure enough, a fuzz of green leafy growth appeared on the horizon. She couldn’t wait for the stream; just thinking about water made her thirsty. She uncapped the canteen hanging on her cantle and shook it. Empty. Rand unhooked his own canteen and passed it to her.

“Why am I out of water when you’re not?” she wondered aloud.

“Maybe because you’re greedy?” He phrased it as a question, but she got the message. She shouldn’t guzzle water just because she was thirsty; she should ration it out. She took a single swallow of the warm, metal-flavored water and handed the canteen back to him.

She was completely out of her element out here. This wilderness was so far removed from her peaceful, quiet library she might as well be on the moon.

Another hour brought them to a little trickle of a stream, just enough to water the horses and refill the canteens. There was barely enough to splash over her sweaty face and neck.

“Still got a couple hours of daylight left, Alice. Are you okay with going on?”

She laughed. “You mean I could hurry up the sunset if I wanted to stop for the night? Librarians are smart, but they’re not that smart.”

He turned his head to grin at her and she noticed something. One side of his face was darker than the other. He must have been riding north before he arrived in Smoke River and his sunburn had turned his skin tan.

“Rand, where were you coming from when you reached Smoke River?”

“How do you know I didn’t come in on the train?”

“I just know. Librarians are—”

“Observant,” he finished with a chuckle. “I was coming from Colorado Territory. Denver City.”

“Colorado! That’s hundreds of miles from Oregon.”

“Sure is. Why do you think I was so hungry at supper that first night?”

“Why didn’t you take the train from Denver City instead of riding all that way?”

He didn’t answer for a long while. “Because I needed the time,” he said finally.

“Time for what?”

“Time to work out a plan. And,” he added, “I didn’t want to load Sinbad on a freight car.” He bent to pat his horse’s neck.

For the next hour Alice thought about his answer. So he needed to think up a plan. And he cared about his horse. Interesting.

By the time they made camp next to a pretty, shaded river in the foothills, she had run out of questions. She watched him loosen the cinch and rub his bay down with a handful of dry grass, then do the same for her chestnut mare. Finally he dropped both saddles at her feet and strode off to the river. When he returned, his hair was dripping wet.

“I’ll put some supper together while you take a bath if you want. There’s a little pool behind that scrubby willow, and I didn’t leave any soapsuds floating in the water.”

Soapsuds! She didn’t have any soap that would make suds. She had forgotten to purchase soap at the mercantile, so she had only a sliver of Sarah’s yellow laundry soap.

“Think you’re gonna be scared tonight?” he asked.

“What an odd question. I expect I will be scared every night until...until this is over. Why do you ask?”

“Just wanted to know how close to lay our bedrolls.”

She eyed the two saddles he’d dropped at her feet. “Close,” she said. “You are the experienced one with a gun.”

As it turned out, Rand regretted sleeping close to her. All day he had been reviewing his plan for catching her sister’s killer, deciding who to interview and what premises to inspect. He was also worrying about how to keep Alice safe in an untamed mining camp.

He was continually surprised by the woman riding with him. She wasn’t frightened by the things that should frighten her, like trapping a killer. Instead she jumped at rustling in the underbrush, at buzzard calls, at things that were no threat, like a chicken hawk swooping off a tree limb or a rabbit scuttling away under a huckleberry bush.

But she had no idea how rough the frontier outside a small peaceful town like Smoke River could be. And she had a lot to learn about open country. He knew he could keep her safe in countryside like this, where there was clearly identifiable danger. But what about in a rough mining town?

He’d noted that Alice could be a bit headstrong, somewhat impulsive in making decisions and stubborn when it came to defending them. He figured Rooney hadn’t had a prayer in hell of dissuading her from accompanying him. But Alice knew nothing outside of her genteel, civilized life as a librarian. He was apprehensive about her getting hurt.

They spent an uneventful night rolled up in their blankets beside the campfire, and while Alice said she wasn’t frightened, Rand still worried.

The next morning his worst fear played out. After a breakfast of coffee and biscuits he had mixed up and baked on a hot rock, he packed up the saddlebags and they started into the hills. They followed a barely discernible trail that wound up through dry scrub and stands of sugar pine and alder trees, and they had just come around a bend when they ran smack into a surprise.

A seedy-looking character in frayed Levi’s and a rumpled shirt was perched on a flat rock with a rifle trained on them.

Rand drew rein.

The man’s bloodshot eyes studied his horse for a long minute. “Where ya goin’, mister? And missus,” he added.

Rand prayed to God Alice would keep her mouth shut. Casually he crossed his hands over the saddle horn and bent toward the man. “Goin’ to Boise City, friend. I own the saloon next to the hotel.”

Behind him he heard Alice give a little squeak.

“Ya do, huh? How come I never seen you there?”

“Guess that’s because I’ve been traveling for the last month.”

“Oh, yeah? Where to?”

“Eastern Idaho. Little town called Broken Toe.”

“Broken Toe, huh? Never heard of it.”

“I’m not surprised,” Rand said easily. “Hardly more’n a wide spot in the trail.”

The man eased his bulk off the rock and clumped down close enough to poke his rifle barrel into Sinbad’s neck. “Whatcha doin’ in Broken Toe?”

“Gettin’ married,” Rand said quickly.

Alice gave another squeak.

“Yeah?” The bloodshot eyes lifted to Alice. “She yer wife, is she?”

“Yep. Name’s Oliver,” Rand volunteered. “George Winston Oliver. My wife’s called Bess.”

“Well, now, Bess. Whaddya got to say fer herself?”

“I say that I am eager to see the new house George has purchased in Boise City,” Alice said smoothly.

The man gave her a lingering look. “Say, you’re a right pretty gal!”

Rand held his breath.

Alice cleared her throat. “I was voted the belle of Broken Toe when I was a girl,” she said.

“Were ya, now?” The man took two unsteady steps forward. “Ya still don’t look more’n a girl, honey.”

Rand spotted a saddled horse almost hidden among the trees. Unobtrusively he moved his hand toward his holstered Colt.

“George,” Alice called. She moved her horse forward and reined to a stop on Rand’s right, shielding his gun hand from view. “You said your father is expecting us, and he never likes anyone to be late. And you told me how impatient he is, being the sheriff.”

“Huh?” Scruffy sent her a sharp look. “What’s in them saddlebags, Miz Oliver?”

“Pots,” Alice said instantly. “And my mama’s best iron skillet. She gave it to us for a wedding present.”

“Got any money?” He took a step closer and Rand thumbed off the safety on his revolver.

Alice’s laughter rang out. “Money! You can’t be serious. Ever since we left Broken Toe, George has been complaining about how much our wedding cost him. And now...” She reached over and playfully slapped his arm. “We have nothing left to set up housekeeping with except my mama’s iron frying pan and some old pots.”

“Got any liquor?”

Alice drew herself up so stiff Rand thought she might pop the buttons off her red plaid shirt. “Sir! I am a good Christian, raised in St. Joseph’s United Methodist Church in Broken Toe. I will have you know I never, ever touch spirits! And,” she added with a sidelong look at Rand, “now that we’re married, George doesn’t touch spirits, either.”

Rand unclenched his jaw and choked back a snort of laughter. Alice was as inventive as she was pretty.

The man groaned and began to back away. “Oh, hell, I’m wastin’ my time on you two.” He staggered off into the trees for his horse, and clumsily pulled his bulk into the saddle.

“Adios!” he called. Rand watched the man wheel his mount, crash through the brush and disappear. He waited until the hoofbeats faded away, then thumbed the safety back on.

“Is—is he gone?” Alice whispered. He noticed the hand holding her reins was shaking.

“Yeah. Pretty quick thinking, Miz Oliver. Very creative.”

She gave a nervous laugh. “Really? I was petrified!”

He chuckled. “You been reading books on acting in your library?”

She was silent. He stepped Sinbad forward. “Come on, Miz Oliver. We’ve got hours of riding ahead of us.”

A Western Christmas Homecoming

Подняться наверх