Tin-Stars and Troublemakers Box Set (Four Complete Historical Western Romance Novels in One)

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Tin-Stars and Troublemakers Box Set (Four Complete Historical Western Romance Novels in One) Page 12

by Rice, Patricia


  As they rode out, they could see the two youngsters trying out their new mounts on the hill. The boys gave them a spirited chase, flying down to cut across their path, but then they were gone and only the trees closed around them, and Lily and Cade were alone.

  "I didn't think I would ever see the day when I could appreciate a sidesaddle." Lily adjusted herself uncomfortably on the heavy man's saddle.

  A flicker of amusement crossed Cade's impassive features as he took in the area of her discomfort. "You should not expect to be ridden all night and get up and ride the next day. We could have stayed."

  Lily's cheeks flamed at his casual terminology for what they had done. "I'll remember that," she replied stiffly.

  They rode in silence until Lily's curiosity got the better of her. "Cade?" He twisted in his saddle and looked at her questioningly. "What did you mean when you said we were married?"

  "You accepted my horse, didn't you?" He nodded at the huge gray she rode even now. "You invited me into your house and brought me a dowry of two mustangs. My father approved. That is all that is necessary."

  His satisfied tone raised her anger. "You know that isn't all that is necessary!"

  Cade shrugged and walked his mount through a particularly narrow strip between trees. "We can go to town and sign the alcalde's book, if you like. There are no priests. I would take you to San Antonio and a church, but your rebels are probably already there trying to blow holes in the city with their cannon. What more would you have me do?"

  "You could have at least asked me," Lily answered spitefully. He was too close to truth for comfort. Marriages were a haphazard thing in this country. She would have preferred San Antonio, but after taking Goliad, the rebels were undoubtedly marching to the next city. She didn't want a church that much. But she would have liked to have been asked and to have had her father and son present. She didn't feel in the least married.

  "If I'm married, what is my name? Mrs. Cade?"

  He tilted his head as if to consider the notion. "Probably not. It might be easiest if you call yourself Senora de Suela. That's my grandfather's name."

  "Do you have an Indian name?"

  "Just my birth name. I did not stay with the tribe long enough to give myself an adult name. My father is Lipan and does not have a family name."

  "What is your birth name?"

  They had reached the grassy plain, and Cade could turn and watch her now. Lily supposed the flicker in his eyes could be called amusement. She had never seen him laugh, and rarely did he smile, but she was beginning to understand some of his expressions. Or lack of them.

  "My father called me something that translates roughly as 'Mighty Quiver.' I never asked him what he was thinking about at the time. My mother called me Luis Philippe, after her father. Do you prefer either of those?"

  A grin quirked Lily's mouth. Mighty Quiver. She could just imagine a screaming baby boy being called that. She suspected his father had a sense of humor even if Cade did not. He was definitely not a Luis Philippe. She shook her head in reply.

  "Where does Cade come from?"

  "The Spanish word for music, cadenza. They thought they insulted me, but they were unaware of the other poor names I had to choose from."

  Lily didn't want to ask who "they" were or why they would wish to insult him for his love of music. She knew absolutely nothing about this man.

  "Cade suits you," she answered decisively.

  "And de Suela?" He lifted his eyebrows questioningly. "Or shall I give myself an adult name now? No one will know the difference."

  Lily considered this briefly, then shook her head. "I think that is your decision."

  "De Suela is an old and respected name. I will stay with it, then."

  Lily de Suela. Considering the state of current affairs, a Mexican name wasn't any better than an Indian one, but she wasn't even certain that either belonged to her. Lily supposed if a child came of their night together, she would be glad of a name for it, but she couldn't reconcile herself to the position of wife just yet. She was just now learning to be herself again.

  She didn't think Cade was very likely to understand that. The rocking of the horse was a constant reminder of what they had done, but the closer they drew to home, the more her thoughts turned to Roy. She couldn't concentrate on both of them. Roy had been with her for nearly nine years. Cade had barely been around for nine weeks. Roy won.

  She was urging Cade's powerful horse faster as the ranch came into sight. It was easier to put everything else out of her mind and let the one love of her life dominate. She needed to see that Roy was well.

  Cade let her go. They were on her territory now. In his father's tribe it was customary for women to own the property. He had given all that he had possessed to Lily without reservation. The theory didn't work quite as well in a white man's world, but he had enough respect for Lily to allow her to take the lead. An Apache male was only supposed to see to the protection of his family and provide for them by hunting.

  His Spanish heritage was a little more confused but not so very different. He would do his duties outside of the home. Inside the home was her family. He didn't expect acceptance there, but he would have to find some way to demand respect.

  As he rode up, Cade noted the strange wagon in the front yard. Painted a bright red and decorated with pictures that apparently had some meaning beyond his comprehension, it bore the bold inscription "Professor Mangolini's Traveling Medicine Show" in gilded letters across the top.

  Climbing down from his horse, Cade noted with suspicion Lily's uneasy stance on the front porch. She was speaking in shrill tones unlike her, while glancing nervously at the recipient of her assurances. As Cade came around the wagon and saw the newcomer, he began to understand why.

  Professor Mangolini was tall and dark and handsome and smiled at Lily in a way that went beyond casual acquaintance. And he looked just like Roy.

  Chapter 14

  Lily thought she might be losing her mind. What she had done last night was sufficient to convince her she had lost what remained of her senses, but she couldn't believe that after nine years, she was actually staring at Travis Bolton while her father and the man she had just made love to looked on. She must be hallucinating. Perhaps she could just faint and then wake up and find everything returned to normal.

  Lord, but he was even more handsome than she remembered. The years had chiseled Travis's features into maturity. There were a few crows-feet around his eyes perhaps, but they still gleamed with the irrepressible humor that had held her so fascinated when she was sixteen. She couldn't believe she was standing here talking to him after all these years. She wasn't hearing a word he said.

  She was thinking of Roy. How would she keep him from Roy? Or had Travis already seen him? Would he have noticed? He'd have to be a fool not to. Of course, Travis hadn't known Jim. Maybe he would think she always fell for tall, dark, curly-haired men with gray eyes. That thought sent Lily's glance back to Cade. She had outdone herself on tall and dark this time, but the thick, straight hair brushing Cade's collar didn't have a lick of curl and his eyes were far from gray. What in hell was she going to do?

  "Well, Lily, are you going to introduce me to this gentleman here?” Travis asked with humor. “Your father and I have already introduced ourselves."

  She would have liked to have seen that. Trying to keep her stomach from leaping up her throat, Lily gestured toward Cade. "This is Cade, my foreman. Cade, this is Travis Bolton, an old friend from Mississippi."

  Salesman that he was, Travis smiled and held out his hand. Cade looked at him, looked at Lily, and with a rather pointed glare at the latter, accepted the other man's hand. Travis winced at the pressure exerted but remained smiling.

  Taking this opportunity to escape, Lily murmured a quick excuse and ran into the house. She would think about Roy and worry about the rest later.

  She found Roy happily playing with a set of toy soldiers and her heart plunged to her feet. So Travis had already been in he
re. Perhaps God had sent him to punish her. Or save her. She wasn't exactly certain which it would be.

  Nine years was a long time. Lily remembered it almost too clearly: her sisters' excitement over their betrothals, the peddler's wagon coming down the hill, and Travis Bolton, sitting bold as life on the wagon seat. He was the most handsome thing she had ever seen in her life, and the tallest. When he had climbed down from that wagon and smiled at her, she had felt dainty and feminine and just the right size. And he had never done anything to discourage that impression. Except get her pregnant and leave without marrying her.

  He couldn't have been much more than nineteen himself at the time. That wasn't much of an excuse for what he had done, but it was all Lily could ever offer. She had never even told her father. When she had determinedly stalked Jim Brown two months later, her father had thought it was because she was upset that her sisters were getting married, and she didn't have a beau. She doubted if he had ever realized it was because she had to marry or bear a bastard. Until now.

  Damn Travis Bolton to hell. He had nearly destroyed her life once. What did he think he was doing here now? Knocking her legs out from under her again? Well, this time it wasn't going to be so easy.

  "Look at these great soldiers Mr. Bolton gave me! Will you ask him to stay a while? He has the funniest stories."

  Lily tested her son's head for fever and, reassured, tried to ease the inevitable. "Mr. Bolton is a traveling man, Roy. I'm sure there are places he's supposed to be. I imagine Cade has some interesting stories to tell if you'll ask him."

  "Cade told me about how he learned to ride once. Did you know he never had a horse 'til he caught a mustang?"

  There were any number of things Lily didn't know about Cade. How did a boy who didn't know how to ride manage to catch a wild mustang? Probably wrestled the animal to the ground. Lily held her fingers to her head and felt another ache coming on.

  She heard her father and Travis enter, their voices boldly jovial. The two of them made a good pair. Her father had always been better at selling than farming. Cade would be off checking on the men and making certain that the chores were getting done. She had to ask him to eat with the family. She might not be able to mention their "marriage" yet, but she certainly couldn't delegate him to the bunkhouse anymore.

  She didn't have to worry about that. By the time Juanita had the evening meal prepared, Cade had washed and joined the others in the main cabin. Lily felt his speaking glance as she entered wearing the blue gingham she had worn the night of the dance. It was the newest dress she owned. The others seemed too girlish and frilly. The gentlemen politely rose to their feet when she entered. Cade followed their example.

  He was furious. She could tell it. But what was she supposed to do? That was Roy's father sitting there. Lord in heaven above, Roy's father. Lily took her place at the table, and when the men had taken theirs, she bowed her head in prayer, then asked them to pass the salt. It was the only thing she could think of to say.

  "Travis was heading for San Antonio when he stopped here. I recommended that he find another destination. You know the place better than I do, Lily. Where would be a good place for a man to sell his supplies?"

  "His supplies? Your alcoholic cure-all, Travis?" Lily couldn't keep the hint of scorn from her voice. Nine years and he was still peddling garbage, just a finer class of it.

  "Now, Lily, don't disparage my medical training. I don't suppose you remember Dr. Joseph from Natchez? I worked with him for several years before he died, and I spent years after that perfecting the formulas for five of his medicines. I was just telling your father about the book I've written detailing my discoveries."

  "Do you have bottles of medicine to cure broken legs? Do you have something we should try on Roy to get him better and make him walk without limping? Did your great training teach you any of that?"

  Travis looked slightly uncomfortable before his handsome mouth bent into a wheedling smile. "Now, Lily, there you go exerting your overactive imagination again. You've done all that medical science can do for the boy. A sip of my rheumatism medicine wouldn't hurt him any if the pain gets too bad, but young bodies heal themselves quite miraculously."

  She had to give Travis credit for not wanting to quack a child. She couldn't tell yet whether he had figured out that Roy was his. She should quit antagonizing him. He hadn't done anything that a million other men hadn't done at some time or place. It was just her unfortunate luck that she got caught.

  Lily sent Cade a quick glance. She could tell by the depth of his silence that he had already figured out who Travis was. Cade might not say much, but he never missed a thing. She hoped he understood her predicament. She wasn't certain of the law, but Travis could very possibly take Roy away from her if he chose. She couldn't imagine him wanting to, but she wouldn’t allow any opportunity for him to try.

  "Who is Professor Mangolini?"

  Lily looked up. She hadn't even been certain that Cade could read. Most men out here couldn't, except for the lawyers in their three-piece suits. To expect an Indian to read...

  Travis sat back and sipped his water. "People are inclined to believe that foreign physicians know more than homegrown ones, and that professors know more than mere doctors. So I have become Professor Mangolini in order to reach a larger number of people."

  "To make more sales," Lily corrected.

  Travis scowled at her. "You make it sound as if what I'm doing is a crime. That isn't fair of you, Lily. Should I go back to peddling tin pots and pans that fall apart the instant they hit a flame?"

  Ephraim looked up in recognition. "So that's where I remember you! You came by that spring the girls got themselves hitched. Tried to sell me an iron skillet that wouldn't hold water. But you had some half-decent bootleg in that wagon when you came back in the fall."

  The undercurrent around the table was about to pull Lily in. She saw the glance that Travis gave her and knew what it meant. He had come back after all. Just a little too late.

  "I was just trying to make a living. I'd had a good summer that year, if I remember. I came back thinking to court the prettiest girl I'd ever seen, only to learn she'd already been taken. Near broke my heart at the time. It's odd how the world turns so the same people are thrown together a thousand miles and too many years apart."

  Odd wasn't the word for it. Cade would bet his bottom dollar that this scalawag had passed through Lily's hometown on his usual route and heard from Lily's sisters that she was a widow with a wealthy ranch now. He'd bet more than his bottom dollar. Surely Lily could see that.

  Cade glanced her way, but she seemed totally entranced by the quack. She had a glazed look in her eye even when she was trying to cut the man to ribbons. The man had hurt her once, hurt her badly, but that wasn't always enough for a woman to turn away a handsome man.

  Somehow they suffered through the remainder of that meal. Lily gave an expurgated version of her visit to the Indians, exclaiming over the kindness of their treatment and the intelligence of the boys who had saved Roy's life as if she'd actually had an opportunity to see any of that. It seemed to pacify her father, although he was still giving Cade pointed looks.

  When Lily finally begged leave to retire, Cade couldn't take it any longer. He touched her arm, and she swung around as if he had burned her.

  "I need to have a word with you before you go to bed. Shall we step outside?"

  She turned on him with wide, terrified eyes, and Cade instantly dropped his hand.

  "Not tonight, Cade, please. You know what needs to be done. I'll trust you to it."

  Cade watched her walk away as a knife pain slit him from gullet to loins. She meant to deny him. She was going to pretend that nothing had happened. She would go to that damned bed alone.

  He ought to be accustomed to betrayal and deceit. He'd seen enough of it in his lifetime. But he couldn't believe that after what they had shared, she could up and walk away. It surpassed the bounds of all credulity.

  But she did so, a
nd like the others, Cade stood and watched her go. Not wanting to hear what was said after she left, Cade made his excuses and went out the back door. He should take Serena and go back to his cabin and get drunk and forget the hell about her. It had been madness to think that he could marry a lady and make a place for himself. He had no illusions about what he had to offer: a gray gelding and some vague hopes. He couldn't even fool himself into thinking that he could offer the passion she had never known, because the passion that had created her child was right there in the house with her. Damn, but why in hell did the man have to show up now?

  But seeing Serena and holding her chubby little body in his arms, renewed Cade's determination. He refused to give up. Not without a fight, at least. If he had to invent another rattlesnake in a box, he would find some way of showing Professor Travis Bolton Mangolini out of the territory.

  Lily evinced no surprise as her window slid up later, after the house had grown quiet. She couldn’t sleep, and she didn't think Cade would be managing it very well either. There just wasn't any easy solution. How was she to explain that?

  Sitting in her white nightgown, she pulled a quilt across her knees. She’d braided her hair before bed, she wasn’t entirely certain why.

  "He's Roy's father, isn't he?" Cade asked first.

  Lily made no attempt to deny the obvious. She nodded.

  Cade leaned his shoulders against the wall and shoved his hands in his pockets as he watched her in the dim light from the window. "Where does Jim fit into this picture?"

  Lily gave him an angry look. "He knew. Don't look at me like that. Jim wanted a wife. A married man gets three times as much land out here as an unmarried one. He'd lost his son. Roy was the son he wouldn't have had otherwise. We were both happy with the arrangement."

  Cade scowled. "That's why you were so starved for passion that you'd even take a renegade like me. And now you've got your chance to get Roy's father back and you mean to set me aside."

 

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