Her mothering instincts stronger than ever, she leapt to her feet. "You stay put, baby. I'll go get rid of whoever that is." When she opened the door, Oda knew in an instant that the worst had only begun—and that there'd be no easy way to get rid of the angry lawman whose bulk filled the entryway.
"Excuse me for disturbing you, ma'am," Morgan said, his tone bitter. "I'll try not to take more than a moment of your time. May I come in?" The question was purely rhetorical, for Morgan had no intention of giving her a choice. He pushed the door open, and after stepping past the speechless woman, slammed it to a close.
The lawman's fury entered the room with him, and Oda bristled in self-defense. She saw it all in his eyes: the frustration, the rage, the burning need for vengeance. Preparing herself for the fight, a mother bear protecting her cub, she stretched to her full five feet and issued a warning. "You so much as lay one finger on me or Mariah, and we'll scream bloody murder so damn loud, even the sheriff down in Durango will hear us."
Morgan almost laughed. He didn't. He snarled instead as he said, "Don't worry. I have no intention of touching either of you." His gaze flickered briefly to where Mariah still lay on the bed. She had yet to lift her head or acknowledge his presence. "I've come for my things."
"Your... things?"
Morgan glowered at her. "Yes, Oda. You know what I want: my badge, my guns, my wallet. Those will do for starters, until I can remember what else your thieving family might have stolen off of me."
Oda puffed up her bosom. "You got no call—"
"Save your breath," he said deliberately, the warning unmistakable. "Just get my things, and get them now. You're in enough trouble as it is without adding any more charges to the list."
Swallowing hard, Oda glanced at the bed. Mariah was sitting on the edge of the mattress now, busy drying her tears. She looked pale, defenseless, utterly vulnerable. "Your things ain't here. They're in the supply cart. I can't leave Mariah alone right now, and she's—"
"I'd be happy to stay here with her, ma'am. In fact, I have a few questions for her." Before Oda could voice her concern, Morgan saw it in her eyes. "I'm the law, remember? I didn't come here to hurt anyone. I came here for a little justice—not that your family knows the meaning of the word. Now go get my things."
Oda remained uneasy. How could they ever have been so foolish as to cross a man such as this? Her gaze darted to Mariah and she raised her eyebrows.
"It's all right, Mother." Mariah's voice was weary, resigned. "Go ahead. I'll be all right."
Oda hardened her expression as her gaze shifted back to the lawman. She marched over to the door and opened it, but before going through it, she reached into her dress pocket and withdrew the silver cigar case he had given her back in Durango. Looking over her shoulder, her blue eyes narrowed, she dropped the case on a nearby dresser.
Before she left, Oda also dropped one final warning. "If you hurt that girl in any way while I'm gone, you bastard, you won't find a rock big enough to crawl under to get safe from me." Then she slammed the door behind her.
"Amazing," Morgan said with a shake of his head. He started toward Mariah. "I have to hand it to this family: You're the most amazing bunch of liars and thieves I've run across in a long time. Your mother is actually indignant—threatening me, for heaven's sake. Why, I could haul her and the lot of you off to jail on so many charges, not a one of you would ever see the light of day again."
Mariah sighed heavily, but had no words to defend either herself or her parents.
He stood at the foot of the bed, his fingers gripping the bedpost. "If it wouldn't trouble you too much," he began, venom tipping each word, "I'd like to know why in the hell you didn't tell me who I was right after the accident."
His wrath washed over her like a lava spill, shrinking her body, her worth, and Mariah had to get up from the bed to feel whole again. Smoothing her hair as she walked over to the window, she made a silent vow to be truthful with him from here on out—for the sake of her own dignity, if not his. "You cost us better than one hundred dollars in sales. So we decided to make it up with your labor. Besides, we were afraid you'd make us take you back to Santa Fe for medical attention if we told you who you were. A delay like that would have ruined our whole show season."
He laughed bitterly. "Far better to ruin a man's life, I suppose. Is that it?"
"Cain, we never—"
"Morgan." He ground his teeth as he spoke. "My name is Morgan. I'll thank you to use it—or better yet, try calling me Marshal Slater."
She couldn't look at him any longer. Not as Cain Law, Marshal Slater, or Morgan... the father. Mariah turned away from him as she solicited the one answer she feared the most. "She—that little girl playing jack-straws in the alley—she was your daughter?"
Her voice was so soft—like the whisper of an angel, Morgan thought—he could barely hear her. He toughened himself against the sound. "Yes."
The word came out sounding like a hiss, and it may as well have been, for Mariah could swear she felt the fangs of a deadly serpent sink into her heart. She'd guessed as much, but to hear it confirmed from his lips, to know for certain that the man she loved had a daughter, struck her like a fatal blow. The fact that he most surely had a pretty blond wife to go along with that child was too devastating to even think about.
At Mariah's silence, Morgan moved up behind her. "How could you have kept my girl from me that way, or let all these weeks go by without her so much as getting a wire from me? She thinks I forgot all about her. Doesn't that bother you at least a little?"
"Of course it does." She whirled on him, grief- stricken for them both. "It never occurred to me, or any of us, that you might have been a family man. I didn't know—how could I?"
"You knew all you had to." His expression darkened, as did his tone. "You knew my name. And you deliberately chose to keep it from me."
There was no real way to deny that, or to rationalize the decision they'd made, and again, Mariah had to turn away from him, away from the terrible disappointment she saw in those hard green eyes.
She looked out the window to the mountains beyond. A great bank of dark black clouds had gathered there, one of those instant mountain storms that hadn't been there just moments before, and she could feel the temperature falling, plummeting along with her pulse. It would rain soon, maybe even snow, deluging the area with thunder and lightning. Mariah thought for one crazy moment of rushing headlong into the violence of that storm, of forcing herself to be pummeled and punished for the terrible sins she'd committed against the man she loved.
Cain—she continued to think of him by that name—stood close behind her, waiting, she supposed, for more answers. Mariah felt as if she'd been turned inside out, emptied of words, of thoughts, of emotions. She quietly said the only thing left to her: "I'm sorry for everything. Terribly sorry."
Sorry, he thought to himself. As if such a tiny word could wipe away even one of her cruel, heartless lies. It made him furious to think that Mariah had been the mastermind behind this betrayal. She'd altered his life without permission, reshaped his very soul, and never once thought to seek his consent.
Morgan was furious, yes, but even worse, he felt profoundly bereft. And he had more than just an idea of why he felt that way. He and Mariah would never again share what they once had, never again have that special something he'd never had with Virginia or any other woman—that special something he'd spent his entire life avoiding at all costs. Until Mariah had tricked him. Until Mariah.
Morgan studied her trembling shoulders, his gaze lingering at the mass of unruly dark hair spilling down to below her waist. Desire came alive in him, hot and urgent, and for the first time, painful as well. Morgan didn't know how it was possible after what he'd discovered today, but God help him, he wanted her still—wanted her so badly, it was all he could do to keep from taking her that instant. In fact, he couldn't remember ever wanting her more.
Again his gaze fell to her shoulders, and he was surprised to find h
is fickle hands hovering there, poised and ready to plunge into that river of thick ebony waves—to do that, or to take her by the throat and squeeze until he could squeeze no more.
Had he regained his memory only to discover that he'd gone completely mad? What kind of a man had he become during that period of forgetfulness? He sure as hell wasn't Cain Law any longer, but he hadn't quite returned to the old Morgan Slater, either. He just plain didn't know who the hell he was anymore. Morgan only knew that if he continued to stand there thinking about how much he once cared, how he wanted her still, he really would go mad.
To protect himself against those feelings, he dwelled on the anger. Then he called up a few memories of what her lies had wrought.
"Well, well, Mariah." The sound of his own voice was sharp and harsh, more venomous than he'd intended, but Morgan forged ahead, using that tone to help insulate himself against her charms. "You must really be proud of your little charade. You did such a good job, you even tricked me into proposing marriage."
She turned on him at this, eyes ablaze. "That was never my intention. The last thing in the world I ever expected, or wanted from you, was marriage. The proposal was your idea, and yours alone."
She'd never, but never, looked more beautiful than she did at that moment, and he knew that no amount of dredging through his memories of Mariah would ever change that opinion. She was a beautiful, desirable... liar. "Nice try, but I know a conniving female when I see one. You did everything you could to push me into marrying you—up to and including that vile-tasting love potion you concocted for me."
"What?" A sudden jolt of anger drove her onward. "If you aren't the most arrogant, conceited—"
"It must have seemed like a good idea at the time, having a lawman in the family—someone who couldn't lock you and your crooked operation up once his memory returned. Nice plan, Mariah. Too bad it didn't work. Too bad you had to make such a 'personal' sacrifice for nothing."
Even in her anger, Mariah recognized the incongruous word. "'Sacrifice'? What are you talking about?"
He leaned in close, his eyes glittering with a rage that touched her soul. "Why else would you have let me... spoil you the way I did, if you weren't trying to trick me into marriage?"
Mariah drew in a sharp breath, and lowered her gaze from his all-knowing eyes. Because I loved you, she thought. Because I knew all along we'd only have a short time together, and I wanted it all. Everything a man and woman could experience together, I wanted with you. The future didn't matter to me. But she said nothing. She let her chin fall until it touched her chest.
Morgan hated her posture, the defeat in the set of her shoulders, but the wounds to his soul were too fresh, and Mariah's betrayal too grave, for him to douse the flames of his anger. "Were you and your thieving family so intent on looking legitimate that as a little insurance you all gathered around and decided to offer a sacrificial virgin?"
Mariah's lid blew. Every last drop of remorse or shame evaporated as the fire in her blood surged to the forefront. "You dirty... rotten... hastard." And with that, she took a swing at him.
Morgan caught her hand in midair. "Careful, little princess. I doubt you want to add 'assault on an officer of the law' to the charges against you." Still gripping her wrist, he pulled her up close. "I'm not quite through with my interrogation. Tell me about that name, Cain Law. Where the hell did you come up with that?"
Mariah wrenched her arm loose and took a backward step. Her voice a whisper, just this side of smug, she said, "Remember I told you about that big yellow dog I had as a kid?" She paused dramatically, gratified to see a flicker of understanding in his dark green eyes. "That dog was always in trouble or raising some kind of Cain or another, so we named him Cain. You reminded us a lot of that dog."
"You named me after a damn dog?"
She tossed her head back, flipping a few ebony waves over her shoulder. "I don't know what we could have been thinking of, insulting our dog that way. We always liked him."
A new kind of rage charged through Morgan at her flip comments, a kind he'd never felt before. But he didn't stop to examine it. "In that case, I suppose naming me after your dog was a pretty appropriate thing to do. You folks did kind of turn me into your own trained pet, didn't you? 'Cain do this, Cain do that.' My little performances must have been worth a few laughs, if nothing else."
On the defense again, Mariah lashed out at him. "You had at least a little of it coming, you miserable bastard. You treated us like dirt back in Bucksnort, as if we were no better than common thieves."
"Looks like I was right, doesn't it?"
This time, Mariah whipped her arm around so fast, Morgan never saw it coming. Her open palm cracked against his cheek, the sound ringing in his ears long after he'd grabbed her wrists and jerked her off of her feet. "Damn you, Mariah. Damn you for the lying, thieving bitch that you are. How could you have cared at all and still done any of this to me? How?"
Her knees buckled, and she hung there by her wrists, suspended only by his grip. Mariah's throat went dry and the tears began to fall. Her bottom lip wobbling, she said in a choked whisper, "Oh, Cain—I never wanted this to happen. I really am sorry."
The door opened then, and Zack crossed the threshold, with Oda directly behind him. It took only an instant for him to see that the marshal had Mariah by the wrists, and that she was crying.
"Here's your things, Marshal," he said, crossing the room. "You get your hands off my girl, and you get 'em off now. She ain't the one done you wrong, anyways. I am."
Brought to his senses not by Zack's words alone, but by his protective tone, Morgan released Mariah and turned to the old man. "You've all done wrong, and every one of you knows it."
Oda, bristling like a banty hen, stepped in front of her husband as the marshal approached them. "Don't matter what we done in the past. You promised not to hurt our girl if I left you alone with her—you promised."
"I didn't hurt her—certainly not as much as this family has wounded me." Done with talk, Morgan reclaimed his badge and studied it for a moment, wondering how he ever could have forgotten this, the most significant part of his life. Then he pinned the gold star to his shirt beneath the Brother Law coat.
After taking his gun belt from Zack's outstretched hands, he fastened it around his waist, lifted the Colt from the holster, and spun the chamber to make sure it was still loaded. He gave the old man a narrow gaze as he asked, "What about my hat and jacket?"
"Your hat blew away like we told you, and your horse run off with your saddlebags. I expect your jacket was inside one of them."
Morgan was none too pleased to realize that he'd have to wear his Brother Law garb a little longer. "And my wallet? I know Amigo didn't run off with that."
Amigo? As he recalled his missing horse, something disturbed him other than the fact that the animal had taken off for parts unknown. There was something else there, a little sliver of memory at the back of his mind, but before he could work it up to examine it, the old man dropped the wallet into his hand, along with his gold watch.
Morgan stared at the timepiece a long moment, and then quickly counted the money. When he came up better than a hundred dollars short of what he knew he'd had with him, he said to Zack, "Where's the rest of my money, old man?"
Zack shrugged. "Went for your expenses, mostly. I bought you them clothes you're wearing, and don't forget—you borreyed twenty bucks not once, but twice." He glanced beyond the sheriff to Mariah. "You still got the twenty dollars you asked for this morning?"
After snatching her reticule off the bed, she hurried forward, pulling the bills from her bag. Mariah handed the money to the marshal, careful not to touch him. "I only borrowed it to buy you a new hat so you wouldn't have to wear the skimmer except at show time. We didn't quite make it to the store, if you'll remember."
Morgan didn't look at her as he took the money. He didn't dare. "What about the twenty dollars you took from me in Durango? Where'd that go?"
"Oh... that." She
backed away from him. "Your expenses, mostly."
Morgan turned on his heel, his expression incredulous. "What kind of expenses could you have incurred on my behalf?"
Her gaze darted to both Zack and Oda in a plea for help, but before they could come to her aid, Mariah remembered the vow she'd made to herself. She raised her chin high and told him the truth. "I gave the money to Artemis. He used it to buy up all the newspapers in the hotel the last two days we were in Durango. He must still have part of it left."
"He did . . . what?" Morgan glanced at Zack, and the old man nodded, the confirmation offered along with a grim expression. Looking back at Mariah, Morgan went on. "Why would you make him do a thing like that?"
"I knew you liked to read the paper each day. I accidentally found out that the Herald was planning to run a story or two about the Doolittle Gang and the marshal who was after them. Since you were that marshal, I thought it'd be in the best interests of the medicine show if you didn't read about it."
The Doolittles. God almighty. They'd completely slipped his mind. "The hell with the show's best interests. Do you have any idea the danger you could have put me in by not telling me about that gang of thieves?"
Alarmed by the depth of anger flashing in his dark eyes, Mariah backed another few steps toward the window. "I did think of the danger, so I had Artemis help me keep a lookout for the Doolittles. I'd have told you about them if either of us had spotted one of them."
"You, spot one of the Doolittles?" He laughed bitterly. "Now there's a hell of an idea. I guess it takes one to know one."
The marshal's tone had gotten so vicious and hateful, Zack decided it was time for a little interference. "That'll about do it, Marshal Slater. I know you're a mite upset, but you got no call to holler at my girl that way. 'Tain't fittin' and 'tain't right."
"I don't mind explaining, Dad." Mariah's gaze flickered from her father to Cain. "The day I went to collect Daisy from the sheriff, Artemis and I saw a Wanted poster for the Doolittle Gang. We studied the pictures, and figured we could recognize them if they were in the area."
Tin-Stars and Troublemakers Box Set (Four Complete Historical Western Romance Novels in One) Page 92