by April Jane
Candice nodded to him once as the Sheriff got up and gathered his gun, jacket and badge. William inclined his head, the candle light, edging his face in harsh angles. She thought she saw the slightest hint of a smile, but the Sheriff was out the door before she could be sure, and she followed him without a backward glance at William.
“I will get you out,” she said quietly to herself, unsure if she would be able to keep the promise if she said it loud enough for him to hear.
At the hotel, the Sheriff attempted to keep her from going inside.
“There is only one way for me to find out if this is him or not,” Candice snapped, shoving his arm aside and pushing the door open. Inside, the hall was dimly lit and led to an equally dark lobby. There was no one attending the desk, and Candice did not wait to see if anyone would come. She rang the bell several times in quick succession in a way that would have caused her father to hiss at her to stop being such a nuisance.
After a great deal of shuffling and cursing, a half-asleep man appeared behind the counter, rubbing at his eyes. Candice smiled brightly at him, recognizing him as the man who had asked for a drink earlier that afternoon, before this entire ordeal had begun. “Good evening, sir,” she began.
“D’you want a room?” he asked, eyes flicking between the Sheriff and Candice. Candice blinked several times, wondering what on earth he meant and—oh. That was a mental picture she would never be able to purge from her mind. Inwardly gagging, Candice kept her smile in place.
“No thank you,” she said firmly, giving the Sheriff a dry look. “I—that is, we would like to know if you have a room registered to Maurice Quincy.”
“I am not at liberty to discuss my clients with you,” the man said indignantly.
“Unless you would like to be spending time in the jail cell tonight for obstructing an investigation,” the Sheriff began, but did not have to finish before the man was falling over himself to offer the information.
“Room 204,” he said quickly. “Top floor to your left, it is the first one on your right.” He paused, blinking owlishly at the two of them. “What did you say was going on again?” he asked.
“I did not,” Candice said primly, slipping past the counter and going down the hall to the stairs. The door was easy enough to find, and Candice had little qualms about hammering on it with her fist. She had no doubts in her mind that she would find what she was looking for with no problem, but she had to get past the man first. If Maurice was who William said he was, he could be dangerous, and for the first time since she had gone to the Sheriff’s office, she was glad to have him along.
“Open up,” Candice called, and there was movement behind the door. Stepping back, Candice pulled the gun from her pocket and pointed it at the door. The sheriff made a noise of surprise, but Candice did not stop to look at him. As the door opened, she shoved past it, ignoring the man’s protest and attempt to grab her. She may have a large surface area, but she could still slip and slide through people like water; years of bartending had taught her that, at least.
She was in Maurice Quincy’s room before she knew it, and over by his coat in another heartbeat. As he loudly protested to the Sheriff and tried to get past the robust man, Candice dipped her hand into the man’s coat pocket and pulled out a tangle of necklaces. She held them up to the dim light, letting out a sharp breath as she recognized the gleam of mother of pearl, intermixed with golden and silver polished to perfection, the same kind of locket her mother had given to her right before she had died.
“Mr. Quincy,” Candice said softly, holding the lockets out further so that everyone in the room could see the stray hairs that poked out of each. “I believe that you are under arrest.”
###
William emerged from the building with his head bowed, and Candice stopped herself from running to him. He may not even want to see her now that he was a free man.
She bit her lip and folded her hands in front of her, keeping her feet firmly planted on the steps to the tavern. He may not even see her, but then, Candice was used to being a ghost, something that most people glanced over. She watched William throw his shoulders back and look up at the sun cresting the horizon.
This was the first sunrise he would see in almost a year that allowed him to be a free man, to not turn and look over his shoulder to make sure that he was not being followed. She smiled in spite of herself, and wondered what a freedom such as that would feel like.
As if she had made some sort of sound, William suddenly glanced over at her, and she was utterly shocked by the smile that spread across his face. No one had ever smiled at her like that, or walked towards her so eagerly, almost running. She could not help the answering smile and found that her feet were moving of their own accord, despite her best attempts to keep them planted to the tavern’s deck. They met halfway, the predawn light casting a sort of pale grey sheen over everything.
“Thank you,” William said, as soon as he was within a few feet of Candice. She smiled demurely and opened her mouth to reply with something witty—she had grown quite witty from all of those novels she had read, after all—but before she could say a single word, William gathered her up in a hug that engulfed her completely. All that ended up coming out of Candice’s mouth was a soft,
“Oh.”
William held her for several moments, and she could hear the hammer of his heart against his ribcage. When he finally drew back, he said in a rush, “Marry me, Candice?”
Candice choked on her next breath. She had certainly misheard, had she not? She blinked several times, waiting for this beautiful man to disappear in front of her, to leave her with this dull stagnation that had been her life for years, but several moments after he said those words, he was still gripping her forearms, his lips parted in the first genuine smile she had seen on his face. “Yes,” she managed. “A thousand times yes.”
William crushed her back to him. “Where do you want to go?” he murmured. “My wife?”
“Anywhere but here?” Candice breathed, breaking away so that she could see his face. William smiled down at her, about to answer, when a sudden voice interrupted them.
“What is going on here, exactly?”
Candice’s smile faded for a brief moment. It was her father, and he would expect her to open the tavern, and all she wanted to do was to sleep—and then she remembered. She had money, and she could leave with this man who would take her as his wife. “Father,” she said, turning to face him. She did not bother letting go of William’s arms, and he made no move to let go of her. “Meet my husband.”
The look on Candice’s father’s face was priceless.
THE END
© Copyright 2015 by April Jane - All rights reserved.
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The Unwanted Bride
by April Jane
1879
Anastasia Fitt drew in a sharp breath as Elise tugged her corset tight enough to pinch uncomfortably around her ribs. “Too tight,” she wheezed, making vague, fluttering motions towards her suddenly smaller waist. It looked good but she risked fainting in this horrid heat if she kept it laced that tight.
“Too fat,” Elise clucked, “more like.” Anastasia grimaced at her reed-thin maid in the mirror and patted her generous hips and bosom.
“Someone does not think so,” she responded, lifting her nose high in the air. “And it is not your place to tell me such things.” She knew that she was hurting the maid’s feelings; Elise had helped Anastasia get ready from the time she learned to walk and speak. They had a connection that went deeper than maid and master, almost a friendship. But the maid was getting on her nerves. “And besides, I would not want
to give my new husband the wrong impression. He will be sorely disappointed if he unlaced me expecting that I remain the same size afterwards.” Anastasia was having trouble getting the words out properly and blackness had already begun lurking at the edges of her vision. She needed to convince her maid to unlace her quickly or else she would faint before she even donned her dress and gloves and went out into the stifling heat. It would be cooler in Montana; at least that's what Mama had told her, but Anastasia would only believe it when she saw it.
Elise would have rolled her eyes if they had been considered equals, of that Anastasia was sure. She looked ready to do so, but couldn’t and keep her job at the same time. She settled with a quick shake of the head and a downturned corner of the lip and began picking at the corset. It let out slowly, maddeningly slow, and Anastasia was almost to the point where she felt as if she would rip herself from Elise’s hands and undo the accursed thing herself when she finally could breathe again.
“Suck in,” Elise said. Anastasia complied, but only a little. She needed to be able to sit comfortably for the journey across the country. It would take several days and she knew that if she wanted to be able to endure the long rides, she would have to be able to sit without the corset pinching at her waist like a steel belt. Elise made another noise of disapproval but didn’t dare reprimand her master for fear of a hand to the cheek. Mrs. Fitt was always on short temper, and Elise was still unsure if the trait had passed to Anastasia or not.
After Anastasia was fully dressed in a lovely navy afternoon gown that flattered her golden locks and lighter blue eyes, Elise departed, carrying two trunks with the entirety of necessities that Anastasia would need. She could always buy more clothes with the little money Mama would give her for this. Surely, since she was the one who was paying for the family to stay alive and as elegant as ever she would receive a reward. It was impossible to be sure, however. Anything with Mama was impossible to tell.
Mrs. Victoria Fitt was the complete opposite of Anastasia. Elegant and lean, she stood out with her auburn hair and striking green eyes that rested well against her pale skin. Anastasia had hated her mother’s beauty for several years before coming to terms with the fact that she was simply a different kind of beautiful. Her mother had hated her for being able to accept that and forego any type of ‘slimming procedures’ she had pushed on her daughter for years.
Mama eyed Anastasia with an overly critical eye. “A bit plain, isn’t it?” she asked, fingering the heavy fabric at Anastasia’s wrist. Anastasia felt her lips thin without her consent, but she stretched them into a smile to hide the fact that she had just frowned at her mother in the way that she was told made her look like a toad.
“I will be riding in a dusty carriage all day, mama,” she reminded her, patting her mother on the hand. “It would be best to not soil my best gowns for riding in a carriage that no one will see me in.”
“What about at the inns?”
“I will wear my velvet cape over so that no one can see my plain dress and take meals in my rooms,” she assured mama.
It was so like Victoria, to fret over the smallest things. It made it easier for her to cope with things such as this, things so large that they would impact her for years to come.
Victoria would not see her daughter for several years, if even then. Money was tight, and that was exactly why Anastasia had taken it upon herself to do something ‘so very preposterous,’ as Victoria had claimed many a time during the process of becoming a mail order bride.
Short of becoming a prostitute, Anastasia saw no other way that she would be able to get money for her family. When she had mentioned that fact to her mother, the aforementioned hand had met her cheek, leaving a bright pink streak across the left side of her face for an entire three hours. It had caused her mother to shut pan about it being such a degrading act, however, and that was an accomplishment in Anastasia’s eyes.
“I suppose that you will have to do,” Victoria said, her lips thinning to an impossibly tiny red slash across her face. Anastasia itched to tell her that it made her look like a home sewn doll, but she dared not risk the slap across the face. People would stare at the mark if they saw it, drawing unneeded and most unwanted attention to her.
“Goodbye, mama,” Anastasia said as Elise came back inside, huffing from the effort of lugging the heavy trunks down the front steps to the footman. “Stay in good health, and the money should arrive shortly after I am with Mr. McKenzie.” The thought of being with a man she had never met before, let alone getting married to him was daunting. She clenched her jaw and refused to acknowledge her fear. If she let Mama know what she was feeling, Victoria would surely persuade her daughter to stay home.
“McKenzie,” Victoria tutted. “An Irish name. Irish folk are known for their heavy drinking and rowdy behavior very unfit for an innocent girl’s eyes such as yours.”
“In his letters he said—
“—that it was many years down the line,” Victoria finished for Anastasia. “So you have informed me. His family have owned the ranch for four generations, correct?” Anastasia nodded, not wanting to get cut off again. “Do you suppose they will still have those outlandish accents?”
“I doubt it, mama,” Anastasia said, sighing. “I really must be off. You may write all that you have forgotten to tell me in the first letter you send. We will keep in touch, won’t we?” she asked, reaching forward and grasping her mother’s hands. Victoria’s cat-green eyes met hers, skipping between one eye and the other almost frantically.
“Why, of course, dear. I wouldn’t have it any other way.” She squeezed Anastasia’s hands and then let them go as if they burned. The footman opened the door at that precise moment.
“Will ye be goin’ then, miss?” he asked in his thick accent from overseas. She glanced down at him and nodded.
He grinned broadly as he held the door open for her. “Wait,” Victoria called just as Anastasia set foot outside.
Anastasia turned quickly and looked at her mother, opening her mouth to fend off another unwanted piece of advice, but her mother simply shoved a fashionable white lace parasol into her hands.
“You do not need to muddy you complexion further with more freckles,” she said, nodding sagely as she pushed Anastasia out of the door.
On that happy note, Anastasia left the only home she had ever known for her entire life.
###
The ride was just as dirty and suffocating as Elise had threatened it would be. Her maid sat huddled in a corner, handkerchief pressed delicately to her nose and mouth to stop her from coughing. Anastasia winced as the carriage hit a particularly rough patch of ground, jostling her hips and jarring her spine. She rearranged her skirts as to not crush them and pulled back the curtain just long enough to see if the terrain had changed any.
The footman had rapped on the top of the carriage some time ago, telling her that they had entered the Montana territory, but it still seemed to be taking forever to reach the ranch. It was her third day on the road, and Anastasia was aching everywhere. She was convinced that she had obtained permanent dust in her hair and engrained in her skin because every time she washed her face, the water turned a muddy sort of brown color that wouldn’t clear up no matter how many times she changed the water and began anew.
The mountains were breathtaking against a cornflower blue sky, purple and majestic, but her foul mood did not allow her to even begin to comprehend the beauty. There was something about this rugged terrain, something that made it seem like it was dangerous. The pine trees stood straight like arrows; the rocks were all jagged and hard to navigate; the mountains looked like dangerously beautiful daggers waiting to slice some poor soul to ribbons the moment they dared to lay a foot upon the soil. Elise lowered the piece of cloth from her mouth, eyes sparking in irritation. Anastasia lowered the curtain before the maid could gripe about the dust and sat back in her seat, contemplating the dull underside of the carriage roof for several seconds and trying to think herself out of bor
edom and pain.
“How far, Thomas?” she asked, knocking on the roof a few moments later after she had gone through her time tables and grammar rules. “Are we any closer to the ranch?”
There was a moment in which she thought Thomas hadn’t heard her, but then the horses slowed and the crookedly handsome footman—crooked smile, crooked nose, crooked haircut—jumped from his perch atop the carriage and peered in.
“What’d you ask, m’lady?”
“Anastasia,” Anastasia corrected automatically. She had tried to get the servants into the habit of calling her by name so that they would feel more comfortable around her, but old habits were hard to break, that she knew. “I queried as to our proximity to the ranch. Are we getting any closer? And how much longer will it take?”
The note of whine crept into her voice without her consent and she bit back another sigh. This traveling was impossible. She was tired of sitting and tired of sleeping on hard mattresses. She was tired of the smell and feel of dust against her skin and billowing off of her clothes the moment she dared touch the fabric. She would be glad to go anywhere at this point, even a strange man’s ranch in the middle of a land that looked more dangerous than useful.
She shifted once again and felt a pang of hunger shoot through her stomach. Wasn’t she always hungry?
Just as she was seriously contemplating asking Elise to fetch her a scone, the carriage came to an abrupt halt. The lack of movement caused Anastasia’s hips to buzz and tingle as if they were still feeling the aftershocks of the rough road. “Miss,” the footman said from above her somewhere, “we have arrived.”
Anastasia drew herself up. “How do I look?” she asked Elise.
“Besides too plump,” Elise said critically, “you look surprisingly well. Considering that you are covered in a day’s worth of dirt and sweat. I do not think that your husband will reject you immediately.”