© 2017 by Mary Connealy
Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438
www.bethanyhouse.com
Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan
www.bakerpublishinggroup.com
Ebook edition created 2017
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4412-6957-7
Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Bible.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Cover design by Dan Pitts
Cover photography by Mike Habermann Photography, LLC
Author is represented by Natasha Kern Literary Agency.
Long Time Gone is dedicated to my grandson, Luke. He has the best smile and the sweetest heart of any little two-year-old boy in the world.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
Epilogue
About the Author
Books by Mary Connealy
Back Ads
Back Cover
1
SKULL GULCH, NEW MEXICO TERRITORY
NOVEMBER 1880
Abandoning his sister to save his brother, Justin Boden felt as gutshot as Cole.
He left Heath Kincaid behind to find his little sister, Sadie, feeling as though he were tearing himself in half to make that choice. But he had only minutes to get his big brother home to stop the bleeding and tend his wound. Still, leaving her behind went against everything he knew about caring for his family.
“No.” Cole’s words were slurred. “Sadie.” He drooped forward until he almost lay on his horse’s neck.
Justin gritted his teeth. The outlaw who had gotten a bullet into Cole was tied over his saddle, its reins tied to Cole’s horse. But Sadie was missing. So Justin had to ask if there was more than one villain chasing them.
Justin grabbed the reins out of Cole’s hands and turned up the trail. Leading two horses, one with his wounded brother, trailed by one with the unconscious outlaw, forced Justin forward—the trail was too narrow to look back.
Cole didn’t have long. If the gutshot was a bad one, it might already be too late.
Sadie was missing, and if the man they’d taken prisoner wasn’t alone, killers might be on her trail—or have her even now. Even King Solomon would have a hard time deciding what to do about this.
Turning his back on Sadie was like cleaving himself in two. But he did it and then pushed hard up the trail for home. Only a few more minutes and he could get Cole inside. If he’d been gutshot—and that was what it looked like—they couldn’t save him.
It nearly drove Justin mad to think of it.
The trail twisted and turned. It bent so it went alongside the mountain, then headed up a while until it got so steep it was impossible to climb, then it wound off sideways again to another spot they could climb. It was narrower and steeper with every step until on some of the sideways stretches, one of Justin’s booted feet was in a stirrup dangling over a dead drop, while on the other side he could have reached out a hand and brushed the mountainside.
He came to a place the trail had caved off. He sure hoped his horse knew how to walk on tiptoes.
Justin prayed for all he was worth as he passed the narrow spot.
One more steep stretch and finally he skylined himself at the top of the mountain. A gale of wind hit him and warned of cold weather coming in. Northern New Mexico in November could be wretchedly cold or it could be pleasant. It was picking this moment to be nasty. He hung silhouetted against the clouds, then dropped down. He was stunned to see the ranch house right at the bottom of the hill. Oh, he knew the hill all right, covered with heavy woods, steep enough to make a mountain goat faint, but he’d never thought of it as hiding a trail. In his lifetime he’d never used it nor seen Pa use it.
Far below in the ranch yard, someone charged out on horseback and galloped for Skull Gulch. Two men had ridden with him besides his family. He’d sent them ahead fast with orders to run for the doctor.
Justin descended quickly, buffeted by a bitter wind that had been blocked on the uphill side of the trail. This downhill side was as steep as the uphill and just as heavily wooded. Justin followed a badly overgrown trail.
John Hightree, the Cimarron Ranch foreman, ran out of the barn. John had been with the ranch since before Justin’s birth, and Justin trusted the man with his life.
Justin yelled, “I need help with Cole, and someone bring this varmint we caught inside and leave him tied up.” Justin didn’t have time now to give their prisoner another thought.
Rosita, their housekeeper, who’d grown up on the CR, stepped out of the house, took everything in at a glance, and got very serious. Considering the amount of blood, that didn’t make her a genius.
Justin jumped down and rushed to Cole. His men were at his side, easing Cole off the horse. Together they carried him inside to Ma and Pa’s bedroom on the ground floor and stretched him out on the bed.
Blood was everywhere. Too much of it for a man to survive.
Justin was a man of action. He fought for his brother’s life by doing something. Moving fast. He had clung hard to the notion that if they could just get Cole home, quit shaking him up, stop the bleeding, and get a doctor’s care, he’d make it.
Justin made things happen with the strength of his back. If he laid his hands on something and used every ounce of his muscle, it’d move. Now he wondered if any amount of hard work would save Cole.
Rosita hurried into the room with a basin of steaming water and cloths tucked under her arm. Justin stepped aside for her; it was either that or get run down.
“I sent for the doctor,” John said.
“Justin, I need your hands.” Rosita ordering him around.
And Justin was supposed to be the boss.
“Where is Sadie?” Rosita was focused completely on Cole, but she had noticed everything. “Why is mi niña not with you? Where’s Heath?”
“Heath is bringing Sadie.” Justin needed to go for Sadie. But it was taking both his and Rosita’s hands to care for Cole. And he had an unconscious man in the kitchen with information that could stop a murder.
And he couldn’t send someone else to help Heath and Sadie, because he needed John and he didn’t know who else he dared trust.
Rosita unfastened a belt Cole had rigged tight around his waist, trying to keep his lifeblo
od inside.
Two of the hired men came in carrying their prisoner.
For a while it was a fur ball. Helping Rosita tend Cole. Shouting orders to his men to make sure the man was secure. Worrying about Cole. Near frantic about Sadie.
Rosita’s orders were louder than Justin’s and cut through the rest of the din.
She uncovered the gunshot, gasped, and her lips moved in a quiet prayer as she dipped her cloth in the basin of steaming water. She began washing, and Cole shouted in pain. Justin knew he was completely knocked out, because Cole could take a lot without so much as a groan. This cry of pain would never have escaped had Cole been awake. Rosita hesitated, frowning, her brow furrowed with worry, but she went right back to her doctoring. Justin hoped she didn’t do more harm with the scalding water. But in a situation like this, Justin trusted her more than he trusted himself.
The prisoner stirred and groaned, then started struggling against the ropes that bound him.
John had helped carry the outlaw in and now he kept him under control.
Justin couldn’t stand the distraction. “There’s a solid lock on the cellar door in the kitchen, John. And that trapdoor in the floor is the only way in and out of there.”
“Good idea. I’ll take him down.”
All they needed was for the man to revive, get loose, and bring chaos to the place while all their attention had to be on Cole.
John boosted the man to his feet and dragged him away.
Taut minutes passed as they battled to stop Cole’s bleeding.
“He’s taken care of, boss.” John came in. “I’ll stand guard over the desperado.”
Justin nodded as John went out again.
Rosita’s care of Cole was painstaking. She snapped out orders, and Justin did as he was told as fast as he could move. It was as if he could hear the ticking of the clock—time running out on Cole’s life.
Justin remembered so many times Rosita and Ma had cared for all the injuries that stemmed from the harsh conditions of a New Mexico ranch. When it was Justin or Cole or Sadie, the tender care often ended with a kiss and a cookie. Justin knew this was far too serious to end as pleasantly.
“I am not going to fix a tight bandage because the doctor will soon come. I want him to be able to get to the wound without hurting Cole further. But we have to keep pressure on.”
“There was another man who rode ahead of me with Alonzo. It’s Ramone.”
Rosita’s head came up. “Ramone? The man who killed your grandfather Chastain all those years ago?”
Justin nodded. “It might not be as we think. I’ll tell you everything later.”
Rosita washed her blood-soaked hands in the basin and dried them on a cloth Justin had brought. Then she turned back to Cole just as his eyes blinked open.
“Cole’s awake.”
“Where’s Sadie?” Cole’s voice, weak and so soft it was hard to hear, but his thoughts were clear.
Justin’s gut twisted. “Heath’s got her.” Justin had a feeling that was the absolute truth. And of course he wanted Heath to get her, yet he didn’t want him to keep her.
“Go, for heaven’s sake. Get out of here and go help.”
A clatter at the back of the house drew Justin’s attention and diverted Cole’s. He wished it’d be Heath with Sadie.
Wished it, prayed it, but feared it was not. This day was just too deeply stacked with trouble.
Doc Garner burst into the room, and right behind him . . .
Justin almost groaned out loud. He’d hoped for the sweet, wise, skillfully trained Sister Margaret. Instead his stack of trouble just got higher.
2
Angie DuPree rushed into the room and stumbled right into the doctor’s back.
She nearly pitched him facedown on top of a bleeding man.
Strong arms caught her so fast she wondered if someone had been waiting for her to get into trouble. The doctor spared her one annoyed glance, then rushed around the bed and bent over the patient.
The doctor reached for the bandaged wound as she realized it was Justin lying there. Horror swept through her and then the hands that set her on her feet drew her attention. She glanced sideways.
Justin.
Her eyes flicked back and forth. It was definitely Justin who had her wrapped in his arms. She’d felt them before.
So it was Cole who was hurt.
Covered up like this, though—unconscious or nearly so—with all of his personality and his way of dress hidden, she was shocked at how much Cole resembled Justin. Both of them tall with dark brown hair. Their eyes matched too, a blue as dark as the starlit sky. But Cole had shorter hair and in the normal course of things was tidier and better dressed. But right now he was a mess.
“Aunt Margaret hurt her ankle and Miss Maria came out with us, but she said another man is hurt?” Angie said weakly.
Justin nodded. “That’s Ramone. I’m glad you could come and . . . help.”
Angie suspected he tried to disguise the doubt in his voice, but since she had her own serious doubts, she heard what he didn’t say.
She looked back at Cole, and a wave of dizziness almost staggered her. Some of it was the sight of so much blood, though she also had a strange blast of what felt like relief that it wasn’t Justin lying there. And then she was disgusted at such a thought. Cole being hurt was just as terrible. She was here to help and who the patient was didn’t come into it.
Some of the dizziness, of course, might be because she had no idea what to do, so she was scared to death. But Aunt Margaret had tripped over a misplaced schoolbook this morning and was limping badly enough she needed medical care herself. She’d sent Angie out here, and one of the other two ladies from the orphanage, Miss Maria, came along and had been sent to another house to tend another man. The doctor said he needed youth and speed and that a lack of knowledge wouldn’t matter.
Well, if Angie could stay upright, he’d get all of those. Youth, speed, and ignorance.
Lucky man.
“Thank you, Justin.” He let her go. She felt wobbly again but covered it up as best she could and rushed to stand next to Dr. Garner. Aunt Margaret said to obey him, lend him a hand. She squared her shoulders, prayed hard, let her head clear, and waited.
Rosita, the Bodens’ housekeeper, stepped aside. Angie knew her, too. She’d met the whole family and most of the other folks who lived and worked on the Cimarron Ranch. They came to church every Sunday morning as she did. Aunt Margaret had talked about them a lot, as well. The Bodens supported the mission generously. And Aunt Margaret loved Sadie Boden. In fact, Angie suspected she loved Sadie more than she loved her.
Which Angie richly deserved, though Aunt Margaret was nothing but kind.
“Miss DuPree,” the doctor snapped.
“Yes, sir.” Angie had no problem with sharply given orders and raised voices. It reminded her of her mother.
“Get across the bed from me. I’ll need your hands over there.” When she was in place, he handed his doctor bag across Cole to her. “We talked about what I might need from my doctor bag.”
There was a bedside table so she set the bag down, opened it, and waited.
Already working, the doctor glanced at Justin. “The shot is through and through. I won’t have to dig a bullet out. Tell me what happened.”
Justin spoke of an ambush, a gunfight. There was an outlaw imprisoned in the cellar. She followed Justin quite well until the doctor told her what to grab out of his bag. She lost the trail of the story at that point.
Her contribution to the chaos was a fumbling business because she was unfamiliar with the tools and supplies Doc Garner requested. She doggedly worked on.
The doctor powdered Cole’s gunshot, then put a folded piece of gauze over his belly.
“I need to roll him to his side and work on his back. I’ll need your strength here, Justin.”
Almost instantly, Angie found herself being pushed just a bit and squeezed between Justin and the table. The doctor and Justi
n lifted Cole with such gentle strength that Angie felt tears blur her vision. She’d never seen men so gentle.
“Miss DuPree, hold the bandage right here.” The doctor grabbed her hand and placed it on the thick pad covering the wound. “You press hard on the front of his stomach and don’t let this dressing slip while we put the carbolic acid on the exit wound.”
The doctor waited until she reached her arms in and had a firm hold on the bandage. Then Dr. Garner tended Cole’s back.
“Now hold this compress on his back while I bind them both in place. Justin, keep him steady on his side until I’m done. I’ll pass the gauze under him and you catch it and bring it up his front.”
“It’s a gutshot, Doc.” Justin’s voice had a terrible grief in it.
“I don’t think the bullet hit a vital organ. He’d already be dead if it had. He’s lost a lot of blood, and that’ll leave him weak for a while, but he’s got a decent chance of making it. There’s always fever—there’s no avoiding that—but if it doesn’t turn septic, he’ll survive. Cole’s a strong man and you’ve done a good job of tending him. The bleeding probably washed out everything from inside. I hope, anyway. Now we wait, get him to drink water as often as we can, and pray.”
The doctor wrapped the bandage. In the stillness of his efforts to keep the bandages snug, Angie caught on to the rhythm of the doctor tucking the strips under Cole’s body, then Justin bringing the bandage up to where the doctor could get at it again. She became aware of Justin so close beside her. He had obviously been through a long, hard day, yet he smelled clean, like the outdoors and horses and something else she’d never smelled before. If strength could have a smell, she’d say it was that. He’d rolled up his sleeves to his elbows, and the effort to hold Cole on his side and lift so the doctor could pass the gauze under him caused corded muscles to bulge on his forearms.
She’d been close to her husband, of course, in wifely ways. But she’d never been near a man like this. Working at his side, watching him do his best in a loving way.
“That’s it. I’m done. Ease him onto his back.” The doctor fussed more with the bandage, straightening it until he was satisfied. “Get Cole some of that water.”
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