“Penny!” Her excited voice echoed in the lobby. Trace enjoyed seeing the smile on her face stretch from ear to ear.
“Mary Rose!” The woman stepped from the stairs as the two rushed to hug.
“I didn’t think you’d come,” Mary Rose whispered.
“You didn’t think I’d let you go through this alone, did you? Why, when Augustus said he was coming, I packed my bags and stowed along with him.” She smiled and glanced over her shoulder at her husband, who was speaking to Rand.
Augustus Wallace gave his wife a smile that did not quite reach his eyes.
“So, who is in charge of the investigation into the theft of the rifles?” Captain Wallace asked.
Trace stepped closer to the men. “I am.” He nodded to the officer.
“I’d like to review the statements and information your investigation has uncovered.”
“It’s over in my office,” Rand announced.
“Let me make sure my wife is settled, and I’ll be over.” Wallace turned to the desk clerk, who handed him a key.
“Oh, you’re not staying here,” Mary Rose gasped. “Not while my home is just across the way.”
“We couldn’t impose,” Penny replied.
“Nonsense. Right now it’s just me rattling around in it.” She turned and leveled a pointed look in Trace’s direction. “Alone. It would be a pleasure to have someone I could talk to.”
He glared back at her as Rand covered his laughter with a cough.
“Captain, would it be agreeable to you?” Penny asked, looking at her husband.
“Anything for my wife,” he replied, handing the clerk back his key. “Would you get someone to bring our bags down?”
“Of course, sir.”
“He’s just too good to me,” Penny replied, as the clerk turned and spoke to the young man at the corner of the front desk.
The women moved away toward the edge of the covered porch.
“Go on with the ladies, Captain. The marshal and I will wait for your bags and bring them over.”
“If you’re sure,” he said.
“No problem.” Rand smiled.
Trace let his hands rest on his gun belt as he watched the captain follow Mary Rose and her friend. An uneasy feeling crossed his shoulders and settled into the pit of his gut, and his brow wrinkled in thought. There was something about that man he just didn’t trust.
“You might as well tell me.”
He turned and looked at Rand, who had taken one of the bags set before them and held out a second bag for Trace to take.
As they headed out the door and across the street, Rand continued, “Glad to see you still have some hide left.” He chuckled. “Now, what was the problem?”
“The bank is holding her money until the investigation is done.”
“Maybe, with Penny here, she’ll have something else to focus on.”
“What do you know about this officer?” Trace asked.
“Captain Augustus Wallace fought hard in the war and then found himself sent out here. I dare say he fancied himself among those dandies in Washington. Why?”
“Just a feeling.”
“Sounds like more than a feeling,” Rand remarked. “What are you going on?”
“For Moe to get that room, he had to produce someone to vouch for him.”
Rand paused to stare. “Was it Captain Wallace?”
“One and the same.” Trace turned his gaze to the figures across the way. “I’ve got a telegram to send before I come by. Keep things close to the vest until I get an answer.”
“Will do. I guess, with the company, you’ll be back in the upstairs over my place.”
“Not for long,” he replied. “I’m surprised that a woman in Mrs. Wallace’s condition would travel.”
“Perhaps, but Texas women are a bit on the stubborn side. She must have felt a strong urge.”
Trace gave him a sidelong glance.
“By all rights, she should be back at the fort, preparing for her lying in. Instead, she’s here, because she felt that a friend was in need. Sort of says a lot.”
****
“It hasn’t changed a bit,” sighed Penny, as she stepped into the house.
“You haven’t been gone that long.” Mary Rose laughed.
Penny moved to the center of the parlor, slid the ribbons of her bonnet from under her chin, and whisked the hat from her head. “We spent many an evening here,” she sighed, sitting on the sofa.
Mary Rose moved to the chair. Her mouth twisted in a sad smile. “Planning your wedding and arguing with Daniel.”
Penny smoothed her hand over her skirt. “He enjoyed every minute of it.”
“I’m sure he did,” Mary Rose agreed.
The captain’s step sounded on the porch, drawing both women’s attention as he appeared in the doorway behind them. Mary Rose glanced down and then stared at his tall black boots as her blood chilled.
“Mary Rose?” Penny’s worried voice shook her from her memories.
She gave a trembling smile. “Won’t you come in, Captain?”
“Thank you.” Standing behind his wife, he pulled his white gloves from his hands. “I didn’t realize it was just you and your brother.”
“Yes, Daniel and I lived here. Our parents passed away several years ago.”
“I see,” he murmured.
She watched as he pulled the fingers of his gloves out and collapsed the fabric to match the darts across the top. An awkward silence followed, until Penny raised a hand to her husband, saying, “I thought I mentioned that, Captain. Daniel and Mary Rose came out after the war. While their house was under construction, they rented a room from my father. That’s how we met.”
“Oh, yes. Yes, you did.” He nodded. “I had forgotten.”
“So much on his mind,” Penny murmured and offered a smile.
“Yes.” Yet the cold glances she received from the captain did little to make Mary Rose feel less anxious. Suddenly overcome with the feeling she’d just done something horribly wrong, she wished someone would come to her door.
Out of the corner of her eye, she glimpsed Trace and Sheriff Weston moving to the house. Relief flowed through her even if she couldn’t let Trace see how much better she felt with him in the room. “Oh, your bags are here,” she said, drawing her eyes away from the cold calculating ones of the captain.
“Here you go, Mary Rose. I’ve got to get over to the office.” Rand said, putting down the bag he’d carried.
“Thank you, Sheriff.” Penny smiled.
“Where do you want them to go?” Trace asked.
Mary Rose stood and moved toward the stairs. By all rights, she should offer them Daniel’s room. Yet a cold hardness filled the pit of her stomach. Was it fear?
“I-I haven’t cleaned out my brother’s room yet,” she apologized. Looking up, she could see Trace’s troubled glance. Humph, let him worry.
“Then,” came Penny’s bright voice, “that is what I shall help you with.”
Mary Rose turned. “I can’t ask that of you, not in your condition.”
Penny rose from her seat and moved forward, her hands outstretched to her. “I hardly think putting things away in boxes will sap my strength. I am in a peculiar fashion, but women do recover. Let me help you, Mary Rose.”
How could she refuse? Her shoulders relaxed, and she squeezed Penny’s hands. “Thank you, I’d like that very much. Let me show you to your room. I’m sure you want to get some things straight, and I’ll let you rest for a while.”
She rounded the banister, Trace’s clean scent washing over her. Steeling her urge to return his glance, she placed a foot on the stairs. “Follow me.” She could hear footsteps behind her—Penny’s soft slippers, the captain’s heavy footfalls, and then the jingle of spurs that could only belong to her marshal.
At the landing, she glanced over her shoulder to see how her friend was making out. Her hand on the rail, Penny seemed to be managing the climb on her own. Mary Rose noted her husband didn’t
bother to offer her a hand in assistance.
Trace would have. The statement flashed into her mind and, without another thought, she knew it would be true. She felt a bit sorry that Penny hadn’t found that. “Nearly there,” she told Penny, catching her glance. Moving toward the doorway to Daniel’s room, a sobering thought bubbled up, and she knew Trace was a different kind of man than most. His actions were always chivalrous. He took into account her feelings as a woman.
Her thumb brushed the back of the ring he’d given her last night. She looked down and stared at the heart. Her thoughts focused on everything he’d done for her since finding her. Her hand pressed against the doorknob, and she looked back. Trace stood off to the side. His blue eyes grew dark and smoldered with anger, so unlike the concerned and sympathetic ones he’d shown to her when he found her hiding in the brush. Suddenly, she wanted those eyes back.
Her brow puckered. Was she ready to bend her tough Irish pride?
“Mary Rose, are you all right?” Penny’s voice brought her back to reality.
“Yes, I was just thinking.” She smiled. “Here we are.” She turned the knob and pushed the door back. “It’s right across from mine, if you need anything.”
Penny swept past her. “Oh, it’s just fine,” she said brightly.
Mary Rose smiled again and turned her head to see Trace come through the door—and any other thought scattered. His elbow brushed her sleeve. She held her breath. Her nerves stretched and twisted in knots as if she expected him to make some sort of caustic remark. Instead, he ignored her. She realized that hurt worse.
“A very nice room,” the captain remarked. “I’m sure we’ll enjoy it during our stay.”
“I’ll leave you two to get settled,” she said, and, not wanting to be in the room with the man, she hurried toward the door. The captain’s words stopped her.
“Actually, since my wife is going to rest, perhaps this would be a good time for me to discuss the case with you over at the sheriff’s office, Marshal.”
She glanced at Trace. A pleasant enough smile for those who didn’t know him, yet she could sense the wary lion beneath. Her heart hammered in her chest. She didn’t want a scene to mar Penny’s visit or to cause any more problems than she already could have with the government.
Trace cast a look at her that made her shiver. “I want to make sure Sheriff Weston will be there to talk to you, Captain Wallace. I know you’d like to be fully informed.”
Her eyes narrowed. Trace’s smile widened. He reminded her of a cat toying with a mouse.
“I’ll wait for you downstairs, with Mary Rose.” He stepped quickly to her side and propelled her from the room.
“What are you up to?” she hissed as soon as they were out of earshot.
“I’m getting a viper from your midst,” he replied, his eyes focused ahead and not giving her a glance as they moved down the hallway at breakneck speed. Mary Rose pulled to a stop and wrested her arm from his grasp.
“I’ll have you know Penny is my good friend,” she snipped, glaring at him.
His brow rose over his right eye. “She may be, but something tells me her husband is not an admirer.”
She opened her mouth to complain, but his grasp tightened again on her elbow, and she lifted her skirts to maneuver the stairs. Once down them, he let her go as if her skin was on fire, and she swirled to meet him.
“Penny and her husband are my guests,” she said. “They are here in my home, and I expect if you come around that you will remember that fact.”
“If I come around?” He moved closer. She could see the anger shimmering in the depths of his brown eyes. “Oh, I will come around, my Irish Rose. And, when I do, I will have a smile on my face. But, while I’m gone, you think on this. If Captain Wallace is here to do an investigation, by all rights he needs to keep it impartial.”
She should tell him about those boots. Yet, as she watched, his eyes warmed as he stepped closer, and her thoughts scattered. His breath rushed past her face and she drank it in. Beneath her clothing, she could feel her body changing. She wanted him, and him alone. Desire heated her lungs, and she struggled for air as his hand slid around her waist. He held her close.
“By staying here, he will have a hard time separating his personal involvement from his investigation.” His eyes roamed her face from temple to chin, finally settling on her lips.
Please, she prayed, let him kiss me. Her tongue darted out, dampening her lips and igniting a hunger in his eyes. His head moved closer, closer. If she did nothing, then their lips would touch. Mary Rose held her breath, less than an inch remained between him and his goal. She felt her body arch as his fingers pressed against her spine.
“You see how it is, my sweet. One taste of heaven and you’d be undone.”
God, he was right. Her hands moved toward his shoulders as she levied pressure against those bands of steel. “Let me go,” she demanded.
He chuckled and closed the gap. She struggled against him. His arms held her tight. The pressure of his lips bruised until she opened her mouth and let his tongue ravish her. The hands that pushed against his body now pulled him tighter against hers. She practiced returning his tongue strokes until neither of them could breathe. Only then did he release her.
“We, we can’t be caught doing that,” she whispered. “People will talk.”
He shook his head. “My dear Irish Rose, people are already talking. You just haven’t been listening.”
She felt his thumb graze the side of her cheek. “I should be mad at you.”
“But you aren’t.”
Her chin trembled. Afraid to talk, she shook her head.
“Hm, perhaps not anymore.” He leaned over and pressed a kiss to her forehead.
The simple gesture soothed her battered feelings. She closed her eyes and thought of nothing but the experience of his lips upon her skin. The thump of boots in the stairwell drew them apart. She turned away, brushed her hair from her face, and tried to calm her racing heart.
“Ah, Captain. Your wife is resting?” Trace asked.
Pulling herself together, Mary Rose took a deep breath and turned toward the men.
“She is, indeed,” the captain replied. His glance moved from Trace to her and back. "The heat bothers her in this condition."
“While you are over at the sheriff’s, I’ll keep an eye on her as I prepare dinner,” she said.
“The usual time?” Trace asked innocently enough.
She nodded, then stopped. "No, with the heat, shall we push it back a bit? Why not come back around dusk. It will be cooler. Shall we say, seven?" She cast a glance to the captain, then to Trace.
He stepped back to her and took her hand. “Agreed. I shall be here at seven or a little after. Shall we go, Captain?”
Penny’s husband glared at her before preceding Trace to the doorway. He opened the door and moved onto the porch as Trace, right behind him, asked, “So when do you expect to welcome your child?”
“Sometime in the early fall.”
Mary Rose stood listening to the men as they moved away, the door closing behind them. Turning on her heel, she walked to the mirror behind the front door and gazed at her lips swollen from Trace’s ardent ministrations. Yes, there was even the flush of a woman in heat around her eyes. No wonder the captain had stared. She closed her eyes in defeat. Trace had been right all along. Anyone could see she was now a woman in disgrace. She had fallen for a man who believed in honor but not love. The farce of an engagement was still on.
Chapter Twenty-Two
Mary Rose stroked the knife across the potato, pulling the red skin away from the white flesh, and fantasized peeling Trace’s shirt from his body. She thought about the deep tan of his skin, how when she kissed it the other day it left a tang upon her tongue. With a sigh, she dropped the potato into the pot and reached for another.
“That sounds like the sigh of a woman in love.”
Her eyes widened. The potato fell from her hand, and the blade ni
cked her finger. “Ow,” she cried and stuck her finger into her mouth.
“Oh, I didn’t mean to startle you.” Penny moved forward. “Let me see.”
“It’s nothing,” she mumbled.
Penny gave her a deep look. Mary Rose removed the finger from her mouth and held out her hand.
“Just a little cut.” Penny smiled. “Run some water on it, and I’ll get a strip of linen to bind it.”
Mary Rose pumped the handle, and as the cold water poured from the channel, she thrust her hand beneath the flow.
“So what were you thinking about?” Penny’s voice came from the pantry.
“Nothing in particular, just thinking,” she answered. Pulling her hand back, she wiped the water from her skin.
“Okay, let me have it again.”
She held the finger out to Penny and watched as she wrapped the cloth around it, then tied the ends together.
“So you weren’t thinking about anything or anyone in particular?”
She shook her head.
“Not even a certain U.S. Marshal?”
Blood rushed to Mary Rose’s cheeks, and Penny Wallace giggled.
“You never could lie. He is quite handsome, this Marshal Castillo.”
“Yes, he is.”
“Is he the one who gave you that beautiful ring?”
Glancing down, Mary Rose looked at the gold ring that graced the third finger of her left hand. “Yes.”
“Do you love him?”
Her face contorted in doubt. “I don’t know.”
Penny shook her head. “You must know, Mary Rose.” She bit her lip. “If you don’t, you’ll end up like me.”
Her heart thudded to a stop. Her fears were true. “I thought you loved the captain.”
This time her friend shook her head. “I do, but the love is a bit one-sided.” She placed a hand upon her rounding abdomen. “I’m hoping this will change how he feels. If I have a child, a son, perhaps he will see me in a different light.”
Mary Rose squeezed her hand tight. “He doesn’t hurt you, does he?”
Penny swallowed hard. “I’m sure it’s my fault. I always seem to be making things worse.”
“Penny,” she began, but her friend shook her head.
Castillo's Fiery Texas Rose Page 22