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Outlaw’s Bride

Page 17

by Johnston, Joan


  Patch let him see the wonder she felt. The terrible need. The fear and trembling at this new step he had taken.

  His fingertips moved slowly, reverently, across her breast, and she purred like one of Leah’s kittens as her skin responded to his touch. She bit back a groan when his thumb brushed across her nipple.

  “Look at me,” he said.

  Patch raised eyes that were heavy-lidded, lambent with the fire he fanned within her. There was no voice for the yearning she felt, only her body pulsing with excitement as he cupped her breast and made her feel his need.

  “Patch, this is crazy,” Ethan murmured against her lips. His hand slid her dress off her shoulders, baring her to his gaze. “Don’t let me do this.”

  Patch was beyond caring what was right or wrong. Her body sang with pleasure as Ethan touched her. When he slid his hand down the front of her, down between her thighs, she grabbed his arms and hung on.

  Ethan had no intention of stopping. Nor would Patch have stopped him. She was too afraid something might happen to Ethan and rob her of ever knowing what it felt like to be held naked in his arms, to be loved by him as a man loved a woman.

  Patch was immediately aware when Ethan tensed.

  “Someone’s coming,” he whispered.

  Patch took one look at the disarray of her clothing and frantically began repairing the damage. Ethan helped her as best he could.

  “I’ll do it,” Patch said when his efforts hindered more than helped her.

  Ethan turned to face the intruder, using his body to shield Patch, who wasn’t quite finished redressing.

  “Leah! What are you doing here?” Ethan realized the ridiculousness of the question. There wasn’t any particular reason Leah couldn’t be in the barn anytime she pleased. He could hardly expect her to know he was having a tryst with Patch. “I mean, is there something you wanted from me?”

  Leah was as upset by the scene she witnessed as the two lovers were by the interruption. She wasn’t stupid. She recognized Ethan’s protective posture in front of Patch. The way Patch’s elbows were moving made it plain she was buttoning buttons.

  Leah understood why Ethan wanted to be with Patch. She had her own eye on one of the boys at school. But she’d only had her brother to herself for a short time, and she wasn’t ready to share him just yet. It was impossible not to feel jealous of the time Ethan was devoting to Patch. In fact, the way things were going, Patch might soon monopolize all Ethan’s time.

  “I know what you two were doing,” Leah said in a disgusted voice. “I wasn’t born yesterday.”

  Ethan’s features hardened. “What Patch and I do is none of your business.”

  Ethan was immediately sorry for his blunt reprimand when he saw the hurt look that flashed across Leah’s face. It was replaced by a mulish cast that boded ill for their budding sibling relationship.

  Leah was practically snarling when she spoke again. “I only wanted to remind you that Gilley buys all the milk he delivers to us from Mrs. Felber, at the mercantile. Also, Chester Felber earns his living by milking his mother’s cows. So maybe you should talk to all three of them when you’re in town. That’s all I wanted to say.”

  Leah backed a few steps, then turned and ran from the barn.

  “Damn, damn, damn!” Ethan took off his hat, shoved his hand through his hair, then yanked his hat back on, tugging it down low on his brow. “Just when I thought Leah and I were making some progress, getting to know one another, she gets her nose bent out of joint, and we’re back where we started.”

  Patch slipped her arms around Ethan’s waist from behind. “My stepbrother and I fought like cats and dogs. But I love him dearly now, and I know he’d give his life for me.” Patch gave Ethan a reassuring hug. “Arguing is a treasured part of being siblings.”

  “If you say so,” Ethan muttered. “I just wish I knew how I’m supposed to act toward Leah. She takes everything I say so seriously. I don’t want to hurt her feelings, but I inevitably do.”

  “Keep on doing what you’re doing,” Patch advised.

  “What’s that?”

  “Love her. Care for her.”

  Ethan reached down and unclasped Patch’s hands from around his waist, then turned to face her. “How did you get so wise?”

  Patch shrugged and grinned. “Trial and error?”

  Ethan tucked a stray lock of hair behind her car. Actually, it was a damned good thing Leah had come along. He wasn’t any closer to understanding his feelings for Patch than he had been the day she arrived in Oakville.

  He was having trouble differentiating between the child of twelve he had known and the woman she had become. He desired the grown-up Patch, all right. He wasn’t denying that. And he admired the way she had pitched in to help with the work that had to be done in the house, her tender care of his mother, and her understanding of Leah.

  But every once in a while he saw flashes of the untamed hoyden she had been once upon a time—her flaring temper, her willingness to fight tooth and claw for what she believed, her impatience, her undaunted spirit. To his surprise, he found he admired those traits as much, or more, than her ladylike demeanor.

  He wasn’t sure which Patch he liked better. He wasn’t sure which Patch was the real one. And he was never quite sure which Patch he was dealing with, the lady or the troublemaking minx. But he knew he would hurt them both if he wasn’t careful.

  Ethan put Patch away from him and picked up the reins to back his horse from the stall. Patch walked beside him as he led his horse from the barn. Once outside, he quickly mounted.

  Patch shaded her eyes from the sun as she looked up at him. “I’ll be waiting here for you.”

  “I’ll be back when I get some answers.”

  It was hard for Patch to watch Ethan ride away. She had convinced herself that Ethan Hawk wasn’t really an outlaw. He had shot Dorne Trahern in self-defense. Whatever killing he had done while on the run had been necessary to stay alive. She was convinced he had never committed the rape of which he was accused. Now he had gone hunting human quarry. Would he do it within the bounds of the law? Or would the years of being a law unto himself cause him to take vengeance into his own hands?

  She had to find out who had raped Merielle Trahern, and soon. There must be a key somewhere that would unlock the secrets of the past. She had to find it. Because without that key, she and Ethan would never be free.

  “Hello, Gilley.”

  The hotel clerk nearly jumped out of his skin when he heard the sinister voice behind him. He glanced over his shoulder and visibly relaxed. “Hawk! Why’re you sneaking around here like some Injun?”

  Gilley turned completely around, which was when he saw the gun in Ethan’s hand. Pointed at him. He tugged on his starched collar. He snuck a peek out the brand-new picture window, but the people walking up and down the boardwalk were oblivious to his personal dilemma inside.

  Gilley felt the sweat melting the starch in his shirt, making it stick to him. He licked the salty dots of perspiration from his upper lip. “Uh. Something I can do to help you, Ethan?”

  “You can tell me why you’ve been delivering poisoned milk to my house.”

  “What?” Gilley’s eyebrows rose till they nearly met the leftover fringes of hair on his balding head. “I never did such a thing! What makes you think I did?”

  Ethan’s eyes narrowed as he tried to decide whether Gilley was telling the truth. “Who else, if not you?”

  “I get all the milk I deliver to your place from Mrs. Felber. It’s already bottled when I put it in my wagon. Maybe she knows something I don’t.”

  “It isn’t just the milk that’s been poisoned, Gilley. You delivered poisoned whiskey to my father.”

  Ethan watched the freckles on Gilley’s face brighten as his face reddened.

  “I swear I don’t know a thing about any poisoned whiskey.”

  “Where’d you get the whiskey you sold to my father, Gilley?”

  “From the saloon. I got it from t
he Silver Buckle.”

  Ethan frowned. He had been hoping he would find the poisoned drinks had come from the same source. That would mean fewer people were involved in the conspiracy to poison his family. However, now that he had talked to the hotel clerk, Ethan had his doubts whether Gilley was a guilty party. The little man just wasn’t terrified enough of the gun in Ethan’s hand.

  Nevertheless, Ethan said, “Don’t leave town, Gilley. Or I’ll come after you.”

  Ethan turned on his heel and headed for the Silver Buckle. It was still early, and there weren’t many people in the bar. Slim, the bartender, was sweeping out the old sawdust before laying down new. Ethan was about to seat himself at one of the tables when he noticed the stranger at a table in the corner, with his back to the wall. So Jefferson Trahern had hired another gunfighter to shoot him down.

  Ethan seated himself across the room with his back to the opposite wall. He couldn’t help smiling at the absurdity of the situation. At least this way they could keep an eye on each other.

  In a matter of moments Slim was at Ethan’s table. “Can I get you a drink?”

  “I’d like a bottle of whiskey.”

  Slim raised his eyebrows. “A whole bottle?”

  Ethan nodded. While he waited for Slim to bring him the whiskey, he studied the stranger. The man wore his gun low, tied down, and the fact he had his back to the wall said a lot about the kind of life he led. He played with a deck of cards, doing tricks, and Ethan suspected that when he wasn’t working for hire he played a mean hand of poker.

  The stranger didn’t bother hiding his interest in Ethan. He stared up from beneath the brim of his Stetson, his eyes glittering intently. He smiled grimly, lifted his glass to Ethan in a toast, and drank it down.

  Ethan’s sense of humor told him they resembled two mangy dogs walking stiff-legged around each other, sniffing and growling and seeking out a weakness that could mean victory in the inevitable fight to come. Only, he had to hand it to Trahern. This man looked a cut above those who had been sent after him in the past. It sure didn’t appear that he planned to rush any fences.

  Slim brought the bottle to Ethan’s table along with a glass. When he started to open the bottle, Ethan stopped him., “Where do you get this stuff, Slim?”

  “Comes from Tennessee, I think.”

  “No, I mean, do you order it yourself, or do you get it from a supplier somewhere?”

  “We get it through Felber at the mercantile.”

  So the tainted whiskey that had been delivered to his father two years ago had its source at the mercantile. As had the poisoned milk more recently delivered to his mother. It was time he talked with Horace Felber.

  “Deliver this bottle of whiskey to the gentleman at the table across the room,” Ethan said. “With my compliments.”

  Slim eyed the gunslinger. “Sure you wanta do that?”

  Ethan rose. “I’m sure.” He felt the hairs prickle on his nape when he pushed through the batwing doors of the saloon. He half expected a bullet in the back. But it didn’t come.

  An honorable adversary, Ethan thought with a cynical smile. In days gone by he would have relished the contest. That was before he had recognized his mortality. The several scars on his body were evidence of the lessons he had learned. Ethan didn’t want to die. Especially not now, when he had so much to live for.

  Patch.

  She was never far from his thoughts these days. Every time he believed he had a handle on her, she revealed another facet of her personality. He wondered how many of those different sides of herself she would bring to bed with her. The sprite? The siren? The lady with an iron rod down her spine? Oh, how he would love the chance to melt it down!

  He had felt her response to his kisses, her surprise and her surrender. He had felt her tremble at his touch.

  She thinks she’s in love with you.

  What he wondered, what was driving him crazy, was whether her feelings were all left over from her childhood infatuation with him, or whether the woman she had become loved the man he was.

  His musings were cut off by his arrival at the door to Horace Felber’s store.

  The Oakville Mercantile was busy. Several ladies were perusing the notions, while Horace Felber stamped a letter behind the jaillike cage that constituted the Oakville Post Office. The bell over the door jangled, announcing Ethan’s arrival. It was almost funny, Ethan thought, how the women shrank from him as though he carried some contagious disease. His mere presence quickly cleared the premises.

  Horace Felber didn’t bother to hide his agitation at the loss of business. The storekeeper waited until he had closed the door behind the last of his customers before he acknowledged Ethan’s presence. He returned to a position of relative safety behind the counter and asked, “What can I do for you, Hawk?”

  Ethan fingered a piece of grosgrain ribbon that he thought might look pretty in Patch’s hair. “I have a problem, Horace. It seems my mother’s been drinking poisoned milk that came from your dairy.”

  Ethan watched for signs of guilt. Horace didn’t twitch an ear or blink an eye. He wasn’t even sweating. His chin came up and his palms landed flat on the counter.

  “Are you accusing me of something?” Horace demanded.

  “I’m asking if you put poison in the milk you gave Gilley to deliver to my mother.”

  Before Horace could answer, his wife stepped through a dark, heavy curtain that separated the store from the storeroom in back. Mrs. Felber was considerably less composed than her husband. In fact, her face was white as chalk.

  It was obvious from her next words that she had overheard Ethan’s conversation with her husband. “Is your mother all right?” she asked. “Nell isn’t going to die, is she?”

  Instead of answering her questions, Ethan asked one of his own. “What do you know about all this, Mrs. Felber?”

  “Don’t say another word, Lilian,” Horace admonished his wife.

  “But Horace—”

  “If you’re going to make accusations like that, you’d better have some proof, young man,” Horace said. “Honest citizens like us have rights—”

  Ethan had Mr. Felber by the throat in no time flat. He grabbed a handful of the storekeeper’s shirt to haul him over the counter and stood him up so he could stare him in the eye. “I want some answers. Now I can get them the easy way or the hard way. It’s up to you.”

  The bell jangling over the door alerted Ethan to the fact someone had entered the store, but he didn’t take his eyes off Horace. “Well? What’s it going to be?”

  “Boyd,” Horace croaked. “Make him let me go.”

  Boyd crossed far enough into the store that he could look Ethan in the face. “Some problem here, Ethan?”

  “No problem,” Ethan replied. “Horace was just going to tell me what he knows about the poison that turned up in the milk my mother’s been drinking.”

  Boyd’s face registered alarm. “Poison? Are you sure? What kind of poison?”

  “Marshall Corwin’s guessing arsenic. Ma has all the symptoms.” Ethan tightened his grip on the storekeeper. “I figure Horace can fill me in on the details.”

  “I don’t know a thing!” Horace bleated.

  “Why would Horace want to poison your mother?” Boyd asked. “It doesn’t make sense.”

  “I figure Trahern paid him to do it. What about it, Horace? You on Trahern’s payroll?”

  “No, I’m not. You’re making a mistake. Anyone could have put poison in the milk.”

  “How do you figure that, Horace?” Ethan asked.

  “My boy Chester milks those cows, bottles the milk, then leaves it sitting till it’s picked up. Anybody could’ve put something in the milk and told Chester some story why he was doing it.”

  “Then maybe I’d better go have a talk with Chester.”

  “No!” Mrs. Felber cried. “Leave him alone! He’s not right in the head. He won’t be able to tell you anything.”

  Ethan loosened his hold on Horace. “
It looks like Chester is the one who has all the answers.”

  “No!” she insisted. “He doesn’t understand—”

  Mrs. Felber didn’t wait to finish her sentence, just shoved her way back through the curtains and out of sight. Ethan heard her heels pounding on the wooden floor, then the slam of the back door.

  “Where’s Chester now?” Ethan demanded of Horace.

  “I don’t know. I—”

  Ethan leapt over the counter to follow Mrs. Felber.

  Boyd was right behind him. “Wait for me, Ethan!”

  Ethan damned the badly scarred leg that kept him from moving at a run. Once out the back door of the mercantile, Ethan saw a flash of green gingham that looked like Mrs. Felber’s skirt going around a corner at the end of the alley and headed toward it.

  When they got there, she had disappeared.

  “She probably headed for the Felbers’ barn. Chester lives in a room there,” Boyd said.

  “Let’s go.”

  It took only a matter of minutes to reach the barn on the outskirts of town where Chester milked the cows. Ethan shoved the barn door open and let the sun stream in. The pungent smells of fresh manure and hay assaulted him.

  It was long past the morning milking time, and the cows had been driven back out to pasture. He found the tiny room with its simple wooden bed and table where Chester apparently lived. The door hung slack on leather hinges. The only things moving were dust motes in the sunlight. The barn was empty.

  “So where are they? Mrs. Felber and her son?” Ethan demanded angrily of Boyd. “You said they’d be here.”

  “How the hell should I know where they are?” Boyd retorted. “I thought she’d come here. She was headed in this direction.”

  “Where else could they have gone?” Ethan queried.

  “Home, maybe,” Boyd suggested.

  “I’ll go check the Felbers’ house,” Ethan said. “You take another look around here.”

  The two men split up and began their search. Ethan knocked and, when there was no answer, let himself in the Felbers’ house. There was no one there. Disgusted, but not yet ready to give up the search, he headed out past the houses on the edge of town toward the cow pasture.

 

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