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Partners in Justice and Love: A Historical Western Romance Book

Page 30

by Lorelei Brogan


  People might think it was grim or poor, but for Lyla, fewer things meant less work to take care of them. Besides, she soon wouldn’t need to worry about being poor or working.

  Keith’s overconfident grin and his gold pocket watch filled her mind as she closed her eyelids.

  The banker would not have been her first choice for a husband, in an ideal world, but Lyla didn’t live in an ideal world.

  He was wealthy, fairly young, and wanted to marry her, and that was about as much standard as she could possibly afford to have.

  She didn’t love him. She was sure she never would, but that wasn’t what marriage was about, was it?

  She had loved someone, once, and it had ended terribly. It had uprooted her entire life and was still wreaking havoc.

  Lyla thought of how happy her mother would have been if she had met Keith and knew that Lyla was going to marry him.

  She would have been thrilled. Lyla patted a finished stack of folded clothing.

  Her parents had warned her about feelings and falling in love. Of course, they had seemed to have plenty of feelings for each other, but they had always assured her that this had happened over time.

  Lyla was fairly certain that it wouldn’t matter how much time she spent with Keith—she would never love him the way that people talked about love. He was a brusque sort of man, always businesslike, and he spoke roughly to anyone who he had dealings with.

  She wasn’t even sure she knew what love was. What she’d had once hadn’t been the perfect kind of love everyone dreamed of having. If it had been, she wouldn’t have ended up the way she had.

  Lyla sighed, finally finished with her task. She took the clean basket of clothes and set them by the door, then headed downstairs.

  “Ready for the dinner rush?” Anne asked her. She and Anne had been working together since Lyla had moved into the hotel. They had built their friendship over the hundreds of dirty dishes that needed washing even though it took until late into the night to get the job done.

  “Are we ever ready for the dinner rush?” Lyla asked, groaning and twisting her neck in circles. “I already ache all over.”

  “No, we’re not, but come on. At least we can suffer together, right?” Anne wrapped her arm through Lyla’s and the two went into the kitchen. The one bright side of the dinner rush was that they got to eat something before and after their work was done.

  There were two heaping plates of hot food waiting for them in the kitchen. The cook slipped two freshly baked biscuits on top of all the other delicious-looking things waiting for them.

  “Eat up, girls. Tonight is going to be a long one, and you need to be ready to work hard,” Cook said with a grin.

  Lyla looked outside and realized he was right. Friday nights were always the worst.

  She sat down and dug into the food, savoring every flavor-filled bite. There was a reason that the hotel restaurant always had someone eating there.

  Their food was unique and second to none. Every human being could appreciate a meal out once in a while, and Cook made it so that no one could afford not to come to his restaurant.

  That wasn’t his real name, of course, but Lyla didn’t know if anyone knew his real name. Ever since she had started working there, everyone had called him Cook.

  He turned the simplest dishes into delicacies and he always seemed to be cooking. She wondered if he ever did anything else, even when he was off work.

  Lyla thought she couldn’t possibly hold another bite, but she still ran her finger over her plate to gather any last morsel. She could imagine her mother scolding her for that behavior. It wasn’t an especially lady-like thing to do.

  The thought made her smile as she wiped her finger across the plate once more and then popped it into her mouth.

  She had lived under her parent’s disappointment for far too long. Sadness washed over her for a moment. In reality, she missed them. She was pretty sure that any child missed their parents when they died, no matter how much they had fought while they were alive.

  “Come on, Lyla, our first customers are here,” Anne said with a grin as she bustled through the kitchen with a tray laden with filled water glasses.

  “I’m coming, I’m coming.” Lyla had no idea how Anne mustered so much enthusiasm for their job when she disliked it just as much as Lyla. Or maybe even more.

  She plastered a smile on her face and tied an apron over her dress. There were no two ways about it—she had tables to tend to and she was going to do a good job, no matter how she felt about it.

  ---*---

  Lyla laid her head onto the counter and turned her head to face Anne. “I don’t think it’s possible to get any more exhausted than this.”

  Anne groaned. “Let’s see how possible it is after finishing all those dishes in the back.”

  Lyla followed Anne’s gaze. There were stacks upon stacks of dirty plates, pans, bowls, and every other type of dish that was used in a restaurant just waiting on the back counter next to the sink.

  It was impossible for them to keep up with the dishes as they were dirtied and wait all the tables, so at the end of the night there was always a mountain-load for them to take care of before they could go home.

  “Hey, at least you won’t have to do this for the rest of your life. A rich banker will probably give you a ton of servants to do everything for you, maybe even brush your hair,” Anne pointed out with a smirk.

  “I’m sure one day you will find some handsome man to sweep you off your feet and rescue you from your dish-washing nightmare. Who knows? Maybe marrying Keith will be the worst decision of my life.”

  Anne shook her head. “Quiet down before someone hears you. You can’t possibly mean that. Keith is clearly in love with you, and besides, he’s so rich you won’t have to work a day in your life.” Anne turned her head a little more to the side. “In fact, why are you still working? Hasn’t Keith offered to pay your way until the wedding?”

  Lyla clamped her jaw. “Yes, he did. But I don’t need him to. Let’s just say I’m taking advantage of my freedom while I still have some.”

  Anne raised her eyebrows. “You’re using your freedom to wash stacks upon stacks of dirty dishes from strangers when you’re so exhausted that you could drop? I will never understand you.”

  Lyla giggled. “When I am married and have lots of time on my hands, maybe I’ll stop in and help you with the dishes every once and a while.”

  “That’s not likely. I doubt Keith is going to let his pretty wife volunteer dishwashing services at a hotel for free when she has her very own servants.”

  “Come on. Let’s get to work on those or we’re going to be up all night.”

  Anne nodded and the two girls pulled themselves up from their chairs and hurried over to the dishes, to begin the process of preparing them for the next day.

  While they worked, Lyla thought about Anne’s words. Of course she knew that being married to Keith wouldn’t be the same as her last eleven months on her own. But would he control how she spent her free time or who she was friends with?

  The thought made her shiver. She would become one of those wives that was just a pretty face to look at during a business dinner, with no life of her own.

  She fought back tears as she scrubbed away a bit of stubborn bacon grease.

  Somehow, the task of washing dishes while Anne told jokes Lyla had already heard during the day suddenly seemed like the absolute best thing that she could possibly be doing.

  She didn’t long for her bed so badly, and she didn’t think about how much she ached. Instead, she tried to appreciate every plate she washed and laughed extra hard whenever Anne got to the funny parts.

  But despite how much Lyla wanted to hang onto the moment, it slipped away, and soon she was trudging up the stairs in a dark hotel, toward her little room with the creaky bed and the cracked wash basin.

  Nobody could stop the days from rushing by, no matter how much they wanted to.

  She could wish that she had
a different life. She could dream of princes and Mr. Darcy from Pride and Prejudice, but she knew that those were just fantasies.

  She was stuck in the real world, where men left you alone and crying not two days after they had asked you to marry them. She lived in a world where women married because if they didn’t, they would be considered the lowest of the low. And she lived in a world of noisy city life and the drudgery of work day after day.

  Lyla flopped down onto her bed and let herself relax slowly, giving her muscles time to adjust to her new position. She stared up at the simple wooden roof above her.

  Where would she be sleeping four months from now? Would she remember this place when she was there? Would she like it better? Or would she wish she could come back to her days of poverty and pain?

  Lyla rubbed her hands over her arms and shivered from the cold. She jumped up, dressed for bed, and slipped between the covers, snuggling down under the blankets.

  She was alone in this world. She didn’t expect that to ever change. She was going to marry Keith, but she was going to stick to herself. She wasn’t going to let him control every tiny detail of her life and she was going to find a way to enjoy herself, sometimes.

  With her determinations at the front of her mind, Lyla slowly let herself relax enough to sleep.

  She tossed and turned in her creaky bed while disturbing dreams haunted her sleep. They reminded her of the miserable future she was about to trap herself into and the terrible past that had pushed her to that decision.

  Finally, Lyla couldn’t take it any longer. Before dawn showed its face, she slipped out of bed, dressed for the day, and prepared herself for the workday ahead.

  Chapter 4

  “Mr.? Hey, Mr.?”

  It took James a moment to react to the urgent little voice in the jail cell. He didn’t realize the boy was addressing him.

  “Oh, Joey, you’re awake.” James left his chair behind the desk and hurried over to the cell.

  “Why am I in jail?” the little boy asked. “Did I do something wrong?”

  “Um, no, you didn’t do anything. I just put you in there so you could rest on the bed, but you can come out now.” James swung the cell door wide open so Joey could come out.

  Joey took a few steps out of the cell and then stood still at James’s feet. “Where are my mama and papa?” he asked quietly.

  James looked around the office. He was alone. Where were Merrick and Daniel when he needed them?

  Kneeling down, James looked the little boy in his eyes. “Joey, can you listen very carefully to something I have to say?”

  Joey nodded his head up and down, his eyes wide and his soft blonde curls bouncing about his ears.

  “Okay, it’s something very important and very hard to hear, so I need you to be like a big man for me, okay?”

  James tried not to think about what he sounded like. He was doing his best to mimic every instance he had ever heard someone talk to a small child before, which wasn’t many.

  “Okay.” Joey’s voice came out with a worried tone.

  “Your mama and papa were hurt really badly in the accident that you had earlier, and they had to go away.”

  “Where did they go?” Joey asked.

  “They went to a very special place up in the sky… to the garden where God lives.”

  “Can I go with them?” Joey looked around the office as if he expected one of his parents to come out at any moment and apologize for leaving him with this strange sheriff.

  “No, you can’t go with them. Actually, you’ll be staying with me until a very nice person from your family comes to take you home.” James stood up and looked down at Joey. He seemed to be taking it quite well.

  “I don’t have any family besides mama and papa.”

  “What do you mean? What about your aunt?”

  “My mama always says my aunt is a very special woman who lives very far away, who I can never see ever.” Joey nodded his head as if he knew exactly what he was talking about, and there was no way that James could know better than him.

  “I see. Well, let’s just wait a few weeks and see what happens, okay? Maybe she will come here and then you will get to see her.”

  “Okay.” Joey nodded, sticking a thumb in his mouth.

  James walked back across the room and resumed his place in his chair.

  “Can I go home now?” Joey asked finally. “Mama usually puts me to bed. She’s probably wondering why I’m gone.”

  James groaned inwardly. Had the boy not heard anything he’d just said?

  “What’s wrong with being here?” James was trying to be patient, but he had some papers to fill out and the distraction wasn’t helping him get the job done.

  “I’m hungry.” Joey rocked back and forth between his feet.

  “Okay, just give me a second and we’ll get you something to eat.” James hoped that either Daniel or Merrick would be back in time to help him.

  James puffed out a breath as silence enveloped him. It didn’t last long.

  “Mr.?”

  James looked up to find Joey exactly where he had left him.

  “James is fine.” James could hear an edge to his voice.

  “Okay. James?”

  “What now?” James put his pen down in frustration.

  “I have to pee.”

  Groaning, James dropped his head in his hands for a moment. It appeared he wouldn’t be getting anything else done today.

  He stood up and reached his hand out to Joey. “Come on, then. I suppose we’d better find you somewhere to pee before you go on the floor.”

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