“Well, doesn’t this beat all.” I turned to see this man with a very thick black mustache and sinister eyes staring at the both of us from behind. I heard the cocking of the shotgun and I saw my life flash before me. “Vance, I should have known that you would be the first in line to get a piece of the pie. I would say that I’m willing to share with you, but I think we both know that would be a lie.” It was obvious from the way that he was talking to Vance that they knew each other.
“Derek, I thought that was you back there, but I wasn’t sure. I would have shown myself, but I also didn’t want to share the bounty.” I was in between a rock and a hard place and the only way out of this was to try to make a run for it. I moved, but I felt his hand on the small of my back. He was rubbing it in a circle and in that way, I came to the conclusion that he was still on my side. “I’ve seen what she has in her possession and maybe we can make some sort of arrangement.” His tone of voice sounded bad and I could tell that Derek was intrigued by the proposition. He lowered the gun and placed it by his side, but he did not relinquish his hold on it.
“Vance, I don’t know if it’s right for me to hear this proposal without the rest of the guys present and accounted for.”
“Derek, I think we both know that you would sell out your mother for the right price. If you were to call in your posse, then they would surely want what’s rightfully theirs. Let’s work together, but first let me get rid of this albatross that has been hanging around my neck. Hand me that shotgun and I’ll show you how to do business.” The way that he was smirking, had me completely terrified for my own life.
Vance grabbed the weapon, turned it on me and pointed the barrel right at my chest. I tried to see something in his eyes, but they were cold and hard. There was no discerning if there was an emotional struggle going on or not. Could I have really been mistaken about who this man really was? Was I deluding myself into thinking that he was my savior, when all along he was only hedging to see who was going to come out on top?
“I’m perfectly fine with you getting your hands dirty, Vance. I’d rather not get blood on my new leather boots.” I watched, as Vance narrowed his eyes and then brought that shotgun back and smashed it into the face of Derek. It stunned and shocked him for a moment, paralyzing him for a split second, so that Vance could use the handle, as a makeshift club to beat him down.
He dropped the weapon beside him on the ground “I’m not that kind of guy anymore, Derek. It’s time I set things right and become the man that this woman deserves.”
“You really did have me fooled there for a second, Vance. I know that you were just putting on airs, but it looked real enough to me.” He left Derek bleeding from the nose and unconscious from the attack.
“Merriam, I hope that you forgive my charade. I just needed to make him believe that I was still that same underhanded man that he knew a few years ago. My wife was the one that changed me and even after her death, I was tempted to go back to the old ways. In the end, I liked who I had become and I couldn’t in good conscience destroy people’s lives anymore.” I knew that he was fighting demons, but I thought it had something to do with his wife’s memory.
“What makes you think that he’s the end of it?”
“Derek tends to go off on his own and usually leads those that are with him on a wild goose chase. We can continue on our way from here and he won’t be any bother from this moment on.” He pulled me to him and with the adrenaline still rushing through his veins; he kissed me with a passion that was unbound. I felt completely at ease in his arms and I let him manhandle me and run his hands down over my body. He left me flustered and feeling like I was crawling out of my own skin.
We made it to the town in question and the sheriff issued a warrant poster for Colin. They found him and he was convicted. The land that he did have was given back to those that he had manipulated.
I stand here with Vance in this hotel room above the saloon. We have already stripped off our clothes and we are now looking at each other, before falling into bed with only one thing on our mind. We made those sheets burn and our cries of ecstasy was heard all weekend. We finally emerged with smiles on our faces and our hair in disarray. I had found the cowboy of my dreams and he had just given me a night to remember or maybe that was two nights or was that three. It didn’t matter. I knew that that was just a start of a beautiful relationship that had just been consummated.
“We are definitely going to have to do that again and often.” I looked up into his eyes and I saw something that told me that he felt the same way about me.
“Merriam, for a good Christian girl, you certainly can be a bad girl.” If I didn’t have the ring on my finger, I would have agreed with him. We had married last night and this was our honeymoon and to say that it surpassed all expectations would’ve been an understatement. We actually rode off on one horse with the sun setting in the distance and on our way to a new future together.
THE END
The Cowboy’s Dark Love
Chapter One
William strapped his rifle to his back and climbed onto the back of his horse with the ease of someone who had been riding since he had been walking. He had just finished his breakfast and was ready for his morning ride across the property. Every morning he made it a point to check the herd and the fence. He could not afford for someone to make off with any of his cattle, nor could he afford to chase them down if the fence got broken and they got loose.
In the wind of the open plains, his shaggy dark hair tried valiantly to escape the cowboy hat but he gave it his best effort to keep it in check. His sun-touched face creased pleasantly around his deep blue eyes as he scanned the horizon for any signs of foul weather, stray cows, or unwelcome visitors of any kind.
William’s broad shoulders and strong arms were made for the tough manual labor of his plains living, but even he got nervous when the winds started to blow the dust into swirling clouds and he lost his visual range of the ranchland.
He had grown up in the east, but knew from a very early age that he was not designed for city living. The cobblestone walkways and scheduled afternoon tea just seemed like a waste of time and effort. His parents had been hoping to find him a suitable young wife, but with almost no warning, he had informed them he was headed west into the uncharted territories of the open lands.
Luckily, they were well off so that they could afford to set him up a little bit. The unclaimed territories were available for homesteading, and he had been able to buy sufficient supplies for a small one-room house as well as a few animals to get the farm and ranch started.
The property he had staked ended up being quite large; and he had had very few challenges to his claim. He did have infrequent issues with roaming cattle thieves and Native Americans, but he had learned to deal with the issues with as little violence as possible. He did not see the need to cause more problems than necessary; life on the plains was hard enough without making enemies.
There was a small town trying to survive nearby, and he was able to get supplies for day’s roundtrip journey on horseback. The saloon had taken a few of his dollars, but the attached house of women had not seen any of his time or money.
After he spent is morning riding the perimeter of his ranch, he returned to the one room house next to the pond and contemplated his options for lunch. The chickens provided sufficient eggs for breakfast and any baking; and the cows were usually willing to share their milk. A few times a year, he would butcher one of the cows to stock his freezer for several months. He had been attempting a vegetable garden, but it seemed to always fall on the bottom of his to-do list, so it was a hit or miss whether it provided him with anything worthwhile. But every year, he bought a variety of seeds and gave it an effort.
He was very proud of being self-sufficient in the house and on the ranch, despite the constant urging from his mother to find himself a wife. She had been so certain that her son would marry a nice girl from a good family and settle into the family business back east.
Now all she could do was prod and pester him from afar, which was much easier to manage. He laughed to himself whenever he pictured any of those girls he grew up with trying to manage on his ranch. They would not even know which end of the water bucket was up. He, on the other hand, not only ran a successful cattle ranch with a semi successful garden, but also lived in a house that he built with his own hands, and managed to feed and clothe himself.
His bed was lonely and cold; and he had every desire to find a wife and have a family. But the options were few and far between. Most of the women he had encountered in this uncharted open land were either wild Native Americans or working women from the house next to the saloon, and he really had no interest in either one.
When he was in town, he often heard other men discussing the politics back east, and the brewing unrest between northern and southern states, but he tried to tell himself that his family would be fine and that it did not affect his life in the open land.
It was not an easy life he had created. But when the work of the day was done, and dinner was tucked into his belly, he could sit in his handmade wooden chair just outside the front door, and watch the sun disappear into the horizon as he sipped hot black coffee from his steaming mug.
Chapter Two
A dark figure crept between buildings of the tiny town, hiding in the shadows and lurking behind saloons and inns to gather discarded scraps of food. The open plains were speckled with tiny towns trying to scratch out a living, and it was difficult to claw out a meager living while keeping to the dusk and darkness.
Each town started to resemble the last one. All of them had the requisite general store, one or two mandatory saloons, a small dining hall, and possibly an inn with a few rooms to rent. It was hard to track her progress as she moved from one to the next, but she tried to mark her movements as best she could with her limited reading skills. She had been scratching out a living on the run for months, borrowing a horse blanket here or a pair of old shoes there. It was better to be unseen altogether than to try and beg from a town or a house.
There were those who would have her back in chains or worse. Even though her original owners were miles away and probably written her off, there was always another one who would be more than happy to take in a stray. She had no intention of ever returning to a homestead like that, and would prefer to surrender her life than to surrender her freedom.
Opal imagined that one day she could have her own place. She did not hope for anything too large, perhaps a small square of land with a tiny house and a vegetable garden and a couple of chickens. She loved to cook and was sorry to have lost that opportunity. When she was a child, her first position was out on the farm but as she grew up, she had been placed more and more into positions inside the house. She watched as her fellow workers would come and go, bought and sold, and then they would just fade away forever. The household jobs had their advantages and their disadvantages. The other workers looked at her differently when she returned to the sheds at night to sleep. And some of the men of the household thought it was their right to take certain advantages that she just had to endure.
She assumed, correctly, that her movement into the house was partially based on her lighter skin. Many of the workers that were destined to remain outside on the plantations were of dark ebony skin. But since her mother was Haitian by birth and her father had been a very brave Native American, she was much lighter skinned with dark haunting eyes and long straight hair. Her father had long since disappeared back into the forest, and her mother had been sold off the plantation when she was very young. While she was technically without family, she did consider her fellow workers to be a family of sorts. And it had been hard to leave them behind. But when she had found the unique opportunity, she had made a run for it.
She had spent the first night hiding up a tree in the woods of rural Arkansas, hearing the men charging over bushes and the dogs baying for her. But after the first night, the forest had gone quiet except for the crickets and owls. She was not accustomed to silence and it scared her more than the dogs. She knew she had to get out of the immediate area quickly, before anyone recognized her. But Opal also knew she had to get out of the south lest someone else find her and consider her free for the taking.
One of the older men that worked in the fields with her had been teaching her to read, and she had been practicing any chance she had. She hoped she knew enough to read the basic navigation and signs she was going to encounter along the way.
Each town promised both survival and capture. She was not skilled enough to find food in the open land but had done her best at the outskirts of each farm, sometimes picking an apple from a tree or yanking a carrot from the garden. Rarely would a farmer miss one vegetable. There were moments when she longed for the comforts of home, but then she remembered that home was not hers to begin with.
It had been a long journey north over the last several months, traveling only at night and trying to stay invisible during the day. The towns could provide certain supplies but they were more dangerous. The open space gave her room to breathe, but there were fewer resources. Some of it had been so hot she could barely breathe; and parts of it had been so cold she thought she was going to fall asleep and never wake up. But some hidden fire inside her kept her alive and kept her moving. Her dark eyes flashed with the sparks and she kept moving through her newfound freedom. But when her life consisted of nothing more than sleeping in the dirt, stolen clothing and discarded food, what sort of freedom had she really gained. She curled up in the woods and fell into a fitful sleep, the stolen horse blanket wrapped around her against the cold air.
Chapter Three
William rode out to check the wooded area along the east perimeter of his property one evening after a hearty dinner of fried eggs, grilled bread, and soup. Sometimes the calves would wander in there and get caught, unable to remove themselves from the brambles and brushes. The calves insured both his income and his future so he was cautious about every single one of them. The last month or so, he had felt the autumn chill sneaking into the air and he wished he had the resources for a small barn to house the animals and their babies, but it was not in the financial immediate plans.
He liked the fall season around the farm. The way his breath hung in the air in the mornings; the way the coffee mug warmed his hands at night as he stretched out his long legs in front of the stove; the way his hunting dog liked to curl up in bed with him to share the shelter. Food was a little harder to come by since the vegetable garden was done for the season. He tended to stock up more from the general store during the colder months, to ensure that he and his household would make it through.
He had butchered one of the cows a little while back, and hoped that it would keep him almost until the first thaw. He had smoked a lot of the meat to preserve it for as long as possible. The last of the vegetable garden had been harvested and canned, but it was not all that much. Once the pond froze solid, he could also cut out the ice to use as a refrigerator. Large bags of potatoes, rice, and beans from the general store in town would supplement what he had. The chickens managed okay in their coop, but he would have to check on them to make sure they were staying warm enough to produce his eggs.
The winters were harsh on the plains, but he still preferred it to the cushioned easy life he would have had back east. There was no adventure to it, sitting around sipping tea in someone’s parlor while the gentlemen feigned interest in politics and the ladies tending to their cross stitching patterns.
As he approached the wooded area, he thought he could hear rustling in the bushes so he dismounted and tied his horse to one of the trees. His dog followed at his heels, sniffing the air intently.
“Do you smell something, Lady?” he patted her silky soft head gently.
She nosed his hand and whimpered softly.
She was usually more aggressive when they sought out the wandering cow or lost calf. She was acting very differently this time.
“Go on, girl,” he urged softly.
“Go find it.”
She bumped his leg softly, and then disappeared into the brush.
A few moments later, he heard a yelp that sounded like it came from a person instead of an animal.
“Lady?” he called out, his voice booming through the silence of the trees.
She appeared from somewhere in the bushes, anxious and whining. She nipped at his gloved hand and tried to pull him with her.
“Lady, I won’t fit underneath that bush.”
She seemed very insistent that he follow her, so he tried to pick his way around, keeping an eye on her path underneath the foliage. He stumbled on a twisted tree root and nearly landed on top of Lady. She had stopped suddenly, with her nose pointing at a shadow in between two bushes.
“Seek,” he commanded Lady.
She slowly inched forward until the shadow yelped when Lady stopped with her front feet on the figure.
“Hello?” William boomed suspiciously, he hand drifting backwards to the rifle slung across his back.
ROMANCE: Stolen by the Alien Lord (BBW Alpha Male Pregnancy Romance) (Contemporary Science Fiction Paranormal Short Stories) Page 105