Always

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Always Page 30

by Delynn Royer


  Galen almost laughed out loud as her hands, so well practiced from years of similar mishaps, shot out to steady it before it could crash to the floor. She fixed him with one last determined glare. “I will never do it! Never!”

  She stormed from the room with such a dramatic flourish, Galen thought she might have done even her legendary mother justice. It had been two years since Elena Rose Girard passed away, and there were times, times like these, when Galen missed her so badly it felt like a physical ache in his chest.

  He settled back in his chair and puffed philosophically on his cigar. After all the ballyhoo and bellyaching was done, Rachel would do it, all right. She would do it because she loved the Elena Rose as much as he did.

  Charlotte cleared her throat and reached up to smooth her chignon. “Frankly, Galen, I’m also at a loss to understand this sudden turn of mind. You never seemed concerned about Rachel’s status as an unattached woman. I mean, you and Elena raised to be so...”

  “So what, Charlotte?”

  “Well... outspoken. Not many true gentlemen find that to be an attractive trait in a young lady.”

  “Nothing wrong with a woman who can speak her mind. Shows she’s got one.”

  “Regardless, I still don’t understand your sudden hurry.”

  “She’ll be twenty-one soon. It’s nigh on time she got hitched— past time if you go by them silly society rules you’re always concerned with, am I right?”

  Charlotte frowned. “I hardly thought you cared much for—”

  “Rules or no rules, it’s time she settled down. Maybe I just want to see to it she makes a good choice while I’m still around to have a say in the matter.” Galen gave her a sly smile. “You wouldn’t want her to end up with some slick fortune-hunter after I’m gone, now would you?”

  Charlotte raised a hand to her chest. “Most certainly not!”

  Galen imagined he could see the dollar signs flashing in Charlotte’s eyes at the very thought of some stranger siphoning off the Girard family fortune Why, that had always been her responsibility.

  In actuality, Galen had no fear Rachel would fall for the wiles of a fortune-hunting lothario. She was too sharp for that, too sharp and too suspicious. No, his fear was that his daughter would never marry at all. Though not from a lack of suitors.

  On the contrary.

  Rachel had, seemingly overnight, transformed from an awkward adolescent into an eye-popping beauty, and Galen, who had always seen the light within his daughter, was left to cringe as one hapless young man after another appeared with bouquets and high hopes on their doorstep. None, of course, were a match for Rachel’s sharp intellect or scathing tongue, and all of them, sooner or later, ended up creeping away like shamed dogs.

  Galen was astute enough to see the writing on the wall. He was worried that, in all her efforts to become a practical-minded business woman, his proud and independent daughter had hardened herself to the point where she was fearful of her own heart.

  Would he really leave the Elena Rose ranch to Nicholas and Daisy? Probably not. But he had to make damn sure Rachel thought he would—even if she hated him for it.

  Silently, for he knew his scheming sister-in-law still watched him, he said a prayer and raised his gaze to the ceiling. Elena Rose, I know you wouldn’t approve of the clumsy way I’m going about it, but the pot’s already on the flame. Now we’ll have to wait and see how the stew turns out.

  *

  Red Panther Hotel, Fort Worth

  Lacey Holloway, saloon waitress and fallen angel, pulled a rumpled bed sheet over her plump breasts and rolled onto her side. She propped up her curly blond head with one hand and sighed the sleepy, languid sigh of a sated woman as she watched Cal Delaney, naked and splendid, sit up next to her and reach for a cheroot from the battered night table.

  He struck a match and lit his smoke with what Lacey considered very fine grace. This was no surprise. As far as Lacey was concerned, Cal did most everything with thoroughly practiced skill—everything—and now, as he climbed out of bed to retrieve his boots and clothing from the floor, Lacey couldn’t suppress a grin as she admired the square line of his jaw and the tousled, sandy blond hair that brushed the nape of his neck. He needed a shave, but that didn’t take away from his appeal. In fact, Lacey thought it added to it. She was tickled as all get out that for the last two nights—ever since he’d blown into town—he had chosen her to keep his bed warm.

  As he climbed into his denims, Lacey allowed her gaze to meander one last time over long legs and lean muscle. Why, if it weren’t for the scars—half a dozen or more—the man would be downright jo-fired perfect. When he turned his back to cross the room to a dresser, her attention settled curiously on two in particular, a pair of nasty-looking slashes that gleamed an angry pink against sun-bronzed skin. Though the wounds themselves had healed, those scars were still tender and new. She suspected they had one humdinger of a story to tell.

  “What’s your hurry, honey?” she asked. “The sun’s barely up.”

  “It’s nine o’clock, Lacey.”

  “Ain’t that what I said?”

  Cal didn’t respond as he searched through the contents of his saddlebag for his last clean shirt. His mind had already moved on to other things, most particularly on his dwindling finances. It seemed ironic that now, when for the first time in his life he was ready to set down roots and stake a claim, he was the least able to do so financially. His wages as a cowpuncher didn’t add up to much more than chicken feed.

  He pulled out a shirt and, along with it, an empty Colt .44 Peacemaker that clattered out onto the dresser top. He picked it up, intending to shove it back into the bag, but then he paused, lingering. The grip still fit his hand as if he had been born to it. The sight had been filed down to facilitate a clean, quick draw. The trigger notch had likewise been filed away so that, once drawn and in the right hands, its rapid-firing ability was unmatched, even by the more modern double-action pieces. In Cal’s experienced hands, the weapon was capable of getting off all six shots in less than two seconds.

  He ran his thumb over the surface of the ivory grip and felt an unwelcome wave of nostalgia. This, the civilian model, he had worn on his right hip for so long it had become a part of him. Its partner, a long-barreled Cavalry model, had ridden comfortably well on his left.

  When he looked up from the revolver to stare out the grimy window of the hotel, he didn’t see the dusty thoroughfare one story below or the few early morning stragglers who now roamed along its length. The image he saw mirrored back at him in the glass wasn’t even his own. It was the face of a sneering young cowboy. It had been over a month now, but the memory still stuck with him like the bad taste that follows a long night of downing rotgut whiskey.

  “Hey Delaney! Ya think you’re somthin’ special? Why’nt ya show us what ya got? Ya ain’t so fast as they say, are ya?”

  The over-exuberant cowpoke had baited Cal earlier that evening, but, seeing that his young antagonist was on the shy side of sixteen, Cal had ignored him. This had enraged the boy all the more. He’d stumbled out of the saloon after Cal, shooting his mouth off like a hotheaded fool.

  Dodge City had an ordinance against carrying weapons. It wasn’t only because of Cal’s reputation among the lawless that he couldn’t afford to abide by that ordinance; it was because of the increasing frequency of senseless confrontations like this one. It was common knowledge that Wild Bill Hickok had been shot in the back of the head while playing an innocent game of poker. These days, Cal opted to pay a small fine for breaking the ordinance rather than end up like Wild Bill.

  The fandango houses were in full swing and tinny piano music drifted on the night air. The kid stood with his thin legs planted before the flapping batwing doors of the saloon. He was lucky Cal was an even-tempered man. There were many who would have killed him with much less provocation. Cal, however, was simply looking for a good night’s sleep. He wished the boy would pass out or listen to his friends and shut the hell up.r />
  Very deliberately, Cal turned and walked away.

  “Don’t you walk away from me, ya yella skunk! You turn your back and I’ll put a bullet in it! I can take you or any two like you! Whyn’t ya fight? Whyn’t ya fight?”

  Bad shooting, even among some of the West’s most notorious gunfighters, was common, and this quarrelsome greenhorn was no exception. His first shot, brazenly fired when Cal’s back was still turned… missed.

  Cal stopped.

  When he turned back, it was to see that the kid had stepped off the boardwalk in front of the saloon, utterly ignorant of the fact that his silhouette now made a perfect target against the ghostly lamp glow that came from within. And Cal Delaney never missed a bull’s-eye.

  When the kid moved to get off a second shot, Cal drew and fired.

  At thirty paces, he took his opponent in the knee, forcing him down in the street, but even that didn’t dampen the youth’s bravado. When the boy raised his revolver a third time, Cal fired again, shattering the kid’s wrist and putting an end to the ill-balanced confrontation.

  It had also ended Cal’s career. When he shed his gun belt that night, it was for the last time. He didn’t have the stomach for it anymore.

  A bothered sigh from the girl brought him back to the present. “You sure you gotta be going so soon, Cal? You don’t have to meet your boss for another hour.”

  Cal stamped out his smoke in an ashtray and shoved the Colt back into his saddlebag. “Just enough time to grab me a hot bath and a shave.”

  “Or just enough time to grab yourself a little bit of something else if you have a mind to, huh?” She giggled. “Catch!”

  Cal turned just in time to snatch from mid-air the item she’d tossed at him. It was a sheath.

  “Stop fooling around,” he said, but he felt his dark mood lift at the sporting girl’s bawdy sense of humor. He had to suppress a smile as he tossed it back. “Save it for later.” He fished some paper bills from his pocket and offered them to her. “That good with you?”

  Lacey plucked the bills from his fingers. “More than good, honey.”

  He crossed to the door and paused, his hand on the door latch. “Be gone when I get back, okay?”

  Lacey’s smile faltered, but only a little. “Sure, Cal, but see you tonight... right?”

  He didn’t look back as he stepped into the squalid hallway. “Sure, Lacey, See you tonight.”

  Look for BROKEN VOWS

  Other Ebooks by Delynn Royer

  A TOUCH OF CAMELOT

  Book One in the Camelot Series

  SEARCH FOR CAMELOT

  Book Two in the Camelot Series

  www.delynnroyer.com

  Copyright © 2012 by Delynn Royer

  All Rights Reserved

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  From the Author

  Excerpt from BROKEN VOWS

 

 

 


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