by Warner, Kaki
Bodine elbowed Ashford. “Think if I say her dress is flashy, she’ll toss it out, too?”
Battling an urge to drive the tip of her parasol through Mr. Bodine’s chest, Jessica stared down at her clenched hands. She should have stayed in England. She should have signed over the deed to Bickersham Hall as Crawford demanded, or bowed to the mining consortium.
But would she have been safe even then? Once Crawford had the land and coal royalties in hand, what need would he have for any of them? And then there was the baby she carried. How could she explain to Annie that the husband she adored had raped and impregnated her sister?
Rage engulfed her. No, running was her only option. As long as she held the deed and stayed out of his reach, Crawford wouldn’t dare harm any of them. That rotter. She sucked air past her clenched teeth, so furious her body shook.
It wasn’t fair. None of this was her fault. She had done nothing wrong.
For one awful moment she wanted to dig her fingers into her own body, claw through flesh and tendon and bone to tear out the life growing within. If only she had fought harder. If only she had stopped him before he wrapped the silk—
“Are you all right, Mrs. Thornton?”
Jessica jerked up her head to find Melanie Kinderly staring at her. She blinked, still trapped in the horror of the past, until slowly her mind calmed. She took a deep breath, let it out, took another. “Y-Yes, I am well, thank you.”
“You’re sure? You’re very pale.”
The worry in the younger woman’s eyes almost made Jessica weep. It had been so long since she’d heard a kind word. “It’s the heat. I fear I’m unaccustomed to it.”
Melanie nodded in sympathy. Blessed with a sweet face, lovely blond hair, and a gentle aspect, she seemed a most pleasant young woman. To Jessica’s mind, her only drawbacks were a bent toward romanticism and an overly biddable nature, of which her mother seemed to take full advantage with her constant demands. It was no surprise the poor woman took refuge in books. Glad of the distraction, Jessica motioned to the one Melanie held now, the cover of which boasted a rather florid drawing of a man on a rearing steed. “Is your book enjoyable?”
“Oh, yes. It’s a true story, you know. Perhaps you’ve heard of him?” Sudden animation brightened Melanie’s slightly protruding gray eyes. “Barnabas O’Shay, the Angel-Faced Killer of Buffalo Gap? He’s from England, too, although over there he’s better known as the Murderous Marquis of Cornwall. Do you know him?”
O’Shay? Marquis of Cornwall? Could Colonials truly be this ignorant?
“He doesn’t exist.” Seeing Melanie’s confusion, Jessica explained. “O’Shay is Irish, not English. And there is no Marquis of Cornwall.
Cornwall is a duchy held by Edward, Prince of Wales and heir to the throne of England.”
“Oh.” With an uncertain smile, Melanie turned back to her book.
Jessica mentally kicked herself. When had she become so snappish and rude? She seemed angry all the time and that was most unlike her. It was as if Crawford’s attack had changed her, separated her forever from the person she had been, and now she couldn’t seem to find her way back to herself. And at times like this, after doing something thoughtless or unkind, she realized how much that change had cost her, and how she no longer knew or particularly liked the woman she had become.
Forcing her mind from those vexing thoughts, she looked out the window, hoping to glimpse something of interest—a bird, a tree, anything green that didn’t have thorns, spines, or a flicking tongue. She had never seen such a desolate landscape or choked down so much dust. It coated her skin, her eyeballs, left a gritty residue on her teeth.
Yet despite the discomfort, she found herself oddly drawn to the incredible vista beyond the window. In some unaccountable way, it reminded her of the bluffs above the North Sea. All that empty space. So much sky. The vastness of it uplifted her, challenging her with possibility and awakening her to hope.
A woman could lose herself out there. Or with a bit of help, a woman might find herself and begin anew beyond the taint of the past. A heady thought.
Heat built until it seemed to suck the very air from her lungs. Boredom ran rampant. Mr. Ashford carefully picked his jacket sleeves free of lint. Melanie continued reading while Maude slumped lower and lower against the door. Jessica tried to doze as well, but the smells emanating from Bodine reminded her of a refuse barge on the Thames and had her stomach bouncing even more than the coach. And with each bounce, the need to relieve herself grew. She doubted she could be less comfortable. Then Maude Kinderly awoke.
“Are we at the stopover yet?” Without waiting for a response, Maude unstuck the bonnet from the side of her face, and launched into another of her endless diatribes, fully refreshed from her nap. “Isn’t this heat ghastly? I don’t know how the wretched people in this area can bear it, although the Colonel says they deserve no better, foul degenerates that they are. Drunken Indians, Mexican banditos, Texicans—the list is endless. I could go on for hours.”
Please don’t, Jessica prayed, hoping to avoid yet another catalog of complaints.
“Daughter, is there any rosewater left? Look in my bag. Hurry, girl. My head is pounding. What I wouldn’t give for a cool pitcher of water!”
Just hearing the word made Jessica squirm.
Melanie lifted a voluminous carpetbag from beneath Maude’s feet, opened it, and peered inside. “I don’t see it, Mama.”
“Oh, honestly, can’t you do anything but read those silly books?” Maude grabbed the bag and began rummaging through it. “It’s not here.” She looked around as if seeking a target for her ire. She settled on Jessica. “Mrs. Thornton, wherever is your hat?”
“What hat?” Jessica asked, discomfort making her contrary.
Melanie gave her a startled look. “It blew out the window, Mama.”
“Indeed? How careless. You foreigners.” Maude dropped the bag to the floorboards. “I pray Santa Fe isn’t this hot. Dreadful, dreadful country. Nothing like Baltimore. And Fort Union! Whoever heard of such a place? I just hope the Colonel knows what we’ve suffered to reach him. Are we slowing? I think we’re slowing.” She leaned out the window then drew back with a look of disgust. “A hovel. I daresay the food will be horrid. Be sure to leave on your gloves.”
Jessica was beyond caring. She just wanted out. Now. Tapping a toe with impatience, she perched on the edge of the seat, reticule in one hand, parasol in the other, as the coach rolled to a stop. Without waiting for the driver to place the mounting step, she threw open the door, hopped out, and fled toward the cabin.
Bodine trailed after her like a slavering dog. “Hat Lady, wait up. I wanna talk to you.”
“Please don’t!” Half blinded by dust and the noonday glare, she darted up the steps and shoved open the door, just as a ham-sized fist clamped over her wrist.
With a shriek of outrage, she whirled, parasol swinging on her arm. She heard a grunt as the tip met flesh, then the hand released her arm so abruptly her momentum carried her backward into the cabin to topple over a saddle propped near the door. For a moment she lay stunned, heels still caught on the overturned saddle. Then a voice from the other side of the room sent her bolting upright.
“Woo-wee! Thank you, Lord!”
Parasol in hand, she scrambled to her feet to see a grizzled old man in a stained leather apron grinning at her through a face full of hair.
“What a tumble! Ass over elbows!” He waved a dripping spoon to illustrate, then cackled and turned back to stir a pot on a blackened cookstove. “Helluva treat.”
Before she could make sense of that, movement drew her attention back to the doorway where her attacker bent, head drooping, hands braced on his thighs. Even though a dusty black hat hid his face, she could see by his size he wasn’t Bodine. But why would a complete stranger attack her?
Brushing dust from her skirt, she lifted her chin and glared at her assailant. “I did not tumble. I was pushed.”
Now that her eyes ha
d adjusted to the dimness of the room and she was thinking more clearly, she wondered if she might have overreacted. Despite his hulking size, the man seemed harmless enough. Judging by his hunched posture, he was possibly elderly or weakened by illness. Scarcely threatening.
Then he lifted his head.
The walls of her throat seemed to constrict. For a moment she couldn’t breathe, couldn’t move. She felt pinned like a butterfly to a mat by the coldest stare she had ever experienced.
Definitely not old or ill. Furious.
She edged back as he slowly straightened to his full height, which was considerably more than hers. He looked like the loser of a tavern brawl—bloodstains on his dusty shirt, one eye swollen shut, and a nasty gash dripping more blood down the side of his dusty, beard-shadowed face.
“What’d you do that for?” he demanded in a raspy voice.
Cook’s bark of laughter made her jump. “Cracked those cojones like eggs on a pan, didn’t she, Brady? Won’t be forkin’ a saddle for a week, by damn.”
Co-ho-nees?She frowned in confusion. Eyeing the man he’d called Brady, she noticed again the cut on his cheek. Had she done that with her parasol? The thought shocked her.
Without a word, Mr. Brady snatched up the saddle and limped out, almost mowing down the Kinderlys as they came up the steps.
“Oh, my,” Melanie breathed as he stomped past. “Who was that?”
Maude shoved her through the door. “Never you mind, missy.”
The cabin was small—a single room dominated by a table and benches, with a stove against one wall, a rumpled cot against another. There was scarcely room to move without bumping a peg or shelf, and with the arrival of the passengers and driver, it became almost suffocatingly crowded. Stepping aside as the others entered, Jessica called out to Cook, “Could you please direct me to the convenience?”
He squinted at her. “The what?”
“The necessary.”
“The necessary what?”
“She means the outhouse.” Their driver, Mr. Phelps, hooked a thumb toward the rear of the cabin. “Out back. If you want to wash, there’s a trough behind the shed. Watch for snakes.”
“Snakes?” Maude clutched at Melanie.
Undaunted, Jessica ducked out the door. Heat engulfed her, so intense she could almost feel her skin shrivel. She’d have to get a proper bonnet soon or she’d be a prune by the time she reached Socorro. A prune with freckles. George would never recognize her—if her brother was still there and if he had even received her letter saying she was coming.
Moments later, gasping and half-nauseated, she fled the reeking facility and headed toward the shed and water trough. As she walked, she ran a hand over her abdomen, wondering if anything felt different since her fall. It would solve so many problems if she miscarried. A blessing really.
And yet . . .
At first she had denied even the possibility of a child. But after missing two courses, she knew for certain she carried her brother-in-law’s baby. The horror of it had sent her to the edge of sanity. She shivered, remembering the day she had found herself crouched in the corner of her bedroom, weeping like a madwoman, the scissors clutched in her shaking hand. Had she intended to harm herself, or the baby? Even now, she didn’t know. And that was the most horrifying thing of all. But lately, ever since she’d felt that first ripple of life, something had changed.
She slowed, flattened her palm against her body. If it was a girl, it wouldn’t remind her so much of John Crawford, would it? It would simply be a baby. A daughter. Someone to love. Would that be so bad?
As if in response, something fluttered low in her abdomen. She jerked her hand away.
And what if it wasn’t a daughter, but a son? What if she couldn’t find George, or her brother turned her away? How long could she survive on the coins and few pieces of jewelry sewn into the hem of her underskirt?
For a moment she stood trembling, doubts weakening her resolve. Then slowly terror subsided. She would manage. She had done so after Papa abandoned her with a dying mother to tend and a little sister to raise, and again after George ran off to make his fortune in the gold fields of the West. She had survived rape. She had left the only home she had ever known and traveled halfway around the world. Surely she could raise a baby on her own.
Of course she could. Thrusting self-pity aside, she lifted her chin. “I am Jessica Abigail Rebecca Thornton and I am a woman to reckon with,” she said in ringing tones as she rounded the shed and almost tripped over a stump beside the trough. Regaining her balance, she looked up, then froze when she saw she was not alone.
Mr. Brady bent beside the pump, water streaming from his mop of shaggy dark hair. Slowly he straightened, apparently unaware that his shirt was open and his upper person was exposed, or that he further exposed himself by lifting the tail of the shirt to mop his face. The man was built like a blacksmith. A very tall, very strong blacksmith. With a streak of dark hair running from his exposed parts straight down to . . . to his unexposed parts.
“You come to ogle or poke me again?”
“W-What? I—” Mortified to be caught staring, she whirled to present him her back. “No—yes—I mean, that is, if you have completed your ablutions, I—”
“Ab-whats?”
“Washing yourself.” Had she truly said that? “Perhaps I should return later.”
“It’s all right. I’m done.”
She hesitated, flustered and unsure what to do. He must have recovered from her earlier attack. His voice no longer sounded strained, although it retained a husky quality as if the dry climate had eroded the mellower tones, leaving him permanently hoarse. It was disconcerting. Like a whisper in the dark. She dared a glance.
Thankfully he had covered himself. Yet he still watched her, an odd twitch at one corner of his unruly black mustache. Her gaze slid to the trough. Despite the scum coating the inside walls—the only greenery she’d seen in days—the water looked so . . . wet. And she was so very hot.
She should leave. That would be the proper thing.
Oh, rot proper, she thought with sudden and uncharacteristic defiance. It was too hot to be proper. Besides, after that reeking facility, she was desperate for a wash. Refusing to be intimidated by Mr. Brady’s looming presence, she set aside her reticule and parasol, stripped off her gloves and tucked them into her skirt pocket, then removed her traveling cape and placed it on the ground beside her other belongings. After carefully folding back the lace-edged cuffs on her gray bombazine, she dipped her fingers into the water. It felt heavenly against her parched skin.
Mr. Brady continued to stand there, gawking.
Ignoring him, she scrubbed the grit from her wrists and hands, then dampened a hanky, squeezed it out, and pressed it to her cheek. Bliss.
“I didn’t push you.”
She stiffened, taken aback by the denial and unsure how to respond. Slowly she turned. He wasn’t as old as she had originally thought, perhaps in his middle thirties. Like his voice, his face bore the mark of this harsh climate, his skin darkened by the sun, his features as harshly chiseled as the wind-carved bluffs. But his eyes were beautiful. A vibrant shocking blue that perfectly matched the turquoise gemstones so favored by indigenous Americans—pieces of sky, they called them. They were much too beautiful for that weathered face.
At least the unswollen one was. She turned back to the trough. “You did grab my arm.”
“To warn you. About the saddle.”
“Ah.” She shot him a glance. “The one left in the middle of the floor? How thoughtful.”
“I was coming back to get it.”
“Indeed. Well then. I accept your apology. Please accept mine for striking you with my parasol. I certainly did not intend to injure you.” Pulling a clean linen from her pocket, she wet it in the trough and held it out. “Perhaps this will help. Or if you would permit, I could tend it for you.”
An odd look crossed his battered face. “Tend what? What the hell are you talking about?�
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Since the man seemed somewhat agitated, although she couldn’t fathom why insomuch as it was only a trifling injury, she allowed the profanity to pass unchallenged. “You are bleeding, sir.”
“I am?” He glanced down at his belt buckle, then up at her. “Where?”
She motioned with the linen. “There. On your cheek.”
“My cheek?” After a moment of confusion, realization dawned in those startling eyes. “Sonofabitch.” With a long sigh, he sank onto the stump at the end of the trough. “I thought my luck was finally changing.”
Jessica eyed him with disapproval. Granted, manners were more relaxed in the Colonies, but this was too much. After stuffing the wet hanky back into her reticule, she drew the strings closed with a snap. “Would you please refrain from using profanity in my presence, Mr. Brady? I find it most offensive.”
“Do you?” He tugged off his right boot.
“I do.” She quoted from Pamphlet Two: “ ‘A gentleman should never use foul language in the presence of a lady. It is indicative of poor breeding and an affront to all within hearing.’ ”
He responded by removing the left boot.
She raised her voice a notch. “It is also written that profanity is the mark of a limited imagination and an untutored intellect.” Abruptly she lost her thought when he pulled the stained sock off his huge foot. “What are you doing?”
“Blisters. Written where?”
“What? I . . .” Words deserted her as the second sock came off.
He gingerly lowered his feet into the trough. “You’re not from around here, are you?”
She didn’t—couldn’t—respond.
“I’ll take that as a no.” Shading his eyes with one hand, he squinted up at her. “Since you’re new, I’ll make it as simple as I can. I didn’t use profanity. ‘Sonofabitch’ isn’t profanity. It’s cussing. Profanity would be like ‘goddamnit’ or ‘Christamighty’ or—What’s that in your hair?”
“My hair?” Caught off-balance by the abrupt change in subject, she started to lift her hands, then froze as visions of crawling things slithered through her mind. “What is it?”