Angeline's eyes were wide as plates. "She can't leave. That dress that has to be finished by-"
"Finish it yourself," Jake growled.
Laura threw her coat onto the unfinished gown. Angeline mewed in dismay as the satin was crushed.
"I'm not leaving, Jake. This is my job." And if she had any hope of keeping her father away from Jake's money she needed to hold onto it.
"And you're my wife." He leaned close, his breath fluttered in her hair. "It's what you wanted, remember?"
No, it wasn't. What she wanted was to be loved, cherished. To be respected and accepted. Instead, her father thought she was something to barter, the town thought she was a whore, and the man she loved thought her no better than her no-account father. Laura swallowed the pain, buried the hurt. Jake had made up his mind. There'd be nothing to gain but more humiliation if she stood her ground now. But the time would come when she would.
Turning, she grabbed her coat and without a word to Jake or Angeline, swept outside. Jake was on her heels. He grasped her elbow as the wind grabbed her skirts.
"Where are you going?" he shouted to be heard over the gusts.
"To the house," she answered. It wasn't home. A home should overflow with love.
"Plan on walking?"
Her chin came up. She met his narrowed gaze with one of her own. "Since it got me here fine, I'm sure it'll get me back the same way."
She'd barely finished her sentence before he was pulling her along the street in the opposite direction of the ranch.
"Jake! Jake, let me go!"
The wind carried her voice. Or maybe he was simply ignoring her. Either way his grip remained firm as he turned onto Main Street and headed for the stables. Rocks crunched under her boots. Dust flew in her face, forcing her to keep her head down.
It was a relief to step into the dim stables and the second they were inside she jerked her arm free. "I'm capable of walking on my own," she said.
"So you proved this morning."
"Why do you care how I got to town or what I did once I arrived?"
He stepped to her, his anger encircling them, thickening the air until it was hard to breathe. "Because you're my wife."
Did that mean he cared? She didn't fool herself into thinking he loved her, but did his ire mean he'd been concerned for her?
"Folks are going to be talking about how I let you walk in the cold and scrub floors at the boardinghouse."
Hope plummeted, but she wasn't done. Work was one of the few things she had to be proud of and she wasn't giving it up without a fight. "What's wrong with that? It's honest work and I've been doing it for years."
"Well, you won't be doing it anymore."
Laura drew herself up, planted her hands on her hips. "And you'll be telling me what I can and can't do, is that it?"
Jake tipped his head. "Damn right. You should have thought of that before you trapped me into marriage."
He spun on his heel. Dust motes swirled as Jake stormed down to the other end of the stable. The smell of hay and horseflesh was pleasant but cold comfort compared to Jake's words. Work was all she had. Besides, if she stopped working, she'd have nothing to give her father and if he didn't get his money…
Laura wrapped her arms around herself. Her mother had defied her father once. She'd never had the chance to do so again. Worried, Laura stepped to the closest stall. A lovely Paint reached its brown head over the top rail for a pat. Laura let the animal sniff and then gently stroked its neck. She'd always wanted a horse of her own, but it had been a luxury she'd never been able to afford. It hadn't stopped her from yearning for one, however. From wanting one thing in this world she could call her own.
The clip clop of hooves caught her attention a moment before she heard Jake's deep voice say, "Let's go."
He had his horse by the reins and though she was surrounded by animals, it was Jake's scent that wrapped around her, a combination of soap and mountain air. She inhaled deeply, taking a little of him within her. Despite his anger, her feelings hadn't changed. And it seemed Jake's never would either.
Feeling overwhelmingly alone, Laura turned to the horse, patted it some more. Maybe she'd come back and visit it again. It was a sad reflection on her life that her only source of comfort was an animal she'd just met.
"Laura?"
"Ready." She followed him outside where the wind once again resumed its assault.
"Can you reach?"
Though she'd never owned a horse of her own, she had ridden one a time or two. Nodding, she put her foot in the stirrup he held and grabbed the saddle horn. As she was pushing off with her other foot, Jake released the stirrup. His hands circled her waist and he lifted her off the ground. His touch burned through the thinning fabric of her coat.
Too soon, she was astride and Jake's hands were gone. She looked down, saw more of her stocking than was proper. Hurriedly, she rearranged her skirts, but the wind kept trying to lift them. When she had the fabric as secure as she could manage she caught Jake's gaze on her leg; knew he'd seen more of her just then than he had when they'd been naked together. Despite the brisk wind, heat crept up her face.
"Jake?"
He lifted those beautiful brown eyes to hers. Was it her imagination or were his cheeks a little brighter than they'd been moments ago? His eyes a little stormier?
"I'm all set," she said, wishing she could read his thoughts.
He nodded, swallowed. "Right."
Jake mounted, settling himself behind the saddle. His chest grazed her back. His arms enclosed her as he took the reins. Each rock of the animal's steps brushed their bodies together.
Yet, Laura didn't fool herself. Despite their closeness on the horse's back, Jake remained as out of reach as he'd always been.
***
The house came into view and Jake breathed a sigh of relief. He needed some distance from Laura. Riding with her body rubbing against his, had him hanging on to his lust by a thin tether.
His anger had dissipated since leaving town. On the ride home he'd realized that, though she'd embarrassed him, she hadn't done anything wrong. She'd simply gone about her regular routine. Once he got past his bruised pride, he recognized just how much Laura's actions surprised him. He'd expected her to start demanding things, asking for her share of his money and pouting if she didn't get it. The last thing he'd expected was to find her putting in a full day's work the very afternoon after their wedding.
Had he been wrong after all?
He'd always thought Laura the opposite of her father. That she was honest and hard working like her mother had been. Yet the morning of their wedding he'd accused her of being exactly like Hugh. He remembered the look on her face when he'd said it, how crestfallen she'd seemed. That he hadn't married a woman who was only after using him eased some of his concerns.
It also brought along a whole passel of complications. If she was as honest as he'd always believed, then his arguments for staying away from her and keeping her from his room were hollow. An image of Laura's stocking-clad leg came to mind. She'd been naked in his bed and yet seeing that bit of her leg had grabbed him by the throat. All he'd wanted to do was grasp her ankle and caress his way upward.
Riding home practically pressed together didn't helped matters either. She felt small and delicate within the circle of his arms. Even with the wind howling between them he smelled her, felt the silky strands of her hair teasing his face. He wondered if her skin would be as sleek.
A hell of a time to be thinking those kinds of thoughts, Jake, he scolded himself as his horse ambled into the yard. At the base of his porch he pulled back on the reins. Without a word, Laura swung a leg over the horn, unknowingly teasing him with another glimpse of stocking. The arousal he'd been struggling to tame twitched. Laura jumped to the ground, and Jake dropped his arms to his lap.
"I'll start on supper."
He nodded, waited until she'd turned for the door before he claimed the saddle. Good Lord, his body hadn't been this out of contro
l since he was fifteen. Shifting to get comfortable, he made the mistake of looking back. Her jacket grazed her slender hips and sat on the gentle curve of her backside. Blowing out a tortured breath, Jake shook his head and directed his horse toward the barn. They both needed to cool down.
***
Laura drew the curtain from the bedroom window. Moonlight fell on the ground, spilled over the barren tree branches and across the animals dozing in their paddocks. Laura pressed her forehead to the glass. She hadn't gone to work to annoy or humiliate Jake. In truth, she'd been sure he'd be happy about it, that he'd see she wasn't interested in his money. But hours later, with supper keeping warm downstairs, Jake had yet to come inside.
"Where are you?" she whispered. Surely, he'd had more than enough time to do his chores. Had he gone back to Bandit Creek? Did he frequent the men's club? Would he seek out the women at Lorelei's Cat House or Martha Sweet's Brothel? Was she so repulsive that he had to fill his needs elsewhere when he had a wife at home?
Would he ever see her as a woman who could love him and make him happy? Or was she destined to always be poor Laura, the woman nobody--man or woman--ever really noticed?
"I could make you happy, Jake. If you'd only give me a chance," she whispered, her breath fogging the glass. Sighing, she let the curtain fall and went downstairs.
She was dozing on the sofa in the living room when she heard the door open. Scrambling to her feet, trying to shake the cobwebs from her head, Laura hurried to the kitchen. Jake was at the sink in the porch, washing his hands. The sound of water splashing was both soothing and nerve-racking at the same time. Soothing because it meant she wasn't alone, but it set her nerves dancing knowing they'd soon be face-to-face again. Was he still angry with her? She hoped, by keeping his supper warm and waiting for him, it would help him see she hadn't been trying to upset him.
Laura waited until he was seated at the table then spooned stew onto a plate and, with a smile on her face, set the steaming food before him. Because it felt as though her stomach was full of grasshoppers, she began chattering. "There are slices of bread in the basket there on the table. If you prefer it warmed, I can slip into the oven for a moment." She filled a glass with water she'd pumped while he'd been outside and placed it next to his plate. "Can I get you anything else?"
With a sigh, Jake set his hands in his lap. "Laura--"
"You don't like stew, do you? You had everything in the root cellar; I assumed you'd like it."
"Stew's fine. But it's late and you must be tired."
Laura shifted her feet as he studied her.
"You fell asleep waiting for me, didn't you?"
"I didn't sleep much last night," she hurried to explain.
He held up a wide palm. "You don't have to justify yourself; I know it's been a long day. I just meant I could've served my own supper, that you didn't need to wait for me." He ran a palm down his face, scraping his beard. He looked as tired as she felt. "Why don't you go on up, get some sleep. I'll take care of the dishes when I'm done eating."
And in the meantime he wouldn't have to suffer through her presence. Jake couldn't have made himself any clearer. "Then I'll say goodnight." She knew by the way he flinched that she hadn't been able to completely mask the burn of his rejection. Yet he didn't try to stop her as she turned and walked up the stairs. Knowing he couldn't see from the kitchen, Laura slowed as she passed his room. Her fingers trailed the cool wood of his closed door and her heart yearned. It seemed Jake was determined to keep her away.
With a heavy heart Laura let herself into her bedroom, softly closed her own door. Then, with a rumbling stomach--she'd been waiting to eat with Jake--crawled into her cold, empty bed.
THREE
Laura had never lived in a grander home. She'd never had so much food to cook with, never had a more beautiful room.
She'd never been so unhappy.
It went beyond worrying about her father and when he'd come around next. Laura had spent her life working hard. She knew what it was to toil from sunup to sundown, to fall into bed at night weary and exhausted.
It wasn't cleaning Jake's home that was making her irritable. It was the loneliness. When she'd worked, there had been people around, and even if she hadn't engaged in many conversations, she wasn't ever alone.
Here, in Jake's home, with its wide porch and views of Turtle and Crow Mountains, she felt isolated. Isolated and unwanted. It had been two days since he'd hauled her out of Angeline's Dress Emporium. She spent her days alone, and since Jake hadn't been returning until after dark, she spent her evenings alone as well. Where was he until those late hours?
Thoughts of him with other women tortured Laura. That he would prefer their company to hers was a fierce slap she had to endure each time he didn't come home until she was lying in her bed, aching for him. Would he care? she wondered, if he knew that while he was lost in another woman's embrace, his wife was yearning for him?
It could be worse, she reminded herself. She could be married to the codger her father had tried to sell her to. "So count your blessings, Laura," she said as she wrung out the cloth she'd been using to dust and draped it over the edge of the washbasin. Then, taking the bucket of dirty water, she opened the door to toss its contents outside.
A blood-curdling scream wrenched from her throat as she came face-to-face with her father.
Laura gulped in a breath, pressed a hand over her galloping heart.
"You scared me to death!"
Hugh Gibb's expression hardened. "You didn't think I'd forget about our arrangement, did you?" He shouldered past her, stepped through the porch into the kitchen.
"Of course not." But that didn't mean she was any closer to giving him what he wanted.
Needing to buy time while she scrambled for excuses as to why she had no money for him, Laura tossed the water onto the still-brown grass. She fiddled setting the pail back in its place in the broom cupboard. It didn't help. She had nothing. Maybe if she'd spent as much time worrying about her father as she had missing Jake, she'd have answers.
Hugh grabbed her arm, turned her around. His fingers dug into her flesh, reminding her he wasn't known for his patience, reminding her just how ugly this could get if he didn't get what he was after.
"I need fifty dollars."
"Fifty?" she screeched. A few dollars she could have scrounged, but fifty?
"Fifty. Jake is rich, fifty is nothing to him."
"But he won't simply give it to me."
Hugh's lips pulled back. "I don't care how you get it, but see that you do. Then bring it to me, the day after tomorrow. You have until noon." He leaned forward. Greed gleamed in his eyes. "If I don't get the money, Laura, Sam will still take you."
"He can do no such thing! I'm married."
"Sam don't care. He just wants a warm body at night. And once Jake knows you've been unfaithful to him, he won't want to be married to you no more."
"I'd never give myself to Sam," she seethed.
Hugh's eyes went hard. "Sam ain't too old to take what he wants, whether you want to give it or not."
She swallowed the loathing. Not only of him, but also of herself. Because she knew what her father meant. And she knew she'd do whatever it took to keep that from happening.
"See you Friday." With a last dig of his fingers, Hugh released her and let himself out.
For a time, Laura stood there, rubbing the arm he'd bruised. Her father wasn't bluffing. He'd forced her into marriage to get his hands on Jake's money, and she'd known it was only a matter of time until he came sniffing for it. But how was she supposed to get the money he demanded? Even if she asked Jake--which she wouldn't--he wouldn't give a cent if he knew it was for Hugh. Neither could she pretend she needed it for herself. How could she when she had more now than she'd ever had in her life?
Suddenly feeling as though her skin was too small for her body, Laura grabbed her jacket. Though she no longer had employment, she did have money coming to her from the last few days she'd worked.
It wouldn't be enough, but it would be that much less she'd have to worry about finding.
The spring wind was brisk. Still, the stretch of blue sky was unmarred by clouds and there was no risk of being caught in a spring storm, which wasn't unusual in Bandit Creek. At this time of day Jake would be at the Golden Nugget Hotel. Laura tugged her collar closed. She'd simply have to be sure she stayed away from it. If Jake didn't see her in town, he'd have no reason to be angry with her. And since he wasn't coming home until late, she'd be back long before he returned.
The wind swept its cool fingers over her cheeks, poked its way through her thin jacket. Overhead, in a large v-formation, geese honked as they headed north toward home. By the time Laura reached Bandit Creek her lips were numb and her cheeks smarted. And she was no closer to figuring how she'd get the rest of the money. Following the creek that gave the town its name, Laura walked eastward, opposite the swift current. With spring run-off having begun in the mountains, the creek was engorged. The water was white as it surged over and around the rocks that lined its bed.
Arriving at the edge of Montana Street and the bridge that would take her into the town proper, Laura stopped. Straight ahead was Lorelei's Cat House and, next to it, Martha Sweet's Brothel. Had Jake been going there in the evenings? Were those women the reason he wasn't coming home to his wife? She wished she knew for certain. But then, if thinking about it broke her heart, how would knowing about it feel?
Turning away from the reality that he'd prefer soiled women to his own wife, Laura headed across the bridge. For now, she had bigger worries.
Weaving between homes and businesses with her head tucked down, Laura managed to visit her previous employers and, despite more scorn and disdain, collect what was owed to her. By the time Laura slipped into the stables, she found herself believing every hurtful word she'd either overheard or had tossed in her face. How could she argue the fact that she wasn't after Jake's money? She couldn't, because she needed it. Her father had made it clear that her marriage meant little in his eyes if he couldn't benefit from it.
Heart of Mine (Bandit Creek) Page 3