by Jodi Thomas
“Trini? Is she all right?”
Abe shook his head. “McGuire let her stay there in return for keeping his house. She sickened about three months ago, died of some fever. I think it was just plain heartbreak. You know how much she and Luis loved your pa.”
“You mean Marilee’s at the ranch?”
Abe nodded. “You didn’t see her?”
Anger coiled in Seth’s gut. The woman said nothing about his sister being there.
“Hell no, or she would be with me now.” He took a deep breath. “My brother left Marilee with squatters?”
“He had no choice. There’s a thousand-dollar reward on his head. He couldn’t drag a seven-year-old along with him.”
“One of the neighbors . . .”
“Most of them are gone, chased out just like your father. Those still here have all they can do to hold on to their land.”
Shock caused words to wedge in his throat. He couldn’t imagine a neighboring family refusing to give shelter to a child in trouble. And why in the hell had the woman not admitted that his sister was in the house?
It obviously wasn’t enough to be a party to murder and the theft of land. They felt they could take a child as well. He swore under his breath.
“The law? Is Nolan still sheriff?”
“Nope. He was dismissed by Delaney now that the town’s under Union occupation.”
“I saw a man with a badge outside.”
“That’s Tom Evans. U.S. marshal. This is part of his territory, though the army pretty well controls things. He stops in occasionally. Keeping up with business, he says.”
Seth filed that in his mind. “What happened to the Flynns and Hopewells?”
“Ed Flynn shot himself when he heard his boy was killed. Mrs. Flynn went to stay with a sister in Missouri. Hopewell’s daughter was raped by a Union soldier. The family pulled out two months ago.”
He and Vince Flynn had gone to school together. So many gone.
The need to see his sister grew stronger.
“I’m going to go get her,” he said, his anger becoming a fiery torch in his gut.
“You might talk to Dillon first,” Abe said. “Common wisdom is that your sister is doing fine where she is. She attends church with Miss McGuire here in town, and she looks well tended.”
“Do you know where I can find him?”
“No, but I think he’s nearby. There’s been a lot of cattle rustling lately. Delaney swears it’s your brother and some other locals.”
“Is it?”
Abe shrugged. “Mebbe. Mebbe no.”
“And the men in the saloon?”
“Delaney’s henchmen. One is a so-called civil administrator appointed by Delaney. Does whatever he’s told. I hate serving them, but I don’t have any choice. They would close me down, and the Belle is all I have.”
Seth nodded. “They know your sympathies?”
“They probably suspect, but I’m the only saloon in town. Right now we live and let live. Now, about Marilee . . . are you sure you can take care of her? Mebbe you should wait . . .”
Seth impaled the man with his eyes.
“I appreciate your concern, Abe, but she’s my sister and I’m not waiting.”
“And then?”
“I don’t know. I’ll find someplace we can stay.”
“And Dillon?”
“I’ll find him, too.” But bitterness seeped deeper in his soul. All his dreams and hopes had centered around the ranch and building it with his brother and father. He’d thought about it during the long months he’d spent in prison. The ranch was not large, nor had it been particularly successful. Cattle was plentiful in Texas and getting them to market difficult if not impossible.
Yet he knew that after the war, people would flock west and with them would come an expansion of railroads.
His father could have tried to grow cotton, but the Major had hated slavery and there was no economical way to raise cotton without it.
But a father and two sons—along with a few hands—could well handle a herd of cattle. He had thought that he and other ranchers could join their herds and drive them north.
Now he had no home, no money, no cattle, no land.
But by God, he had remnants of a family left, and he intended to see them together. And on Sinclair land.
He thrust his hand out. “Thanks, Abe.”
“Wish I could have done more,” Abe said, taking his hand. Then he eyed Seth sadly. “Don’t go out to the ranch. Delaney has an eye on the McGuire woman. He’s warned off several men who wanted to court her.”
“I’ve been officially pardoned,” Seth said. “I haven’t done anything wrong.”
“That doesn’t mean anything in Canaan. And when Delaney discovers you’ve returned from the dead, he’ll try to use you to get to Dillon.”
“Then I won’t lead him to Dillon.”
Abe hesitated, then shrugged. “If you’re determined to get Marilee, the old Keller place is empty. I bought the land a few weeks ago. Managed to do it before Delaney got his hands on it. He particularly wanted Keller’s place because a stream runs through it.”
“Where’s Keller?”
“Found dead. The new sheriff said it was renegades. I have different ideas. But I knew something Delaney didn’t. Keller has a daughter in Dallas. I contacted her and made an offer. She accepted. Delaney’s mad as hell, but I have friends, too. Anyway, you and Marilee can stay there until you find something else. There’s water. Some furniture’s been stolen but there’s probably enough.”
“I owe you.”
“No, you don’t. I’ve been here thirty years and what’s going on turns my stomach.”
Seth turned and left the room. He paused outside the door, grateful to Abe. The man had been afraid, that much was obvious, yet he had given his advice. A warning. And, more importantly, a place to stay.
Seth decided to leave the back way. He had no desire to see those uniforms again. Nor a marshal. He wanted no confrontations. Not until he fetched his sister.
Chapter Three
ELIZABETH READ TO Marilee as she waited for her father to return from town. Elizabeth hugged Marilee closer and settled the storybook in her lap. She hoped the story would relieve some of the child’s terror.
Marilee had heard the shots but she had stayed in her room as instructed by Elizabeth. It wasn’t the first time threats had been made, or guns fired.
Elizabeth had found her huddled on her bed, her face pale. She had watched her father die and her brother wounded. Only Trini had kept her from running after her brother, Dillon, as he’d been dragged away by Union soldiers. Three nights later, friends had broken him out of jail.
For weeks, Union soldiers had surrounded the ranch, hoping that he would return. It wasn’t until a few weeks ago that they had left, detailed instead to hunt Dillon Sinclair in the hills.
Elizabeth had worried about his return, that he would try to take an already shaken young girl, and about what would happen to the child if he succeeded. Marilee was fragile, more than fragile, and haunted by a cough. What would happen if she accompanied a fugitive?
The newest Sinclair looked no better. He’d looked desperate and dangerous. Not only that, he wore the remnants of a uniform.
The men who had killed Marilee’s father wore uniforms.
I have no right. Marilee is not mine.
In my heart, she is.
If only her father and Howie returned. Then they could ride for help.
Howie and the other four hands were out searching for cattle, though she was sure they had been rustled. Her father had gone into town to complain to the federal authorities about the latest theft and to ask for help.
It had taken more than an hour to soothe Marilee after the intrusion. “It was just a stranger who needed water,” she said, hoping she wouldn’t be struck dead for what she was leaving out.
“I heard shots,” Marilee said.
“A stranger. I just didn’t want him near the house,�
� Elizabeth said. “He took his water and left. Everything is fine now.”
“I want Dillon,” Marilee said suddenly.
“He’s gone, sweetpea,” she said.
“I don’t care. I want him.”
“I don’t know where he is.”
“He’s not dead?” Marilee sought reassurance.
“No.”
“Then why doesn’t he come to see me?”
“I don’t think he can,” Elizabeth replied. For two months after she and her father arrived, Marilee hadn’t said a word. Then she gradually started to speak. The nightmares were rarer, but she still woke up screaming.
“I want my daddy.” It was the first time Marilee had mentioned him since Elizabeth had first seen the little girl in Trini’s small house on the ranch. Her heart had gone out to the silent child who had trembled when Elizabeth had stopped at the small foreman’s house after she and her father moved in.
Trini had kept her hidden, in fact, for several weeks, afraid that she would be ordered away, and the child with her.
Then Trini had died and Marilee had suffered still another loss. How much could a child bear?
Elizabeth was determined to protect her as much as possible.
Was she doing that by keeping her away from the man who claimed he was her brother?
If only he hadn’t looked like the worst of renegades.
She looked up at the grandfather clock. Afternoon. When would the man who called himself Sinclair return? Could she stay here without any help? Would he bring others when he returned?
Her father had been gone half a day, more than enough time to see to his errand and return. But she knew him too well. Once in town, he often became involved with others. He was a gregarious man who loved stories and an audience and he often forgot about time.
She reluctantly made the decision to go into town. But she didn’t want to take Marilee with her. The road was too dangerous. If they were caught out alone . . .
“Let’s go see Robert,” she suggested to Marilee.
Robert was the son of a neighboring rancher, another newcomer. Elizabeth refused to think of either of their families as carpetbaggers, the derogatory term that had often been thrown at them.
All the other children shunned Robert. Marilee, who instinctively was for the underdog, had become his good friend.
Marilee’s face brightened. “Can I?”
“Of course. I need a few things in town and I’ll fetch you on the way back.”
“Will you bring some peppermint candy?”
“Always,” Elizabeth said.
The thought of her favorite treat, and a few hours to play with Robert, was obviously a partial cure. Marilee fetched her bonnet as Elizabeth went down to hitch the horse to their buggy. She added the shotgun at the last moment. It would be more effective than a rifle if they ran into trouble.
In minutes, they were on the road. She had been forced to use Ornery, a horse well named for his stubborn ways. But today he had been unusually cooperative, probably due to the apple she gave him.
Miriam Findley, Robert’s mother, was delighted to see them and readily agreed to keep Marilee for a few hours. “Be careful,” she warned. “Bud Garner was stopped and robbed last week. Rebels, he said.”
“I’ll be careful,” Elizabeth said. “I have a shotgun with me.”
“I’ll send Mr. Findley after you if you aren’t back by sundown.”
Elizabeth nodded her thanks and got back on the buggy. Marilee had run inside to see Robert. “By the way, I had a visitor this morning. He said his name was Seth Sinclair. He looked like a saddle tramp, though.”
“Another Sinclair. Oh, Elizabeth, I don’t think you should go alone.”
“I’ll be fine, truly I will,” she said. “I want to tell Major Delaney, though, and the sheriff.”
Miriam Findley looked doubtful. “I hate this country. I told Mr. Findley I want to leave.” She always called her husband Mr. Findley. Never just Gary.
“Oh, don’t. Please. It will get better.”
“It’s a hellhole,” Miriam said, then backed away, her face flushing as if she’d said something she shouldn’t. “Be careful.”
Elizabeth couldn’t argue. She loved the country. She loved the streams and the hills and the wildflowers. But the hate among the Texans was an open wound, deep and festering.
She snapped the reins and Ornery stepped quickly through the gate and onto the main road. She glanced down at the shotgun at her feet. Her father and she had both learned to use both rifle and shotgun during their first weeks here. She hated the weapons but she’d learned to conquer those feelings in the past several months.
After a mile, she relaxed. The day was lovely. Light clouds shaded the sun and a breeze cooled the usually hot temperatures. Bluebonnets and Indian paintbrush colored the hills.
A sound of a gunshot shattered the silence. Its report echoed in the hills and bounced back. The horse’s ears went up, then he jerked in the harness.
Elizabeth tightened her hold on the reins as another shot ripped across the hills. Then a loud ungodly yell.
Her heart thundered as she glanced behind the buggy. Four masked men approached from the east.
She snapped the reins to speed the horse, then realized she didn’t have to. Ornery bolted and raced down the road. She didn’t know whether to try to pull him up or to allow him his head while she just held on for dear life as she heard the riders closing in behind her.
The yell again. It sent cold shivers over her. She’d heard that cry once before when night riders had descended on the ranch. They’d been chased off by federal troops but not before they had nearly set the barn on fire.
She’d witnessed the fear of their hands, who had taken refuge in the house. They’d heard the rebel cry. It was enough to terrify anyone. She and her father lost most of the hands the next day.
The buggy lurched ahead, the horse running in blind panic. All efforts to pull back on the reins yielded nothing.
The riders caught up with the buggy, riding alongside, shooting into the air. The buggy swayed from side to side along the road and she had to grasp the side to keep from being thrown out.
The intent of the riders was obviously to cause an accident. She didn’t know whether they were after her, or her father. Until now, the sides of the buggy would have shielded her from sight, but everyone knew the buggy. They used it to go to church and for trips into town.
It didn’t matter who they were after.
She hung on to the reins, even as her left hand clutched the side of the buggy. She continued to pull back on them, but her slight strength was nothing compared to the power of the horse’s fear.
She should have stayed at home. She knew that now. She had the protection of walls there.
But she hadn’t been ready to give up Marilee, not after working so hard to scare away the demons that haunted the child.
The buggy bounced and rocked as the horse ran headlong, spurred by continuing shouts and gunfire. Stay on the road. Stay on the road.
She glanced at the shotgun on the floor next to her. She couldn’t reach for it without letting go of the side of the buggy. Nor would she be able to use it as the buggy careened back and forth.
They could see her now. They had to know she was a woman. Two of them fired again. The buggy swerved and almost toppled and she stifled a scream.
I’m going to die.
More shots, this time from a different direction. The riders around her broke off and raced away.
But her horse didn’t stop. He wouldn’t stop now until he dropped. The buggy would never last that long. Her body jolted as the wheels hit a rut in the road.
She closed her eyes, uttered a prayer, then opened them again.
A horseman passed the buggy and rode close to Ornery. He leaned over and his hand caught the harness.
He was going to fall. No one could stop a horse galloping as Ornery was doing. The figure moved from his saddle onto Ornery’s back, his h
ands pulling at the traces.
The buggy slowed and after what seemed like endless moments came to a stop.
She had seen the pinto before. The animal had been at her well just hours earlier.
Its rider looked different. He had washed, changed clothes, shaved. She wouldn’t have known him if it hadn’t been for the horse.
He turned, one leg resting on Ornery’s back as the horse snorted and foam flew from his mouth. Sinclair soothed the hindquarters, and he whispered something soft to the animal. Ornery quieted.
Then the man looked at her. “Are you all right?”
She had to think about that for a moment. Or perhaps she was just too stunned by the change in him.
He’d been a saddle tramp before. Bearded. Unkempt. Dirty. It had been easy to dismiss him. Almost. Her conscience, which had been compromised far too often recently, assaulted her.
Something else did, too. Something just as powerful. She felt as if she had just been hit by lightning.
He was one of the most attractive men she’d ever seen. He’d lost his hat, and his hair, which had looked dark this morning, had obviously been washed. Its bronze color glittered in the sun. Dark blue eyes were piercing in a lean, almost gaunt sun-darkened face. Unlike Delaney’s indulgence-swollen face, this man looked honed by pain. The renegade she’d glimpsed earlier was still in the fierce eyes, but a hero had just saved her.
He waited for her answer.
“I think so,” she said, dismayed to hear the tremor in her voice. “Yes, of course I am,” she added, trying to force steel into it. “Thank you,” she said belatedly. “But I really could have stopped Ornery . . .”
A raised eyebrow stopped her words in midsentence. “Ornery?”
“He comes by the name honestly.”
One side of his mouth twitched, though she had the impression he really didn’t want her to realize it. In one easy movement, he jumped from the horse onto the ground. Without paying any attention to her, he tied his pinto to the back of the buggy. He swung up into the driver’s seat, forcing her to move.
“My horse needs the rest,” he said shortly. “He’s not up to running like that.”
His presence overpowered her. Pure raw masculinity made him appear far larger than he was.