Julianne MacLean

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Julianne MacLean Page 20

by Prairie Bride


  “The good news is, your marriage is valid,” George told them.

  Briggs glared up at his brother as if he were about to argue the fact that he’d just delivered good news. Something inside Sarah died a little.

  “It seems a bigamous marriage is considered void, whether or not either party moves to end it with an annulment or a divorce. So you were right in your assumption that it was void, Sarah, when you agreed to marry Briggs.”

  Sarah nodded, wondering why she wasn’t happier about this news. But with Briggs sitting across from her, hardly seeming to care what George had to say, she found herself fighting tears.

  “You said there was more?” she mentioned, working hard to keep her voice from quavering.

  “Yes.” George reached behind him for a document that he’d laid on the counter. He put on his spectacles, reading some of it over to himself. Those few silent moments seemed like an eternity.

  Finally, he set the page down. “In 1862, an Anti-bigamy Act was set forth. It’s a federal statute making bigamy a criminal activity.”

  “Will Garrison go to jail?”

  “Yes, once he’s reported to the proper authorities, but so could you, Sarah.”

  Heart suddenly racing, she felt Briggs look at her. She couldn’t bring herself to meet his gaze. “But I didn’t know,” was all she could say.

  “That being the case, you would be innocent, of course, but if Garrison says otherwise… Do you believe he would try to incriminate you?”

  “Yes. He told me if I ever revealed any of this, he would say I knew what I was doing because I wanted his money.”

  “But you left him without taking anything, isn’t that right?”

  “Of course.”

  “Then he’d have a difficult time proving you wanted his money.”

  “So you think I have nothing to worry about?” Sarah asked, afraid to even hope.

  “I would certainly do everything to help you.”

  Through all this, Briggs said not one word. His silence troubled Sarah more than anything.

  “But this is good news,” Sarah said to George. “Why are you looking so—so worried?”

  “Because there is still one other point.”

  Sarah steadied herself.

  “It has to do with your marriage to Briggs.”

  Briggs leaned back and folded his arms. “I thought you said our marriage was valid.”

  “I did say that, but there are some complications.”

  “Because we didn’t know each other?” Sarah asked. “People do that all the time.”

  “Yes, they do, but in this case, it was more than not knowing each other. There’s the issue of fraud.”

  “Fraud,” Sarah repeated.

  George cleared his throat. “On the day you arrived by train, Briggs let me read your letter. Don’t be angry, he was just trying to convince me he was doing the right thing. I distinctly recall that you wrote you had never been married before.”

  “But I hadn’t been married. Not legally.”

  “I understand that, Sarah, but a court might see it differently if Briggs were to bring it forward.”

  Sarah shot a glance at Briggs. He was sitting calmly, listening to it all. “What do you mean, bring it forward?”

  “I mean Briggs has grounds to seek an annulment.”

  Sarah’s stomach turned. She laid her trembling fingers across her abdomen. “An annulment?”

  George nodded. “If he wants to.” He looked down at Briggs, questioning him with his eyes. “He may not want to, of course, in which case everything would remain as it is.”

  Staring across the table at her husband, Sarah swallowed nervously. Perhaps the worst of it was she couldn’t begin to guess what he was thinking, despite the fact they’d shared so much over the past few weeks. Would she ever really know him? she wondered. Would she even get the chance to try?

  “Why is everyone staring at me?” Briggs asked, flipping his hair back off his shoulder. “I suppose you both want me to say I don’t want to end this marriage.”

  George stepped back and set the paper down on the table by the stove. “I think we’d both like to know what you—”

  “I don’t know. If you’re looking for an answer, I can’t give it to you.” He grabbed his coat and strode out of the room. Sarah sat frozen in her seat staring helplessly at George.

  The front door opened and slammed against the inside wall. George hurried to the foyer. “Where are you going?”

  “Somewhere to think.”

  Heartsick with dread, Sarah listened to her husband’s boots pound down the veranda steps. He will never forgive me, she thought miserably, then buried her face in her hands and wept.

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Rain-drenched and exhausted, Briggs pushed through the swinging doors at the Long Branch Saloon. He stopped just inside, inhaled the thick scent of cigar smoke and removed his waterlogged hat. The place was uncommonly busy for this time of day. Must be the rain, he thought as he strode toward the bar and dug into his pocket for a few coins.

  “What can I get you?” the bartender asked, wiping his hands on a damp cloth.

  “Whiskey.” Briggs didn’t take a drink often, but he reckoned if there was ever an appropriate time, this was it.

  The bartender poured him a glass, then turned to set the bottle back on the shelf.

  “Leave it,” Briggs said, knowing he wasn’t going to be ready to return home for a while yet. He had a lot of thinking to do and he wasn’t about to do it in the same house with Sarah. She’d cloud his judgment with her mere presence and he had an important decision to make. He should have known something like this would happen a month ago when she’d first told him about Garrison and about her parents being dead for four years instead of four months. The lies had started then, but he’d felt obligated to stick to their agreement.

  Raising the shot glass to his dry lips, he took the first drink, tasting the bitter liquid for a moment before he swallowed. He carried the bottle to a table and sat down.

  After everything that had happened with Isabelle, he should have been more careful. He should never have let himself fall for Sarah so quickly without knowing her better. He should annul the marriage. It was quite simple, really.

  He tipped up the glass, downed the rest of the sour-tasting whiskey, then poured another. He watched as the amber liquid gushed into the glass. What the hell was he going to do?

  His head was telling him to end it. The law was clear; he was justified.

  But the idea of leaving Sarah behind and returning to the farm without her was unthinkable. Just the thought of it made his whole body ache. Never see her again? Never touch her? Smell her? Could he go on knowing he’d never be able to bury himself in her warmth again?

  Laughter erupted in the back corner of the saloon. Briggs jumped, then tossed back another mouthful of whiskey, welcoming its numbing effect. He pinched the bridge of his nose and shut his stinging eyes. What were the chances this would all work itself out? What were the chances he’d be able to trust her? Ever?

  If he was smart, he’d never trust anyone again.

  Briggs heard heavy footsteps approach and felt someone’s unbidden presence behind him. He swiveled in his chair.

  “We meet again,” Garrison said, bowing slightly.

  “Not by choice.” Briggs had to force himself to stay seated when all he really wanted to do was toss Garrison out face first into the mud.

  After a short pause, Garrison pulled out a chair. “Mind if I sit?”

  “Yes.”

  “Oh, come now. You’re being a bit hard on me, don’t you think? Sarah’s the one you should be angry at.”

  Something inside Briggs jolted. He downed another mouthful of whiskey.

  Garrison sat down across from him, despite Briggs’s earlier protest. “Bartender, I’ll have what he’s having.”

  The bartender brought a second glass. “You want a bottle, too?”

  “No, just a glass. I’m not i
n need of it like this gentleman is.”

  The bartender poured, then turned his back on them and returned to work. Briggs felt Garrison’s gaze upon him and tried to ignore it. The last thing he needed was to get into a saloon brawl and spend the night in jail.

  “Ah. The drowning of the sorrows,” Garrison sighed.

  “It’s none of your business, McPhee.”

  “I’m only trying to make conversation. We got off on the wrong foot, it seems.”

  “There is no right foot where you and I are concerned.”

  “I don’t blame you for being angry. I would be, too. But like I said—it’s not me you should be angry with. I’m only trying to help.”

  “Help? You’re helping?”

  Taking a slow dignified sip from his glass, Garrison crossed one leg over the other. “I’m here to talk to you, aren’t I? You look like you need some helpful advice.”

  “As if I’d take that advice from you. You’re my problem, McPhee, not the solution.”

  “That’s not very neighborly of you.”

  “You’re not my neighbor. I’m surprised you’re even willing to come within ten feet of me.”

  Garrison chuckled with too much confidence. “We’re in a public place, Mr. Brigman. If you lay a hand on me, there are plenty of gentlemen here to come to my aid.”

  “That’s not what I’m talking about.”

  Garrison took a drink, staring straight ahead. “No?”

  “No. I could talk to the sheriff. You’d be locked up before you even knew you’d left the room.”

  “Locked up? And how may I ask would the charges read?”

  “They’d read exactly as they should. Bigamy with a capital B.”

  Garrison nearly choked on his drink. “Is that what she told you? I must admit, that’s not one she’s used before.” Garrison swallowed another mouthful, then smiled and dropped his hand onto Briggs’s shoulder. “Bigamy. How original. But in this case, I’m not the bigamist, Brigman. She is. I suppose that makes you one, too.”

  “I’ll have you know my brother is a lawyer. He’s checked into things for me. My marriage to Sarah is valid. Yours isn’t.”

  “I’m sorry, I’m sorry,” Garrison said, chuckling and holding his stomach. “I shouldn’t laugh. This is very serious.”

  “You bet it is. I think it’s about time you tell me what’s so funny.”

  Garrison reached for Briggs’s bottle of whiskey. “May I? Perhaps you should have another, too.” Briggs watched as Garrison filled both their glasses. “This is indeed difficult. It always is.”

  “What do you mean, always?”

  “I’ve had to do this before. It’s not the first time Sarah has gone off for a new life and I’ve had to bring her home, and you’re not the first man she’s married.”

  Briggs tried to keep his stomach from rolling.

  “I can see you’re surprised,” Garrison said.

  “I’m surprised you’re fool enough to make any of this up.”

  “I’m not making it up. She’s my wife and she’s got a problem.”

  Briggs downed the rest of his whiskey and slammed the glass onto the table. He wiped his sleeve across his mouth and stood up to leave. “Why don’t you go back to Boston and take your lunatic stories with you?” Briggs walked toward the door. The confident sound of Garrison’s voice stopped him.

  “I suppose she told you her parents were dead.”

  Briggs froze. He stared out over the swinging saloon doors at the curtain of rain cascading from the roof. Slowly, he turned around to look at Garrison. The man had risen and moved to stand at the bar.

  “Did she say they’d died in a train accident? Or was it the pox?”

  Every thought in Briggs’s head was humming with disbelief. This couldn’t be. Why had he stopped to listen? Why hadn’t he just ignored Garrison?

  “Well?” Garrison asked. “Which was it?”

  Briggs regarded him coldly. “They are dead. They were killed in a carriage accident.”

  Garrison moved toward him. “Ah, yes, the carriage accident. Now, was this when she was a child? Or was it recently?”

  Swallowing his unease, Briggs searched his brain for an answer. Before they were married, she’d written him and told him they’d died four months ago. She’d later told him four years. Which was it?

  Garrison poured more whiskey into both glasses. “Maybe you should have another drink.”

  Briggs didn’t want another drink. He didn’t want to let his guard down. He didn’t want to look at Garrison another minute. But something inside him was screaming for answers. Most likely, Garrison was playing him for a fool. At least, that’s what he wanted to believe.

  Slowly, cautiously, he returned to the bar and wrapped his large hand around the glass. “What else?”

  Garrison reached into his breast pocket and withdrew a cigar. “I’m assuming she told you they were dead, then.”

  “Aren’t they?”

  He cut off the tip of the cigar and lit it, shaking his head as he puffed a few times in succession. “Alive and living in Chicago.”

  Briggs felt his chest throb.

  “You must have had a feeling something wasn’t quite right,” Garrison said. “Instinct? She would have come to you with some obvious experience. Didn’t that suggest anything to you?”

  Unwilling to confide in this man, Briggs stood in silence. His head was pounding with confusion and near dizziness. Yes, his instincts had been to doubt her, but he’d told himself at the time it was his own problem. He’d come to the relationship a skeptic. Even George had tried to convince him of that.

  But perhaps it had not been because of his experience with Isabelle. Perhaps his instincts had been right….

  He gulped down another mouthful of whiskey and felt it sear its way down to his knotted stomach. He looked at Garrison. “If it’s as you say, why do you keep taking her back?”

  Garrison puffed on his cigar. “You should know the answer to that. You’ve been with her a month. Surely you feel for her, just a little.”

  Briggs stared at his glass and worked hard not to reveal anything.

  Garrison continued. “There’s something about her, don’t you think? Something that makes you want to protect her, even when you know she can take care of herself, better than anyone, in fact. I suppose I’m no different from you. I want her still, after everything she’s done. The thought of letting her go, well, I can’t easily live with that. Isn’t that how you feel, too? Aren’t you trying to justify all this, figure out a way to fix it and put it behind you?”

  Briggs didn’t answer Garrison, but the question flapped wildly in his brain. Sarah had deceived him from the beginning, saying she’d never been married. Then, to trick him on their wedding night as she had…

  Briggs prepared himself for the question he was about to ask. “Do you have children?”

  “No. Sarah doesn’t want any and she knows how to prevent it.”

  Briggs’s head was spinning…his limbs felt shaky.

  It wasn’t the whiskey.

  He tipped back his glass to finish. Laying his money on the bar, he pushed away from the counter.

  “Where are you going?” Garrison asked.

  “I’m going home.”

  Garrison’s hand snaked out and clasped Briggs’s arm. “What are you going to do? I won’t stand by and let you beat her to a pulp. Just let her go, that’s all you have to do. Bring her back to me and I’ll take her home where she’ll be safe. You can forget any of this ever happened.”

  Briggs hesitated, glaring down at this man before him.

  “You’ll give me your word? You won’t mark her?” Garrison implored.

  Briggs’s gut wrenched with disgust. “That ain’t how I handle things.”

  Walking out of the saloon, disillusioned, Briggs wondered how he would handle this, when all he wanted to do at the moment was put Sarah on the first train back east and never lay eyes on her again.

  Walking back to Geo
rge’s house, Briggs had to concentrate on staggering around the cow patties and not falling face first into the mud. In fact, in his pathetic, intoxicated condition, he wasn’t sure he could distinguish between the two.

  He flipped his wet hair out of his eyes so he could see better. The rain had finally stopped but the road remained a sticky pool. With each step, he sank down at least four inches, the dark muck pulling at his boots.

  And oh, his head…pounding like a drum. He should have known better than to accept that last drink. He should have known better than to take the first one. He’d never had much of a head for liquor.

  By the time he reached George’s house, it was sufficiently dark. He stopped on the veranda to scrape the mud off the soles of his boots, and paused there, gazing blurry-eyed at the lighted windows. He didn’t want to go inside. He didn’t want to do what he had to do, but the time for indecision was over. He just didn’t want to get Sarah into trouble with the law….

  Nearly losing his balance, he reached out to grasp the door handle, and kicked himself again for drinking that whiskey.

  He entered the dimly lit house.

  No one came to greet him.

  The silence pulsated around his garbled senses.

  Standing unsteadily in the foyer, he heard a chair slide out from the kitchen table. George appeared. “You’re back,” he said softly.

  “Yes. Where’s Sarah?”

  “She’s resting. I’ll get her.” He made a move to go upstairs.

  “No. Don’t.”

  George stopped at the bottom step. “I promised her I’d wake her if…when you returned.”

  “I don’t want you to.”

  Suddenly, the room began to spin and Briggs stepped sideways. George grabbed his arm and drew his eyebrows together. “Are you drunk?”

  “No. Well, I had a few drinks, but I’m perfectly fine.”

  Wearing a disapproving frown, George went into the parlor and lit a second lamp. “It’s not like you to take a drink, Briggs.”

  “I know, and believe me, I regret it.”

 

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