As if to torment him, a vision of Poppy Westerfield sneaked inside his mind.
Cass grimaced. He wasn't looking forward to facing his boss's wife when he reached the hotel. In fact, he took the long way to Hancock Park, uncertain how to deliver his bad news: the maid whom Poppy had sent him to investigate had vanished as thoroughly as yesterday's sniper.
To tell the truth, Cass wasn't sure Mrs. Dalrymple even existed. Poppy had described golden eyes, which weren't common. When she'd added blue spectacles to the maid's list of accessories, Cass had begun to suspect that a certain freckled redhead, who'd begun to favor disguises, had been snooping through Baron's room. The question was, why? Had Sterne sent Sadie as his campaign spy?
Or was Sadie sleeping with Baron?
Cass's heart twisted at the thought.
As much as Cass cared about the randy old skirt-chaser, he didn't know how long he could pretend indifference if Baron was humping Sadie. In fact, he didn't know if he could stop himself from punching out Baron's lights. Or worse.
Baron's skirt-chasing was a problem for other reasons too. As his bodyguard, Cass was supposed to be on the lookout for assassins, and Baron wasn't helping matters by letting beerjerkers do a bump-and-grind in his lap.
As if that wasn't bad enough, the senator was practically inviting that granger vigilante to take another potshot at him. Baron liked to claim he headed to Aquacia Bathhouse each morning to make peace with the sodbusters, but the truth was, Baron was ailing. His trousers were growing too big in the waist, and the whites of his eyes were a jaundiced yellow.
In public, of course, Baron remained his charming, baby-kissing self—most of the time. An exception to the norm had occurred at the pool that afternoon, when Pendleton had rushed in the door with a private message. After a quick but agitated conference with his secretary, Baron ignited the paper with a few puffs of his cigar and waved Pendleton back to the campaign office.
Nevertheless, the secretary's news must have upset Baron, because he promptly lost a $10,000 poker pot. Although Baron never did volunteer the contents of the message, he confided that Poppy was going to be on the rampage.
Sure enough, Poppy was. The minute Baron walked through the door of their hotel suite, his wife accused him of entertaining his mistress in their bedroom. No one was more surprised than Baron at this accusation. He blinked blankly at her when she produced a strand of dark, auburn hair as evidence. In Cass's private opinion, that hair looked suspiciously like Sadie's.
"I found it in your drawer of unmentionables," Poppy spat, her cheeks nearly as red as her own strawberry curls.
"Why the devil were you snooping through my underwear?"
"I wasn't snooping! The drawer was shut crooked, so I..." Her chest heaved. "You were fornicating!"
Baron snorted. "As if this damned wasting sickness has left me the balls to do it."
"Don't you dare change the subject, James Westerfield!"
Baron rolled his eyes. "I've been making nice with sodbusters since nine o'clock this morning. A dozen witnesses can vouch for me at Aquacia Bathhouse."
"All men, I suppose."
"Hell, yeah! Men have better things to do than nag!"
Cass winced at the memory. He owed his loyalty to Baron, so he'd forced himself to keep quiet about his suspicions: namely, that Baron had been rutting with Sadie.
What did the hellcat hope to gain by seducing Baron? At least her affair with Sterne made sense. The former Ranger was fit and single. Since Sterne's retirement allowed him to take a wife, he represented the possibility of a better life for Sadie.
Not that marriage guaranteed happiness. Baron and Poppy were living proof of that.
Cass thought back to his childhood. He couldn't remember his parents cuss-fighting the way Poppy and Baron did. In fact, Cass liked to think that Pa had really loved Ma, the way fairytale couples loved each other. If Cass hadn't screwed up his life, getting his face plastered on Wanted Posters all around the West, he would have wanted to love a woman that way and start a family.
Working for an important man like Baron, a man who had the power to make sweeping changes for good, was how Cass hoped he might finally earn his redemption, at least in the eyes of the law.
He just wished Baron would treat women better.
As Cass rode up the Grand Park's drive, he spied his philandering boss sneaking out of the hotel's lobby. Baron was dressed in his best swallowtails. His freshly shaved chin looked softer than a baby's bottom, and he reeked of lemongrass soap. Cass didn't need to see an engraved invitation to know his boss was headed for a tryst, minus the inconvenience of a bodyguard.
"Hell," Baron boomed as Cass threw his reins to a waiting stableboy, "no wonder you took so long to run Poppy's errand. You're still riding Flea-Bait."
"Pancake," Cass corrected him.
"Yeah. Same thing."
A muscle ticked in Cass's jaw. Baron didn't think the buckskin could measure up as a Ranger's horse. Cass secretly agreed; however, he was just ornery enough to defy this logic because Pancake was the one subject both Collie and Baron could agree upon, and he needed Baron to accept Collie.
Besides, Cass was supposed to be a law-abiding citizen now. He couldn't indulge in his favorite tradition: rustling his mount from a town with an odd name. Last July, he'd been tickled by the notion of retiring Jelli, from Jellico, Tennessee, so he could "borrow" a buckskin from Pancake, Texas.
Being a law-abiding citizen sure isn't much fun.
"Uh-oh." Baron's canny gaze darted from Cass's scowl to the trigger guards of his holsters. "Who'd you plug this time? That smart-mouthed kid?"
Cass folded his arms across his chest.
"Pleading the 5th, eh?" Baron boomed jovially. "Can't say I blame you. But it would be a shame to shoot the coon. Especially after Vandy crapped on Sterne's pillow."
Cass wasn't amused. "Where are you going?"
"To church." Baron rolled his eyes. "Don't wait up, Ma."
Cass refused to budge.
"I distinctly recall giving you the whole night off," Baron said archly. "Collie too."
"Yeah? Well, I recall your promise to stay in. With Poppy."
Baron flashed his horsey grin. "Change of plans. The ol' gal had a headache. Took a sedative and fell asleep."
"So Tito's with her?"
"You mean Pantywaist the Pirate?" Baron snorted. "Tito wrote a note. Said he was done letting snipers use him for target practice. He headed home to Galveston."
Cass hiked an eyebrow. "Tito knows his letters?"
"Surprised the stuffing out of me too. I reckon he had someone write it on his behalf. In any event, he quit."
Cass frowned, digesting this news. "If Tito isn't upstairs, and neither is Collie, then who's protecting Poppy?"
"Uh... Pendleton?"
Cass had half a mind to slug his boss. Pendleton would pee his pants at the first sign of a masked man with a gun.
"What's the matter with you? After convincing your wife that a burglar was rummaging through your underwear drawer, Poppy's scared out of her mind."
"You're half right," Baron said dryly. Then he turned sheepish. "Aw, hell, Cass. Don't look at me that way. A man's got needs. You know that better than anyone. I told the hotel detective to pass by the room on his rounds. She'll be all right. If Poppy wakes, tell her I'm playing poker. Comprende?"
Ignoring Cass's sputtered objection, Baron saluted with his walking stick and breezed past him on the stairs. Cass watched through narrowed eyes as the senator reached the boardwalk and strolled beneath the orange and yellow lanterns, bobbing in the languid breeze that riffled the live oak trees. Every now and then, Baron would tip his hat to passing ladies. The boardwalk was moderately crowded with well-heeled couples, who were enjoying the autumn stars and the romantic strains of a stringed quartet.
But as Baron drew abreast of the musicians' pavilion, a voluptuous redhead in a slinky, black gown materialized at his side and slipped an arm through his.
The wom
an looked an awful lot like Sadie.
Damn her anyway!
Sickened by the visions dancing in his head, Cass decided Baron could, indeed, protect himself from bushwhackers tonight. The last thing Cass needed was to sit outside Baron's campaign office, listening to him and Sadie rut on the mattress in the back room.
Slamming through the lobby doors, Cass stalked past brass planters of prickly pear cacti and a fountain that spouted garlands of autumn leaves, in lieu of precious water. When he finally climbed the stairwell to his floor, he found Pendleton snoozing on a chair outside Poppy's room. A newspaper was spread over the secretary's face to shut out the flickering light of wall sconces.
How can a book-learned man be so stupid?
Cass had half a mind to kick the chair out from under Poppy's "guard." Gritting his teeth, he snatched the Lampasas Dispatch off the secretary's head. The rustling news print—or maybe the sudden flash of light—caused the older man to snort awake.
"Cassidy! I was just—"
"Snoring. Yeah, I heard."
Pendleton had the decency to redden. Leaping to his feet, he straightened his rumpled suit coat and shoved his wire-rimmed spectacles up his nose. "I tried to tell Baron he was making a mistake."
"You mean about making you a bodyguard?"
Pendleton hiked his chin. He had a crab-apple face from squinting at numbers all day and a stooped frame from hunching over ledgers. With his pasty complexion, extra thick lenses, and thinning hair, he looked ten years older than Baron.
Ironically, he was ten years younger.
"I have no trouble conceding I'm not the sharpshooter you are," Pendleton said testily. "However, every man has talents. You might be able to brand a steer, but I can make it turn a profit—even in a drought. I assure you, men with my talent are far rarer than men with yours."
Cass hiked an eyebrow. He hadn't been aware he and Pendleton were competing for the designation of Best Hired Hand.
"No one's questioning your loyalty, Pendleton. Or your work ethic. Just your choice to take a nap."
Fiercely brown eyes raked Cass from hat to toe. If he'd been a misplaced decimal point, he would have tucked his tail and headed for the hills.
"Watching Baron play poker all day is easy work," Pendleton accused. "Try discussing water issues with Bo Bodine. That nitwit can't even convert miles to acres on a map!"
Cass hiked an eyebrow. "You met with the Chairman of the Senate's Agriculture Committee?"
Pendleton bristled. "Not that it's any of your business, but yes. Yes, I did. We crossed paths in the lobby around dinnertime. Baron's always saying, 'Seize the day,' so I did. Mrs. Westerfield was carrying our maps, so I pleaded Baron's case.
"Bodine's a real piece of work," Pendleton continued grimly. "I don't think he can even read the Texas Constitution, much less uphold it as an elected official. The sodbuster said some pretty vulgar things about Baron's reelection hopes too. Mrs. Westerfield was so upset, she retired with a headache."
Cass frowned. "Shouldn't you be leaving the discussion of water rights to Baron's attorney?"
Pendleton stiffened. "For your information, Mr. Cassidy, Baron bought that parcel of land from my father, after Pa fell on hard times. No law wrangler knows that acreage better—or cares about it more—than I do. I shall continue to advocate for its improvement during the drought. By this time next year, I should have all the money I need to buy it back."
With a terse nod, Pendleton turned on his heel and marched toward his suite. He'd only taken three steps, however, when he halted.
"A word of advice, Mr. Cassidy," he called over his shoulder. "Mrs. Westerfield is not as hardy as she seems. Despite appearances to the contrary, Baron has grave concerns about her."
"You got a point, Pendleton?"
The secretary's thin lips twitched in a mocking smile. "In certain circles, you are hailed as Eros in Spurs, are you not? I think you know my point, Mr. Cassidy. Good evening."
Cass scowled.
Pencil-necked fussbudget.
Resigned to the tedium of babysitting a sedated woman, Cass decided to splash water on his face. He stripped off his hat, spurs, and boots. Then he tugged a bottle of tequila from his saddlebag. Only when he was settling down on the edge of the bed to toss back his first shot did he hear the unmistakable creak of a floorboard in the hall.
A moment later, a tentative knock sounded on his door.
"Cass?" Poppy's plaintive voice quavered as she called out his name. "Is... is Baron with you?"
Just my luck. The sedative wore off.
Stuffing his tequila under a pillow, Cass forced a smile for his boss's wife and tugged open the door. He found Poppy standing barefoot and tear-streaked, her perfumed cloud of auburn hair spilling over a flimsy, peacock-blue negligee that left little to his imagination.
Despite being 16 years his senior, Poppy was undeniably attractive. She had lush breasts, voluptuous hips, and legs that went on for miles. She also had a tendency to weep, rail, and swoon—behaviors that seemed more frequent now than they had in '78, the last year Cass had prodded Baron's steers along the Western Cattle Trail to Dodge.
Poppy's big, misty green eyes peered eagerly past him to the bed. "Are you alone?"
"'Fraid so, ma'am."
She blinked, squeezing out a tear. "That bastard! He's with her again, isn't he?"
Before Cass could utter a single, credible excuse for his boss, Poppy started wailing like a banshee and threw herself into his arms. He staggered backwards, biting off an oath as the door swung closed behind her. In the next instant, 120 pounds of buxom, blubbering femininity were sliding down his ribcage toward his nether region. Cass wasn't any saint, but even he was horrified by the way his pecker was responding to his boss's wife.
However, this wasn't his first rodeo with Poppy's "episodes," as Baron liked to call them. Eight years ago, when Cass had found Poppy threatening to slash her wrists, she'd claimed life wasn't worth living because she'd miscarried another baby.
Baron had been grieving his lost heir, too, but since Poppy had frozen him out of their bed, he'd started turning his wolf loose on younger, doe-eyed prey. Cass supposed that womanizing had been Baron's way of feeling manly. Or maybe extra marital affairs had been Baron's way of proving his seed wasn't "poison," as Poppy had once shouted loudly enough for every cowboy in the bunkhouse to hear.
How Baron and Poppy managed to stay married was anybody's guess. Cass suspected that Baron must still love his wife, deep down, because any other man would have lost patience with her erratic moods. Baron had even hired a Mexican missionary to keep Poppy company while he was away from the ranch. That missionary had suggested that Poppy wear a relicario, to commemorate her lost children, and that she begin observing October 31st as Día de los Muertos, when the souls of babies returned to the earth.
"I can't go on this way!" Poppy wailed, clinging to Cass's shirt front. "I might as well be dead!"
"Now Mrs. Westerfield, you don't mean—"
"Baron doesn't love me, and he won't let me have babies!"
"I'm sure if you just talked—"
"I have no reason to live!"
"Here now. That's not true." Cass was struggling to drag his bandanna from his throat with one hand and to keep her hips hoisted safely above his traitorous pecker with the other.
"I want to be a mother!" she hiccupped into his pectorals.
"Of course you do."
He wanted to shove his bandanna into her hand, but she seemed more intent on mopping her tears with his shirtfront—especially where the placards gaped and tufts of tawny hair peeked through.
"You've always been so kind to me."
"You deserve kindness, Mrs. Westerfield."
"You'd make a good father," she whispered between sniffles.
"Uh... thanks."
"You do want babies, don't you, Cass?"
She was rubbing her cheek on his shirt, her breaths steaming through the linen. His nipples pebbled.
He told
himself she was distraught. He told himself he was lower than a snake's belly to think some poor, bereaved woman was pawing him like an inept lover. Sadie had been right. His mind was in the gutter. He should be flogged—and not in a good way.
Confound it. There I go again!
Burning with embarrassment, Cass tried to swing Poppy's slippery, satin-sheathed hips toward a chair.
That's when another knock rattled his door.
"Oh no!" Poppy cried, throwing her arms around his neck and flattening every inch of fevered femininity against his flesh. "It's Baron!"
Blood surged to Cass's forbidden places. He bit the inside of his mouth hard. He didn't often have to rein in his carnal urges, and he discovered, to his aggravation, that restraint wasn't as easy as preachers and virgins made it look.
"I'll handle this," he hissed, grateful for any excuse to detach Poppy the Cockleburr from his crotch. "Sit here. And stay out of sight."
He drilled her with a commanding stare and pressed his fingers to his lips. She nodded meekly, but her eyes were hungry as they feasted on the bulge in his trousers. At that point, he almost hoped his visitor was Baron.
Gritting his teeth, Cass reached for a Colt, checked the beans in its wheel, and crossed to the door. He was expecting to see a drunken Collie sliding down the wall and a desperado coon toting one of the hotel's koi between his teeth.
Imagine his shock when he found the Devil's Red-haired Daughter, smoldering like a brand on his doorstep.
Chapter 9
Sadie waited nervously outside Cass's door, her reticule clutched in a sticky, damp fist.
Her search of Pendleton's room had yielded nothing to incriminate Baron for killing sodbusters—or anyone else, for that matter. The convention of the Farmers Alliance would be over in three days. She was running out of time. She needed to crack this case before Baron holed up again on his ranch. That's why she'd decided to choke down her pride and strike a truce with Cass.
Of course, the sentimental side of her had other, ulterior motives for knocking on his door. She couldn't bear to think he was beyond saving. She was desperately hoping she could convince him not to throw away his last hope of Rangerhood by doing dirty deeds for Baron.
Devil in Texas (Lady Law & The Gunslinger Series, Book 1) Page 11