Amelia (31 page)

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Authors: Diana Palmer

Tags: #Romance, #Historical, #Fiction

BOOK: Amelia
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"Yes," Quinn said. "But if you expect a fair trial… !"

"Why should I not get one?" Rodriguez asked patiently. "I am not guilty."

"You are a Mexican," Quinn emphasized. "And there has been enough trouble on the border to prejudice people in El Paso against you already. It will be taking a terrible chance."

Rodriguez shrugged. "I have been taking terrible chances for many years. One more does not seem like so much."

"Then, if you feel that way about it, yes, I'll go with you," Quinn said.

Rodriguez smiled at him. "I know that you will take very good care of me,
señor
. I have no fear."

Quinn wished that he could say as much. Rodriguez would find out who he was the minute they hit El Paso, and his respect and the girl's adoration would cease to exist. Quinn would become the real bad guy, and despite his hopes, Rodriguez would be lynched to the nearest tree. He had never felt quite so helpless in all his life.

Maria, sensing his disquiet, snuggled up against his side and lay her head on his shoulder. "Do not worry so," she chided. "Papa is a fox. He will not let them hang him."

Quinn smoothed her long, black hair. All the while he was wondering how he would prevent that.

 

The night passed slowly. Quinn woke at dawn and got up, wandering around the small pueblo with curiosity. He was family, so no one thought anything about his restlessness. Rodriguez was in his own hut, sound asleep. Quinn paused outside it, wanting so badly to go in and confess everything.

Maria heard him and came out, wrapping a shawl around her shoulders to shield her from the chill of morning. "
Buenos dias
," she murmured, lifting her smiling face to be kissed.

Quinn obliged her, but absentmindedly, because his mind was on Rodriguez and the long ride back to El Paso.

She saw his preoccupation. She took him by the hand and led him out of earshot of the hut.

"Tell me what bothers you so," she queried softly.

He grimaced as he met her blue eyes. "I'm not what you think I am," he said heavily.

"I know what you are going to say," she murmured, watching his face go blank. "You, too, are a
desperado
, and if you take my papa to El Paso, they may get you, too," she said misconstruing everything in sweet oblivion. "Papa will not go through with it." She laughed. "He takes these spells once in a while. He never gets past the outskirts of El Paso before he turns around and comes back home. It will be all right. Simply humor him. Shhhh!" she cautioned quickly when he started to protest, because Rodriguez was just coming out of the hut in search of him.

Quinn was forced not to argue, not to tell the truth. He gritted his teeth with the effort not to confess. They were going to hate him, he knew. But the die was cast.

He watched Rodriguez pack his saddlebags and say good-bye to his family and friends. That was hard enough, but when Maria began to cry, and Juliano, it was almost more than Quinn could bear. How could he have allowed himself to do this? Fate was working to his advantage, but he would be betraying not only Rodriguez but Maria as well. He looked down into her soft blue eyes and wondered how he would ever be able to live with his own conscience once the deed was done.

"
Vaya con Díos
," she said softly.

"I'll need to," he replied quietly.

Rodriguez smiled at her. "Adios, niña."

"Hasta luego," she corrected. "You will be back very soon. I know it."

Rodriguez didn't reply. Neither did Quinn as they waved and rode slowly out of the village. He didn't know how to tell her the truth. It was the first time in memory that he'd deliberately avoided a confrontation. But it was also the first time he'd been in love.

 

The wedding was an important occasion. Every ranching family for miles came around to view the brief ceremony that took place at the small Methodist church. Afterward there was a parade of buggies and surreys out to Latigo for the reception. Every family brought something to add to the buffet table, and Rosa had made a majestic wedding cake.

Alan was a little sad as he congratulated his new sister-in-law, but he said or did nothing to spoil her happiness.

"He'd better be good to you," was all Alan said, and he smiled even then.

Remembering King's evident concern for her two days ago, when the horse had almost unseated her, made her smile. "He will," she said with certainty. King might not love her, but her welfare certainly mattered to him. Perhaps if she were careful, she might turn that concern into love. It was certainly a possibility.

King claimed her for the first dance, while the cowboy band played a waltz. She whirled in her pretty satin and lace wedding dress in the living room, cleared of furniture for the occasion. King's eyes were possessive and soft with affection. Amelia flushed a little at the look in them.

"My own sweet girl," he said quietly, smiling down at her. "I never dreamed that marriage would be such a welcome thing, or that I would find a woman I cared to spend the rest of my life with."

"You considered spending it with Miss Valverde," she commented.

"A man considers many women before he finds the right one."

"She isn't here today."

His face hardened. "Did you think I would insult you in such a way, by producing one of my old flames to dance at your wedding?"

"I'm sorry," she said. "I didn't mean to make it sound like an insult, but your parents are friends of the Valverdes…"

"A friendship mainly of hopeful gain on their part," he said flatly. "Now that the chance of marriage into my family is passed, I think that we will see much less of them in the future."

Amelia didn't add that she hoped so, but she did.

Chapter Nineteen

«
^
»

 

R
odriguez allowed Quinn to precede him into the sheriff's office in El Paso. He surrendered his gun without a protest, which only made Quinn feel worse.

"So you brought the greaser in," one of the men talking to the deputies said insolently. "Damned Mexican trash… !"

Quinn laid him out in the floor, right in front of the sheriff and his men. "You keep a civil tongue in your head, mister, or I'll pull your tongue out and thread it on my gun barrel!" Quinn said coldly.

He didn't raise his voice. He didn't have to. The man knew him all too well. He got up, favoring his jaw, and quickly exited the office.

"I want some guarantees from you about this prisoner," Quinn told the sheriff. "He's not what you think. And until he's given a trial—a fair trial—he's innocent."

The sheriff nodded. "I'll see to it that he isn't mistreated, Quinn. You have my word on it."

"I'll take him back for you." Quinn took the key and escorted Rodriguez down the row of cells to an empty one.

"These gringos respect you,
señor
," the Mexican remarked. "You are one of them, are you not?"

Quinn didn't look at him. "I'm a Texas Ranger."

Rodriguez gave him a searching look and slowly nodded. "I thought as much. You did not want to bring me here, yet it is your duty to arrest me. It is because of Maria, you hesitate, yes?"

"I love her," Quinn said heavily.

Rodriguez took off his hat and sat down on the bench inside the cell, smiling. "Then she and Juliano will be taken care of. I am glad."

"You won't be hanged," Quinn said stubbornly. "Don't give up now!"

"What I said, to Maria, was for the sake of the grandchildren I may have one day." He studied Quinn's hard face. "The charges are true,
señor
. All of them, except for the butchery. I have killed many gringos, stolen much gold from your banks, taken many head of cattle." He shrugged. "I am an old man. If they hang me, it will only end my suffering. You see, the faces, they have begun to haunt me," he added softly. A faint, bitter smile touched his dry lips. "I do not sleep so good these days. I am tired." He sighed wearily and leaned back against the cold wall. "Whatever they do to me does not matter. Now they will leave my poor people alone, and Maria will be free at last to live her own life and not have to live as a fugitive in mine."

"Rodriguez," Quinn began.

He held up his hand. "
Muchas gracias
for what you have done. But it is finished."

Quinn left, reluctantly. Caught between a rock and a hard place, the saying was, and that was how he felt.

He rode out to Latigo just in time for the end of the festivities as his sister married his best friend. He had hated the idea of this wedding, because he was certain that King had been forced into it for honor's sake, not for love of Amelia. But when he saw the two of them together, he began to rethink his objections. If ever a man was falling in love, it was King. He looked at Amelia with a frank adoration that dominated his lean, dark face.

"Welcome home, stranger!" an elated Amelia said, laughing, running to meet him with a fervent hug. "You made it after all!"

"Barely," Quinn said. "I've just brought in Rodriguez."

The minute he said it, he knew it was the wrong thing to voice. King's face changed. All the pleasure went out of it, and his posture became rigid.

"Where is he?" King asked in a dangerous tone.

"In the city jail. King, wait!"

King had whirled on his heel and was walking toward the stables. Quinn caught him by the arm, holding on relentlessly even when King tried to fling him off.

"Don't do this," Quinn pleaded with him. Beside King, Amelia's face had gone pale and unhappy. "My God, I shouldn't have come, I've spoiled everything for you! I'm sorry!"

"I'll kill him," King said coldly. "Do you think I can forget what he did to her?"

Amelia had thought King was falling in love with her. Now she knew the truth. It was all a lie. He'd been putting on an act, because he was trapped into marrying her. It was Alice he'd loved, still loved. The woman might have been cold in his arms, but that hadn't stopped King from loving her. Unrequited love was a fact of life.

"He'll be tried, fairly," Quinn said harshly. "If you try to go near him, I'll stop you. Don't make me lock you up on your wedding day!"

King seemed to vibrate. He stared at Quinn with furious eyes. "How can you defend him?" he asked harshly.

"He isn't what you think!" came the sharp reply. "He's not a monster. He had nothing to do with that butchery. The man who did it was named Manolito. He left Maria, Rodriguez's adopted daughter, in a brothel in Del Rio. I rescued her and took her home. But long before we reached the pueblo, Rodriguez knew that he'd deserted her in Del Rio and killed him for it. Manolito was a butcher; he killed the girl's family and stole her away. Rodriguez rescued her and her little brother and adopted them as his own. He's a good man, King. He didn't do that to Alice. It was Manolito, and he's dead!"

If Quinn had hoped to sway his friend, he was doomed to disappointment. King was too furious to listen. All he could see was Alice's poor body, cut to ribbons, mutilated.

He broke Quinn's hold and turned on him, as dangerous as his friend had ever seen him. "Get off Latigo land. And don't come back," he told Quinn in a cold, menacing tone.

He stared at the man with utter contempt and then went stalking off by himself while Amelia stood in the tatters of her dignity. Around them, friends and neighbors tried not to stare and failed miserably. Quinn turned and mounted his horse, deaf to Amelia's entreaties, to the Culhanes' apologies. He felt like a man carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders as he rode back toward town.

 

Enid and Brant had planned to go away for the weekend, to leave the newlyweds alone. As it turned out, a reluctant Alan went by himself. Enid couldn't leave the broken girl to face the house alone, because King had gotten on his horse and ridden away without another word to anyone. Apparently he wasn't speaking to Amelia because of Quinn and what he'd said about Rodriguez.

"It's the… the daughter of Rodriguez," Amelia had sobbed. "It must be. Quinn's in love with her. Did you see his face when he spoke of her? And he had to arrest her father. He'll be hanged, you know he will, even if they don't find him guilty of the murders, they'll hang him for bank robbery and rustling. He's probably sure she'll never forgive him."

"Poor Quinn," Enid said soothingly. "And poor you. King can be so inflexible sometimes."

"He still loves her, doesn't he?" Amelia asked, her tragic, tear-wet face looked to Enid for confirmation of what she already knew. "He hasn't stopped loving her at all. He wants vengeance for her death."

"He was very young," Enid said slowly.

"It's no use at all, " Amelia replied, wiping her eyes. "He's given me what he meant to, the protection of his name to save mine. Now I can give him something in return. I can leave here and let him go on with his life. Later, perhaps, a divorce can be quietly obtained."

Enid was horrified. "Amelia, you must not leave!"

"How can I stay? King wants no part of me! If he had cared, he would never have let the capture of an outlaw destroy our wedding day like this. He did the right and honorable thing, I cannot expect him to pretend love where none exists." She wiped her eyes hurriedly. "I will stay the night. Tomorrow, I will go back to the boardinghouse, where I will stay until I can contact my cousin in Florida."

Enid didn't know what to say. She felt totally helpless. "Amelia, I am so sorry!"

"Yes. So am I. But at least I know the truth now. King cannot love me. His heart is buried with this Alice to whom he was engaged."

"She didn't love him!" Enid argued gently.

"But King loved her," came the wise reply. "Whether love is shared or not does not matter to one whose heart is stubbornly addicted."

"You love King," Enid stated.

Amelia nodded. "I will love him until I die. But it would never be enough for him." She reached out and kissed Enid's cheek. "Thank you for being so kind to me. I wish I could repay you."

"Amelia, King will be devastated if he finds you gone."

"No, he will not," she said simply. "I think you will find that he is only relieved. Now I must rest. I have so much to do tomorrow."

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