Read Bound by Blood and Brimstone Online
Authors: D. L. Dunaway
Tags: #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #Speculative Fiction, #Literature & Fiction, #Historical, #Science Fiction & Fantasy
don’t like me. I’d have to be a fool not to pick up on that, and I wish it weren’t true, because for
the first time in my life, I feel like I belong somewhere.”
I read genuine pain and confusion in his handsome face and allowed myself a second of
guilt before wrenching my chin out of his grasp. I denied his accusation but had to admit my
wariness at the way he’d managed to worm his way into my family’s fabric like a misplaced
thread.
“How can you blame me?” I entreated. “You waltz in here as a hired field hand, and the
next thing I know, you’re eating in our kitchen, bosom buddies with Reese, the older son
Momma always wanted, and there’s Lorrie Beth.”
I stopped abruptly, horrified at the sudden clenching of my throat clogged with a hot knot
of unshed tears.
“What about Lorrie Beth?” His voice, deep and resonant, calmed me somehow,
permitting me a breath to retrieve a thread of dignity.
“I’m not as naïve and stupid as you probably think I am, Noah. I see how it is with you
two, and you better know one thing. I look out for my sister. I always have, and I always will.
Anybody who hurts her will have me to deal with, and I promise you, I’m more than a handful.”
He could’ve laughed at me with my teenage angst, standing there with my jutting chin
and my fists at my sides. He could’ve easily pointed out the discrepancies in our sizes and how
ridiculous the notion that the likes of me could instill fear in him. Instead, he reached for one of
my hands with a small, sad smile, and slowly unclenched my fingers.
“I already knew all that, Ember Mae. I respect you for it, more than you know, and I
won’t insult you by denying what you’ve figured out.” I allowed him to hold my hand while he
talked, meeting his eyes squarely, trusting his words. “I’m not some pampered city boy, Ember
Mae. I know how to work hard and take care of my own. You won’t ever have to worry about
Lorrie Beth being hurt as long as I’m around. I’d kill anybody who even thought to try it.”
Neither of us spoke for a moment, and as I searched his eager, open face, I found the
handwriting on the wall. His next words were no surprise at all. “I’m head over heels in love
with your sister, Ember Mae. It may sound corny, but it’s like I’ve found a missing part of me in
her. She’s become part of my soul, and I’ll never be complete without her.”
His desperate, heartfelt confession suddenly left me feeling old and tired. Pretty words, to
be sure, but ludicrous for him to think Lorrie Beth could be his happily ever after. Then, it
dawned on me.
Of course! He has no idea Lorrie Beth
is thirteen years old! Why should he, since
it’s never
come up, and she could easily pass for twenty-five. I can’t tell him the truth. I know it
should come from me, but I just can’t do
it.
What cruel irony, to think Noah would be the loser in this, returning to college in the fall
with a broken heart. His next words crashed my new-found sympathy and left me reeling.
“I’ve decided not to leave Silver Rock Creek yet. I’m not going back to college in the
fall. My dad left me pretty well off, and he owned the newspaper back home. When the time
comes, I’ll just take it over. I can always finish college later.”
He waited for a response of some sort, but my brain had just locked up. All I could do
was jerk the corners of my mouth up like some wooden-headed marionette.
“I’m telling you this because I’ll be staying here until, oh, shoot, it’s easier to just show
you.” He dropped my hand and dug something out of his pocket. It was a tiny box with a hinged
lid. He opened it. Inside was a gold ring with a single, round, emerald stone.
My pulse quickened as I remembered another piece of emerald jewelry and all the grief it
had led to. “What’s this?” I asked, my lips going numb.
“It was my mother’s engagement ring,” he answered. “It’s going to be my Christmas
present to Lorrie Beth. The truth is, Ember Mae, when I leave Silver Rock Creek, I’m taking her
with me.”
Though Noah’s revelation had terrified me, I kept it under lock and key like all my
secrets. I chose not to dwell on the calamity this news would bring, and like the good ostrich, I
shoved my head under the sand, hoping against hope that it was just some misunderstanding.
Surely Noah couldn’t have been serious about taking my sister away from me. Better to just cut
out my heart and roast it over an open flame.
As summer drew to a close, the flurry of active farm life did well to distract my thoughts,
as did the budding tensions between the two young men in our company. When Noah announced
his intention to stay on a while, Reese reacted predictably with a clap on the back and a goofy
grin. Momma actually wept, wiping her eyes with a corner of her apron. Sam jumped up and
down with a squeal, and Lorrie Beth beamed. Then there was Caleb.
I was never quite sure of just how aware my sister was of the war waging about her. She
never appeared to notice the way Caleb’s eyes followed her, his naked longing, painful to watch.
She was oblivious to the way his jaw would tighten when she smiled at Noah or the torment on
his face when she giggled at something Noah said.
I couldn’t imagine how the two of them could co-exist in the barn, roomy though it was.
It must’ve been torture for Caleb, sleeping under the same roof with Noah, but to his credit, he
never voiced any malice. He said it all with the eye daggers he threw when Noah’s back was
turned.
Burying myself in chores, trying to stay invisible, I did my best to keep watch over Lorrie
Beth. Since Noah Lunsford had come along, Lorrie Beth had once again retreated from me,
escaping into some solitary place she preferred over my company. Our shared confidences, our
binding trust was given to him now, and only in his presence did she open up like the petals of a
lotus blossom in a wasteland. Though I couldn’t get close to her, I could still sense a rising storm
within her. I knew it was just a matter of time before the pressure cooker would blow.
The first weekend in October was greatly anticipated, as it was set for our Pioneer Day
festival. For weeks, exalted expectations had our citizens in a frenzy of preparing food, planning
events, building booths, and making costumes. The brainchild of our city council, Pioneer Day
celebrated our rugged ancestors with music, dancing, crafts, a “pioneer parade,” and enough food
to feed the U.S. Army, Navy, and Marines.
All over the county people dug into old trunks for long dresses and bonnets left behind by
dead relatives. Feed sacks were torn apart and sewn together, boots, moccasins, and coonskin
caps were gathered, and snowy aprons ironed. Most had everything they needed, since nobody
we knew ever threw anything away.
Momma, however, surprised us with brand new “authentic” costumes she’d ordered out
of some catalogue. When I expressed shock at her extravagance, she laughed gaily and said,
“Don’t worry, Honey, we can afford new things now. Besides, this family is long overdue for
some prosperity, don’t you think?”
Just like when we were little, Momma had ordered matching dresses for Lorrie Beth and
me. Some things never change. There was nothing left to do but grin and bear it, and I was hyped
up enough on the idea of fun to let it slide. I never dreamed Lorrie Beth wouldn’t do the same.
The day of the festival dawned unseasonably warm, a cloudless, breezy, exhilarating day,
wrapped in Momma’s promise of a reprieve from heavy chores. It started with a lazy stretch and
a leap from my bed before heading to the kitchen for breakfast and a long bath. It ended when I
left the kitchen, my wet hair swathed in a towel, headed for my bedroom and my favorite book.
As I neared my doorway, I heard giggling from my room. Figuring Sam was hiding
under my bed, waiting to play his favorite tickling game, I made my fingers into “claws,” took a
deep breath, and entered in a crouch. The idea of the game was to pounce on the bed in a
ferocious growl, while my victim would scream and thrash his way out from under the bed and
out of my reach. What I saw when I cleared the threshold knocked the “growl” clean out of me
and scattered my senses to the four winds.
Sam sat on the floor beside my bed, a long box in his lap, his fat fingers busily groping
the contents. That box was the private storage of my most treasured possessions. Among them
were Daddy’s carvings he’d given me before he died, now being stroked and admired by his only
son. The other, Wonnie’s Cherokee wedding dress, adorned Lorrie Beth’s body as she preened
before my cracked mirror.
“What do you think you’re doing?” I screeched, flinging my damp towel to the floor,
freezing her in mid-pose. In an instant my blood had reached boiling point, all thoughts of fun
and games vanquished. “This is my room, in case you’ve forgotten. And those are
my
things.
Mine
! That dress was Wonnie’s, and she gave it to
me
! Now take it off!”
The swift potency of my rage blinded me to her wet, wide-eyed shock, deafened me to
Sam’s whimpers. In one stride I was in her startled face, one sleeve of the dress in my grip, ready
to rip it from her body where she stood. She gasped and attempted to step away from me, her
face drained of color.
“I’m sorry, Ember Mae, sorry, I didn’t mean to do anything wrong. Please don’t; you’re
scaring me, please.”
She was stammering, her body quaking hard enough to rattle the beads on the dress’s
bodice. Placing a trembling hand over mine, gripping the sleeve, she squeezed hard and drew a
deep breath to steady her voice.
“I found Sam on the floor with the box and was just about to put it back when I saw the
dress. It was so pretty, I couldn’t help trying it on, and I thought it would make a cute costume
for the festival. I didn’t hurt it. Please don’t be mad.”
I was immune to the tears ready to spill over her black lashes, helpless to stop the
hammering of hot blood in my temples, deadened to her pleas. “Take the dress off,” I said
tightly. “It’s the only thing I have left in the world that gives me any joy. The only thing that
helps me remember who I was before--everything went wrong. It’s not for anyone but me. Now
take it off before I tear it off you.”
With that, Sam threw his head back and howled. When I cut my eyes to him, Lorrie Beth
broke and ran, her lips peeled back in a bone-grinding wail. Momma tore out of the kitchen, her
bun askew, nearly colliding with Lorrie Beth in the hallway before she could stop herself.
“What on earth is going on in here?” she demanded, grappling with Lorrie Beth, who by
now was on her way to full blown hysterics. “Stop it, Lorrie Beth,” Momma ordered, giving her
a firm shake. “Stop crying and tell me what’s wrong.”
Before Lorrie Beth could voice one word to seal my fate, Sam Benedict Arnold bolted
from my bedroom, his howls louder than ever, to fling both arms around Momma’s legs. Turning
his tear-stained face up to Momma’s, he cried, “Ember Mae is
mean
! Lorrie Beth wants to wear
that dress tonight, and Ember Mae yelled at her and tried to tear it up! She’s mean!”
Momma glared at me over Sam’s ravaged face. “Is that true, Ember Mae?”
I felt like the world’s dumbest criminal, a defendant fighting for his life with no attorney.
“That dress is mine, Momma! Wonnie gave it to me when I was ten, and it’s special. It’s not just
some silly costume. It was her wedding dress.”
She gaped at me in disbelief and stepped around my accusers to face me, her eyes like
blue ice. “Do you mean to stand there and tell me that you yelled at your sister, scared her and
Sam half to death, tried to tear this dress off her? All because of some old worn-out rag Wonnie
gave you?” Her cool, controlled tone was a dead giveaway to her outrage. I knew I was in deeper
than I’d ever been with her, but no beating could deter the blistering fury I was about to unleash.
“How could you?” I screamed, hot tears blinding me to her stricken face. “How dare you!
Wonnie’s gift is
not
some worn out old rag! Didn’t you hear what I said? She was married in it!
She was married, and she became a mother and a grandmother to my daddy! Remember him,
Momma?” I was ranting, standing in a pool of quicksand and sinking to my death. I didn’t care.
“Lorrie Beth gets her way about everything. She’s always been catered to, and I’m just
another piece of furniture around here. She doesn’t even care what that dress means to me. She
never could, and she’s not wearing it. Now, make her take it off, Momma!”
“What in the blue blazes is going on in here?” Like a clap of thunder, Reese’s bellow cut
my rampage to an end, jerking our four heads to the front door where he stood, red-faced, and
panting. “Do my ears deceive me, or did I just hear you screaming at your own mother, Ember
Mae?”
Shaking his head, as if to discard the distasteful image, he locked eyes with me and