Jane Bonander

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Warrior Heart
Warrior Heart
JANE BONANDER
Copyright
Copyright

Diversion Books

A Division of Diversion Publishing Corp.

443 Park Avenue South, Suite 1004

New York, NY 10016

www.DiversionBooks.com

Copyright © 1997 by Jane Bonander

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.

For more information, email
[email protected]
.

First Diversion Books edition May 2013.

ISBN: 9781626810341

For two of my favorite small-dog lovers, Evelyn Bonander and Donna King, and for Dorothy Lohman, whose Shih Tzu, Tashi, taught me everything I needed to know about the breed.

Let those love now who never loved before;

Let those who always loved, now love the more.

—Thomas Parnell

A special
thank-you
to my Michigan friends, Nancy Giggey and Peggy Wang, for their unwavering support and for the title of this book.

Prologue
Prologue
Northern California Coast, 1879

V
igilantes.
They had come out of nowhere, hooded, cowardly, and without a salvageable soul among them. One minute Flicker Feather had been industriously weeding her garden, and the next, she lay dead, her blood soaking into the earth.

Jackson stood over her grave, his head buzzing, his chest and his throat burning with unshed tears. The smell of fresh dirt drifted through the air, as did the scent of the wildflowers that showered the ground around the grave. A mourning dove wept somewhere in the distance, the sound as melancholy as it was comforting.

Jackson heard the baby crying, but he couldn’t move.

Time passed. Aeons, maybe. He didn’t know and he didn’t give a good goddamn. Time meant nothing now that his beloved was gone. The vision of her lying beneath the dirt made him choke, and he gasped for breath, feeling as though he were suffocating. He fell to his knees and rocked, dragging in gulps of air.

Again he wondered why he hadn’t sensed trouble with the vigilantes. There had been plenty of it around, but Flicker Feather’s village had been far enough west that it had escaped the vicious acts of the Whites who were so filled with hate. Even so, he should have felt the danger. He should have
known
they would ultimately find them.

He wondered if it would have done any good, if he could have prepared the villagers better…. Could he have insisted his wife not go out into the garden unless he was there to watch her? He attempted a smile. She’d been a sweet, generous girl, but she’d also had a mind of her own. She’d hated it when he hovered.

His gaze found a lingering robin perched atop one of the split redwood pickets that made up the fence that enclosed his wife’s grave. The bird pecked at the decorative feathers Grandmother had fastened there. Finding nothing edible, it hopped to the storage basket that sat beside the fence and plucked at the woven reeds.

Jackson had never professed to have a “gift,” but he’d predicted his wife’s pregnancy, and it hadn’t been a hopeful guess. He’d
known
the baby was growing inside her. Why couldn’t he have “seen” the horror coming?

He groaned. God, he didn’t know what he would do without her.

“Her spirit is gone, Warrior Heart
.

He’d been so lost in thought, he hadn’t heard the footsteps that scuffed across the grass, stopping behind him.

Pain tore through Jackson’s chest and tears leaked, spilling onto his cheeks. “Why couldn’t I save her, Grandmother?”

“Your energy must no longer be for my granddaughter. You have a child to think about.”

A ragged sigh escaped. “What good am I to her? I couldn’t keep my wife from harm, how can I be of any use to the daughter she bore?”

“That is not Warrior Heart talking; that is pity.”

“It’s the way I feel.”

Her strong, bony fingers grabbed his shoulder. “You are being selfish. Think of what Flicker Feather would want you to do.”

Staring into the distance, Jackson shook his head, unwilling and unable to put aside his pain. “If she’s dead, she has no thoughts, Grandmother
.
” He continued to stare, yet saw nothing.

“This was my fault. My being here has put the village in jeopardy.”

Grandmother was quiet
,
but Jackson knew that deep in her heart, she too felt he was to blame, for he’d stood alone in his attempt to fight the prejudice against Flicker Feather’s people, against all the Indian people. For decades the Whites, and before them the Spanish, had slaughtered the gentle California tribes, to gain their land and to rule over them. Resistance meant death. Passivity meant death or enslavement. To many, Jackson realized, bile forcing its way into his throat, death was the more honorable route.

His presence among these gentle-hearted people put them in danger. He had first thought that living among them would be a deterrent against those who wanted all remnants of the Indians and their old ways obliterated. Arrogance, perhaps, had led him to this hopeful belief.

“It’s better if I’m gone, Grandmother. And better if you and the baby are gone, too. You’ll be safe as long as you’re away from here. And away from me.”

Grandmother made a spitting sound. “You would abandon your own child?”

A shudder tore threw him. His destination was uncertain. But whatever it was, his daughter was better off elsewhere. “Where I’m headed
,
she can’t go.”

Grandmother squatted beside him and hesitated a moment before speaking. “Will you return to your other family, then?”

He shook his head. He’d tried that route, but in the end, he hadn’t been able to tell his father what he wanted. He hadn’t been able to tell him anything. The estrangement between them had grown wider, ever since he’d refused to settle down and work the ranch. Angry words had been spoken on both sides. Although his father was not a bigot, he didn’t understand Jackson’s need to be with the Indian people. He never would. When they couldn’t reach an understanding, Jackson had gone back to the tribe, fallen in love with Flicker Feather, married her, and fathered a child. And no one knew. No one.

“I want
you
to raise Flicker Feather’s daughter,” he replied. “I want her to know the ways of your people, not mine.”

Grandmother’s expression was skeptical. “Your vision is hampered by your grief. Your people are good. They should know of your child.”

In his heart, Jackson knew there was a corner that would agree. But not now. Not here. Not with this child. He hadn’t the strength to face his father again.

Grandmother made an impatient sound with her tongue. “Where am I to take her?”

Jackson clasped the old woman’s bony fingers and stood, drawing her to her feet. He towered over her in every physical way, but she possessed the strength that he somehow had lost when Flicker Feather died.

“I will make arrangements for you to take the baby and travel up the coast. To safety.”

“I do not want to go. I will not.” Grandmother folded her thin arms across her chest and set her toothless jaw firmly.

Jackson felt a knot of frustration twist through his grief. “Please, Grandmother. I can’t guarantee your safety if you stay here.”

“This is my home. I will not intrude upon the lives of others. If you want me to care for your daughter, then she will stay here with me.” She waited a beat, then added, “And if you are the man I know you can be, you will not leave us.”

Her disgust was evident. Jackson’s own disgust with himself swelled. “You aren’t safe here, Grandmother. No one is safe from the vigilantes.”

“You are a coward to leave,” she spat.

He couldn’t argue with the truth. “Whether I stay or not, you are still in danger.”

She was resolute. “They will not harm us. I have been in contact with the spirits, and they have promised us safety.”

Squelching a sigh, Jackson pinched the bridge of his nose.
He had respect for her religion, but the reality was that no one was safe from the vigilantes.

“I’m going to the bank to talk with John Frost. Once I’ve set up a trust fund for you and the child, I’ll make sure you have access to it. John is a good man. He’ll make it easy for you, I promise.”

There was a voice in his head that warned him not to leave, but he refused to listen. He knew he should stay and find the bastards who had murdered his wife. He knew he should exact some revenge. His head told him it was the right thing to do. But his heart was so filled with grief he had no room for any other emotion.

“Your religion speaks to you, Grandmother, I know that. But I need to know that my daughter will survive in spite of my absence.”

Grandmother’s black eyes pierced his. “Since the death of Flicker Feather you have not spoken your daughter’s name.”

He couldn’t speak it aloud, for it had been Flicker Feather’s choice, and each time he heard the name now, it intensified his personal pain. Their daughter’s eyes, his wife had told him, held the faded tints of morning and the deep, rich colors of evening. She was named Dawn Twilight.

Northern California Coast, 1882

He had been born twenty years too late. Now, as the leader of the vigilantes sat astride his mount on Pinkers Bluff, gazing out over the burned and smoking village, he knew this had to be the last raid. Twenty years ago, other whites would have applauded him for the butchery of the small tribe of digger Indians. They would have looked at the grass where pools of blood sweltered in the heat, and at the huts, spattered with gore, and said, “Well done. Another filthy savage village returned to dust.”

But not now. Now, although there was still prejudice, widespread massacres were frowned upon. He drew in a breath, the air pungent with smoke and burning flesh, and pulled out his tobacco pouch. As he rolled a cigarette, he glanced at his companion.

“This will be the last village,” he instructed. “If we burn any more, we’re liable to get caught.” And in truth, he didn’t know if he could stomach another slaughter. It was one thing to rid the countryside of the filthy diggers; it was quite another to watch their children die. Strange. He felt no shame after killing the adults. But the children, even though they were the nits of the lice-ridden diggers, softened his heart.

His companion shifted uncomfortably in his saddle. “I’m glad we’re done. I never did like doing this. Hell, I almost confessed my sins to the priest last week.”

The leader leaned over and shoved his cigarette near the man’s brushy mustache. “If word
ever
leaks out about what we’ve done, I’ll know who did it.”

The older man pushed the cigarette away. “I don’t have a death wish. I can keep my mouth shut.”

The leader’s gaze returned to the smoldering village. He’d done what had to be done, but he wasn’t like the others. Not like those who went in and butchered the innocent, slicing and gouging and skewering the babes on their bloody blades … or roasting them over fires made from the flesh of their parents.

He swallowed hard. No, he wasn’t like that. After all, he was a father himself. He could never harm a child. At least … not on purpose.

Chapter 1
1
Riverside Boardinghouse, Thief River, California, 1891

H
old still, dear. I can’t get a straight hem when you wiggle.”

Dawn’s movements quieted and she expelled an exasperated sigh. “I’m sorry, Mama. It’s just that I promised Mahalia I’d go into the woods near the river and pick her some berries for dessert tonight.”

Libby took the last pin from her mouth and fastened it to the yellow flower-sprigged calico. She caught her daughter’s glance and smiled, admiring how well the bright yellow color suited her dusky complexion.

“Walk to the door so I can see if the hem is even.”

Dawn pirouetted away, her thick, dark braid swinging.

Libby scrutinized her work, satisfied. “It’s nice of you to want to help, but you don’t have to take orders from Mahalia.”

Dawn giggled and studied her reflection in the mirror. “Why not, Mama? You do.”

Libby caught her daughter’s eye and winked. “I do, don’t I?”

“It’s almost like she’s the boss and you’re working for
her
instead of the other way around.” Laughter lingered in Dawn’s voice as she twirled.

“Mahalia does have that effect on people, doesn’t she?” Libby put the pincushion into the sewing basket and set the basket beside the rocking chair. She had mending to do tonight.

“I like her, though,” Dawn mused as she swayed to some internal music. “She’ll cook anything I want, and she bakes the most delicious apple pie in the whole world.”

“That she does.” Libby’s hands automatically went to her hips, which had rounded slightly more than she would have liked since she’d hired Mahalia as her cook and assistant three years before. She couldn’t call Mahalia a whirlwind, for her larger-than-life appearance and presence likened her more to a tornado.

“Have you finished your lessons?”

Dawn stopped dancing and wrinkled her nose. “I have sums to do.”

Libby swallowed a sigh. Sums were Dawn’s nemesis; this wasn’t the first time she’d finished all of her other lessons, leaving the sums till last, hoping they’d somehow miraculously do themselves.

“You can take the dress off, dear
.

Dawn stepped out of her new dress, and Libby noticed that the knee of one of her cotton stockings was torn. Dawn attempted to move away, but Libby caught her arm.

“What happened to your knee?”

“It’s nothing, Mama. Really.”

Again she attempted to leave, but Libby drew her close and examined the rip, noting that blood had soaked through the fabric. Gently pushing the cloth aside, she saw the ugly scrape on her daughter’s knee.

“How did this happen?”

Dawn wouldn’t look at her. “It was nothing, Mama. I … I tripped, that’s all.”

An angry ache settled in Libby’s chest. “You were pushed, weren’t you?”

Dawn finally pulled away and picked up her school dress. “I told you, I tripped.”

Libby clenched her fist and pressed it against her mouth. This was the third time in a week that Dawn had “tripped” on her way home from school, ripping her stockings. But the stockings be damned. Libby refused to believe her daughter was that awkward and clumsy.

“It’s those boys, isn’t it? Willie Frost and his bullying friends. They’re teasing you again, aren’t they?”

Dawn stood before her in her muslin chemisette. The lace edging the hem of one leg was torn. “It happens all the time, Mama.”

How could she be so calm? Libby rose, maternal possessiveness causing her blood to boil in her veins. “I’ll get to the bottom of this if I have to—”

“Mama, please,” Dawn pleaded. “If you interfere, you’ll only make things worse.” She hugged Libby’s waist. “It’s not so bad, really. I can usually outrun them. I don’t mind so much. They’ll get tired of picking on me one day and go after someone else.”

Libby returned the embrace, pressing her nose against Dawn’s shiny black hair. “But
I
mind.”

Dawn patted her shoulders, as if Libby were the one who needed the encouragement. “I can take care of myself, Mama.”

Leaning away from her daughter, Libby swallowed the lump in her throat and gave Dawn’s braid a playful tug. “What will I do when you no longer need me?”

“That won’t be for a long, long time,” Dawn assured her.

Libby forced a smile. “I guess you need me to tell you to get out of those stockings and have Mahalia bathe your knee.” She lifted an old brown cotton dress off the table. “Put this on before you go cavorting in the woods, please, and hang your school dress in the wardrobe.”

Dawn shrugged into the dress while Libby folded the new one and draped it over the sewing chair.

“Perhaps you should do your sums before you go off picking berries. I know you. Once you’re in the woods, you’ll have no concept of time, and I’ll have to come looking for you.”

“But if I do my sums first, it’ll be dark before I can get to the berry patch.”

“Sums come before berry picking, Dawn.”

Dawn’s beseeching look was a well-practiced one. Although it confirmed her youth, there were times when Libby swore her daughter was twelve, going on eighteen. The realization filled her with bittersweet emotions.

“But, Mama, I—”

Laughter erupted on the porch below, and they both turned toward the open window.

Dawn skipped across the room, ignoring the cat that slept on the cushioned window seat, and peered outside. “Oh, look! How cute!” She sped past her mother, scrambling to button the last few buttons of her dress before she disappeared out the door. Her footsteps clattered on the stairs.

Libby frowned and stepped to the window just as a horse’s rump disappeared beneath the porch roof.

Raising her battered head, the cat on the window seat made a raspy sound and glared at Libby with her one good eye.

Libby stroked her scarred ears, lingering on her neck. “I’m sorry, Cyclops. I didn’t mean to disturb your nap.”

The roof hid the Bellamy brothers from view, but Libby heard them chortling. She wondered how many decades Burl and Bert had been living at the boardinghouse; they’d been here when she arrived twelve years before.

Now, as every day, they rocked on the porch, snorting with laughter at something or someone Libby couldn’t see. They passed most days that way, making running commentary on everyone, stranger and acquaintance alike.

“What the hell do ya call
that?”
Burl Bellamy’s cackle turned into a fit of coughing.

“It’s a dog.”

The voice, rich and deep, tinged with a hint of indignation, reminded Libby of bronze and polished mahogany.

“A
dog?
That ain’t no dog,” Burl argued. “Hell, a real dog’d eat that’n fer lunch and cough up a hair ball bigger’n a stallion’s testicles.”

Bert Bellamy howled at his brother’s witticism.

Libby’s interest was piqued. She hurried down the stairs and went to the front door, pulling aside the short curtain that covered the window. She peeked outside, squinting at the stranger.

“Oh, my.” The words came out on a rush of breath, and she put her hand to her chest, feeling an odd fluttering there.

He stood by his mount, big and luxuriantly muscled with a chest as wide as a door and arms as big around as porch pillars. His face was deeply tanned and as leathery as the saddle that was cinched around his horse’s belly. Deep brackets were etched on either side of his mouth, and his jaw was square and hard. Unrelenting, Libby decided.

“Oh, what kind is it?” Dawn stood on tiptoe by the stranger’s horse and peered at his saddlebag.

Libby’s gaze was riveted on the man’s face, which had softened slightly when he smiled at her daughter. He removed his hat, revealing sun-bleached streaks in hair that was as brown as strong coffee.

“It’s called coyote bait, little gal,” Burl suggested, obviously still having a good time at the stranger’s expense.

“He’s a Shih Tzu.” The stranger’s smile vanished, and his voice was gruff and defensive.

Burl guffawed again. “Hear that, Bert? It’s a shit-soo!”

“A shit-Sioux? What’s that?” Bert asked, clearly amused with himself. “Some kinda Injun dog?”

“Can’t be, Bert. Ain’t enough of him there to feed a whole tribe.”

The brothers chortled again.

Dawn glared at the old men. “Shame on both of you. You know how I feel when you make fun of the Indians.”

“I’m sorry, little gal,” Burl apologized, still laughing, “but ya gotta admit it ain’t much of a dog
.”

Dawn turned toward the saddlebag again. “I think he’s adorable, especially with that leather thong holding his hair up on the top of his head. Is that to keep it out of his eyes?”

The stranger continued to study Dawn, a look on his face that Libby couldn’t identify. She sensed he hadn’t had much experience with girls Dawn’s age. “That’s right, young lady.”

Dawn gazed up at him. “Can I hold your dog? Maybe play with him?”

He lifted the dog from the saddlebag and handed it to her. “I think Mumser could use some exercise.”

“Oooh, Mumser. What a cute name,” Dawn said with a giggle as the pup licked her face. “You’re much more fun than our cranky old cat.”

Dawn carried the wiggly pup to the grass, where she ran her fingers over its long, silky coat before it scampered away from her, obviously eager to play.

Libby’s gaze lingered on her daughter as the child romped with the pup. She was grateful for Dawn’s resilience. Somehow she had to keep her innocent and sweet, but with the world the way it was, she knew that wasn’t possible. Prejudice against half-bloods was rampant, even in bucolic Thief River, California.

Dawn’s laughter tinkled through the air. With such a playmate, her sums certainly would be forgotten, and perhaps even her promise to pick berries.

“Is this the boardinghouse?”

Again Libby was drawn to the rich timbre of his voice.

“Shore is. Riverside. Built in eighteen-seventy on the banks of Thief River by the late Sean O’Malley,” Burl recited. “May God Almighty bless his Irish soul.” He spat a stream of tobacco over the side of the porch, hitting one of Libby’s prize chrysanthemums.

With an angry gasp, she flung open the door. “Burl Bellamy! How many times have I told you not to spit your disgusting tobacco onto my flowers?”

He turned and grinned, exposing his toothless mouth. “Well, afternoon, Miz Liberty, how long you been standin’ there?”

“Long enough to see you do it.” She put her fists on her hips and glared at him. “If you can’t use the spittoon, then quit chawing tobacco.”

Lifting her skirt with one hand, she grabbed the sprinkling can she kept on the porch with the other and hurried down the steps to the grass. With her fingertips, she gingerly held the stem of her beautiful pink mum, then doused it with water.

“There, there,” she soothed, almost feeling the mum’s anxiety.

“Who knows, Miz Liberty? Mebbe tobaccy juice is just what them posies need,” Bert offered.

Libby rolled her eyes and swung around. “That stuff is poison. To my flowers
and
to you.” The last three words lost their punch as she met the stranger’s gaze. She swallowed hard, having momentarily forgotten he was there in the flurry over her mums.

His hat was still in his hand. His eyes were such a brilliant blue that they appeared to have been painted.

“He’s wantin’ a room, Miz Liberty.”

“She don’t rent to folks with dogs,” Burl announced.

“Heck, Burl, that ain’t no
real
dog.”

Libby continued to stare at the stranger, her mouth working but nothing coming out. For anyone to render her speechless was quite an accomplishment, she thought, bemused.

“Mumser!”

Hearing her daughter’s cry of alarm, Libby pulled her gaze to the other side of the path that led to the house, where more of her chrysanthemums grew.

“Oh, no!” The damned dog was digging in her precious flower bed!

Flinging away the sprinkling can, she flew at the dog, making threatening motions with her hands. “Get away! Shoo! Shoo!”

With his rump in the air and his tail wagging, the pup clearly thought Libby wanted to play. She disregarded him and fell to her knees next to the flowers. Ignoring the playful growling and the tugging at her skirt, she replaced the dirt the little beast had dug up around the stems, pressing it over the roots.

“I’m sorry, Mama. He just sort of got away from me.” Dawn was contrite as she bent to help her mother put the flowers to rights.

“I don’t think he did any real damage.” Libby held a tight rein on her temper, which could be volatile. Although she never displayed anger in front of her daughter, she often felt as if she were going to explode. Like now. It was unreasonable to get emotional over flowers, but she’d worked so hard on them and they were truly the most beautiful mums in northern California. Everyone told her so. Why, perfect strangers would stop and compliment her on their beauty.

She took a deep breath and continued to pack the dirt when she heard the keening rip of fabric, followed by Dawn’s gasp and cry.

“Cyclops! Mumser! No!”

Libby turned in time to see her battered one-eyed cat giving chase to what appeared to be, for all intents and purposes, a small shaggy mop racing over the grass. A length of her own lacy petticoat fluttered along behind the dog.

Jackson cringed as he surveyed the chaos and covertly studied the girl. When he’d ridden up, his emotions had been exposed like raw nerves, but he’d quickly shoved them into the corners of his mind, where they belonged. His first glimpse of the girl had nearly done him in.

What he’d expected hadn’t been what he’d found. He’d been searching for her for a month, since his return from the Orient. His first discovery was the burned-out village where he’d left her and Grandmother. With mounting fear, he’d tracked her to a ranch, but learned she hadn’t been there for six years. His gut had clenched when he discovered the rancher had been using her as hired help. A mere child, for Christ’s sake! He’d expected to find the same thing here, but found instead a happy, beautiful child, well dressed and cared for by a woman she called Mama. What in the hell was going on?

It was hard for him to keep from staring at her. She was a beauty. More than that, she appeared to be sweet-tempered and compassionate. He felt a rush of pride, followed by a surge of guilt that washed every other feeling away.

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