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Authors: Velda Brotherton

Tags: #Victorian, #Western

Wilda's Outlaw (28 page)

BOOK: Wilda's Outlaw
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Chapter Sixteen

“Caught ’em naked as jaybirds,” one of the posse crowed and slapped his thigh.

Calder wrapped her up as best he could after the sheriff ordered them from the water. Men hooted and hollered, pointed and laughed. She wanted to die, right there.

“Shut the hell up,” Sheriff Calumet ordered. “Git them clothes off them there bushes, Neely. The rest of you turn your backs while these two get dressed.”

Turning his back Calder shielded her and helped her put Rachel’s worn calico dress over her head. Then he worked at putting on his britches. She had to help him because his wounded arm wouldn’t cooperate too much. In all that time, neither spoke.

By the time she had his shirt on and him hurting at every movement, tears wet her cheeks. Would this never end? She wanted to just take off running. Through the trees and out onto the road and out across the prairie.

Calumet forced them apart and Calder grunted in pain. “Ain’t no use in crying, little lady. Way we see it, you made yourself a bed, crude as it is, and now no way out, you’re gonna have to lay in it.”

“Neely, put her up on your mount. You’re the least, you can double with her. And you two, tie this ’un on his horse yonder.” He pointed at Gabe, who watched the proceedings quietly.

Sheriff Calumet mounted up. “Take the woman to Lord Prescott at Fairhaven.” Then he gestured toward Calder. “This one is going to Hays City and jail. He’ll get a fair trial, then we’ll hang him.”

“No!” Wilda struggled to break free of her bonds. She managed to butt her head into Neely’s chest with a thunk hard enough to make him whoosh. He smacked her with the flat of his hand.

“Settle down, woman,” Calumet said. “I’m sick to death of these gangs, think they own my county, by God. Ride through tearing up Ned, shooting my men. Wild Bill might not have been able to tame them, but I sure as hell intend to.” He yanked the reins and spurred his horse. “Let’s git this ornery bum to Hays. Then drinks are on me.”

Wrists bound to the pommel of his own saddle and escorted by a jubilant posse, Calder gazed at rows of unpainted buildings no bigger than twelve by twelve. Not a whit like Victoria, this untamed Hays City. The railroad track ran right down the middle of the street. Signs above the doors proclaimed such as Mrs. Gowdy’s sod hut, Paddy Walsh’s Saloon and Gambling House. Others sported names like Hound Kelly’s and Kate Coffee’s. He counted twelve such establishments along the north side alone. And the most famous, one heard of throughout the west was Tommy Drumm’s. It had the only bar mirror in Hays.

Calder had always wished to lean elbows on that bar and order one of those fancy drinks Tommy was famous for, but hadn’t ever done so. Never would now. He watched the saloon out of sight. Rode on past a clothing store, grocery store, hotel. A conglomeration of soddies and shacks filled lots on either side of the street, most no better than the hideout he and the boys had on the Smoky River. And folks living in them, too. Hell of a place to pass his final days; hell of a place to be hung by the neck till dead.

At last they arrived at the jail. A white-haired gentleman dressed like a gambler lolled out front on a hand-hewn bench, legs crossed at the ankles and stuck out so that anyone who wanted past had to go around or step over. Accommodating sort of cuss. Through slitted eyes the man watched the riders nose their mounts up to the split rails that served for hitching, but didn’t stand.

“Got the sumbitch, mayor!” one of the men whooped.

Calder was damn sick and tired of the congratulating of these yahoos ever since they’d trussed him to his saddle, like they’d captured Jesse James or someone. He sure as hell no longer wanted to be like Deke’s cousin Jesse. This being famous was no fun at all.

The mayor shifted a matchstick from one corner of his mouth to the other and rose. “See ya did. Where’s the girl?”

“Sent her on home to the Duke or Lord or whatever in sin he is. Didn’t see no need to bring her in. She ain’t going nowhere, time comes to get her testimony. Looked a little the worse for wear, but I don’t think she were hurt none, ’cept we caught this scallywag having his way with her. She didn’t seem to mind, but don’t reckon that fancy Duke will take to it much. Knowing this turd poked her. Reckon we can leave that to him, though.”

The mayor hung his boot toes over the edge of the crude boards laid down to keep folks from walking in the ankle deep mud, when there was any, which at the moment there wasn’t. It hadn’t rained since spring storms moved through a month earlier so a fine layer of dust was all the street offered.

The man they addressed as Mayor glared at Calder. “What you got to say for yourself, boy?”

Still trussed up astride Gabe, Calder stared back at the man and stuck out his chin. To hell with him and his ugly boots.

“Ought to’ve stuck to robbing honest folks and kept away from the gals,” the mayor said. “Especially in that Englishman George Grant’s settlement. Them noblemen don’t take too well to such goings on. Blue bloods, they are.” He scoffed and spat, showing what he thought of that notion.

From the back of his horse, Calumet chuckled, addressed his men. “Well, get him down off that animal and let’s lock him up. I got a mean hankering for a beer. I’ll treat you all to drinks at the Smoky Hill.” He dismounted and went inside the rough lumber building that served as a jail, leaving two of the men to pull Calder off his horse and drag him inside.

They shoved him none-too-gently through the door. The jail was much like any hoosegow on the frontier. A desk for the lawman and a cramped barred cage set off for those on the opposite side of the law. An old man lay on one of the filthy straw bunks snoring loudly. Three similar beds were unoccupied. The place smelled worse than a stable, by a long shot.

Forced into a cell, Calder cringed when the door banged shut behind him. The key grated in the lock. The old man on the cot snorted and turned over, but did not awake.

“Might as well settle in, boy,” Calumet said through the bars. “Ain’t no judge due here anytime soon, and we’ll keep you till then. Might be you’ll end up going someplace else, since you’re wanted all over this damned territory for one thing or another. Don’t matter none to me, long as you’re out of my hair.” He laughed. “Lucky for you they run Wild Bill out of town for shooting up them soldiers. I expect he’d a gunned you down and been done with you.”

“Yeah, real lucky for me,” Calder said.

Calumet chuckled again. “Might interest you to know, the governor was a fixing to put out an amnesty offer on you and them like you, though to my notion you ought to all be strung up. All you’d had to do was leave the state and quit pesticating the be-Jesus out of us. Now lookit the fix you’re in, all ’cause of some purty gal.”

Amnesty? That was a bald-faced lie. Calder didn’t believe it for a minute. The sheriff was only trying to rile him. Well, it was just about to work. This wasn’t the first jail he’d ever been in, but it would be the first time he’d sat behind bars waiting to be hung, and it made him a tad nervous. They had a permanent gallows here, in this wild-assed town that hadn’t even been a bump on the plains until after the Civil War. Wild Bill Hickok might have achieved some fame here, Boot Hill might have some fifty tombstones to mark the passing of the lawless who dared ride in, but it was still just another western stopover on the owl hoot trail. Not that much law ’less the sheriff got riled. He’d hate like hell to end up dangling from the end of a rope in such a nowhere place.

And all because he couldn’t keep it in his pants. That English lass had led him around by the nose. Now that he thought of it, she’d worked him pretty well. Getting naked and all. He sure hoped she’d be happy at that fancy castle. There were probably worse things than dying over a pretty woman, but offhand he couldn’t think of any. He was clearly a blamed fool. Still, he couldn’t help but think of all that sweet loving, and her letting him in where no man had been before.

He sank onto the stinky hard bed and closed his eyes. Damn, she was the prettiest thing he’d seen in a long time, and her skin so fair and smooth as silk. Who could blame him for being a fool over her? Her and her talk about a little house and a baby. Be a joke on that fancy Earl to end up raising Calder Raines’ kid, wouldn’t it?

Who was he kidding? He was only trying to make it easier to lose her and the life they could’ve had together, all at one time. He’d go to his death loving her, and that was the God’s honest truth.

****

Lord Prescott did not appear at the midday meal, giving Wilda’s imagination more time to brood over what punishment he had in mind for her. Marguerite had trailed her around like a keeper ever since those two posse men delivered her to the front door of Fairhaven. Clearly she was assigned to prevent Wilda’s running away again. A servant carried a meal upstairs to the unfortunate Tyra, who had been imprisoned in her room since his Lordship had learned of her hand in the kidnapping of his wife-to-be. Wilda yearned to talk to her cousin, but everyone was being extra careful to keep them apart. No doubt following his Lordship’s orders. Even Rowena couldn’t be bribed into allowing the two to meet. No telling what punishment Prescott would dole out to Wilda.

But of it all, losing Calder was the worst, the rest would be easy in comparison. She would grieve his loss forever.

When Prescott did not put in an appearance at the table that night, she decided to wait no longer to learn what discipline he had in mind. The man was incorrigible, and she would not allow him to leave her hanging on tenterhooks while he sulked and brooded over God knew what.

With Marguerite trotting along behind her, imploring her to reconsider, Wilda approached his chambers in the east wing of Fairhaven, far removed from everyone else.

Marguerite plucked at her sleeve. “You must not do this, child. He will be very angry.”

“I am sure he is already very angry. I will not be kept waiting while he devises all sorts of unimaginable treatments.”

At the massive dark door, she raised a fist to knock. Foreboding clutched at her stomach and her heart thundered in her ears. The first rap was timid and she steeled herself, took a deep breath and hammered on the door. Hard.

Answer it, you damned coward
.

Oh, how she had learned to talk.

She dare not mention to Marguerite what she had in mind after she gained an audience with Lord Prescott. Somehow, he must help her get Calder free.

“Yes, what is it?” A growl from inside.

Marguerite let out a moan and skittered away down the dim hallway. Wilda’s head swam, but she would not faint, even though she had squeezed herself back into the uncomfortable Victorian clothing. Clearing her throat, squaring her shoulders, she tried to reply, only croaked down in her throat. Locked her fingers together over her trembling mid-section and tried again. “It is me, Wilda. I wish to speak with you.”

“Not now. Go away.”

Chin lifted, she declared. “I will not go away. I will remain here hammering on this blamed door until you grant me leave to enter.” She raised her voice and hit the door again, then kicked it for good measure. If he did not open it, she would continue to kick the blamed thing until he did. He would not treat her this way.

The doorknob rattled, a crack appeared along one side through which leaked candlelight. “I said go away, and stop making that infernal racket.” The words were slurred. The sot was drunk.

“I will not. I. Will. Not. Sir. You must speak to me.”

“Tomorrow. I will speak to you tomorrow. All the caterwauling in the world will not change my mind. Now, do go to bed and stop acting like the spoiled child you are.”

The accusation broke what restraints she had placed on her temper. Before he could shut the door, she threw herself against it with such force it nearly knocked him off his feet. He shouted ferociously but stumbled backward, allowing the door to open far enough for her to shove through and into his bedchamber.

“You presumptuous little twit.” He staggered to his feet, arm raised as if to hit her.

Jaw stuck out, she stared up at him. “Go ahead, hit me. But it will do you no good, sir, not unless you mean to knock me unconscious. Or kill me.”

His flinty stare locked on hers, and she shuddered all the way to her toes. In the candlelight, she could scarcely make out his expression. Only the glint of those dark eyes, each reflecting a single candle flame. It was like staring into the bottomless pits of hell.

His sour whiskey breath washed over her. His arm remained suspended for a moment longer, then he dropped it to his side and swept past her to slam the door. A glass of amber liquid sat on the table, reflecting the candlelight. He staggered toward it. A purple evening robe swished around his ankles when he walked in slippers of the same color. His long hair, usually caught in a ribbon at the nape of his neck, hung loose past his shoulders. In the darkened room, even drunk as he was, he was truly a formidable figure.

How could she have been so foolish as to dare to face him in his lair? Alone. Vulnerable to his slightest wish. Now that she had his attention, she could not speak past the dryness that stuck her tongue to the roof of her mouth. No doubt he could hear her heart thunder.

A sip or two from the glass served to move him beyond the fury to find his own voice. “How dare you push your way into my chambers? And after carrying out such a stupid and farcical plot. What did you hope to gain?”

The strength her temper had lent to her actions melted away, and she gazed at the floor, unable to look into his scowling face. “I do not know. I tried to tell you…tell you how I felt. You would not listen…so I suppose I thought it was my only recourse.”

Surprisingly, he remained quiet for a moment, then took another gulp of whiskey, eyes regarding her over the rim of the glass. “They’ll hang him, you know,” he said in a tone roughened by the strong drink.

“I want you to stop them doing that.”

A bitter laugh burst from him, startling her. “You what? You want what?”

“I should think you would be satisfied with punishing me. He’s done nothing to you. It was all my idea.”

BOOK: Wilda's Outlaw
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