Authors: Rebecca Paisley
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General, #HISTORICAL WESTERN ROMANCE
“I want to.” She gave him a soft smile when he put his arms around her shoulders and pulled her close. “Chancellor and Genevieve,” she began quietly. “Those were my parents’ names. The day they died, we were picnicking. While I gathered flowers into a basket, they watched from beneath a large tree. The sky became suddenly dark as a storm blew over the area, and Father called that it was time for us to return home. Just as I started toward the tree, lightning struck it. Mother and Father died instantly. I’ve been terrified of lightning ever since and have found no way of ridding myself of the fear.”
Roman took her hand and thought about how horrible it must have been for a five-year-old to watch her parents die so suddenly and by such stunning means. “I’m sorry that happened to you, Theodosia.”
A flood of affection washed through her as she listened to the sincerity in his deep voice. She squeezed his hand in gratitude.
“What happened after the accident?” Roman probed gently, surprised by his own intense interest.
“I was devastated, of course, and very frightened about what would happen to me without my parents. But Upton and Lillian traveled to New York and took me back to Boston with them. They raised me as if I were their own daughter, Roman, lavishing upon me everything they had to give, most especially their love. If not for their kindness, I would not have recovered from the terrible ordeal of watching Mother and Father die.
“As I’ve told you once before,” she continued, “I am deeply indebted to them, and that is one of the reasons why I have resolved to give them a child.”
“One of the reasons?”
“Guilt is another. You see, Lillian and Upton wanted to devote all their time to me while I was small, and so they postponed having children of their own. When they began trying to start a family, Lillian had great difficulty conceiving, and then she suffered four miscarriages. Her physicians have said that she should have begun a family long before she began to try. If she could possibly manage to carry a child past the first three months, her chances of delivering a healthy infant are significantly higher, but unfortunately she does not seem capable of remaining with child for longer than seven or eight weeks.”
“And you think it’s your fault.”
Theodosia let go of his hand, picked up a stick, and drew circles in the soft dirt beside his boots. “It is
my
fault, Roman, and the sole way I can ease Lillian’s heartache is to bear a child for her. A baby of her own flesh and blood would mean the world to Lillian, and I am the only person who can make her dream come true.”
For a while, Roman said nothing but only watched her draw in the dirt. “I understand that you want to do something nice for your sister, but isn’t having a baby for her taking it a bit too far? I mean, people just don’t do that kind of thing, Theodosia.”
His question and statement filled every corner of her mind. In only a few moments a startling, yet sad realization came to her.
“When you truly love someone, Roman, no sacrifice is too great to make.”
He made no reply to her revelation; she offered no further comment.
In the warm quiet, Theodosia pondered the fact that Roman had never known real love…
…and Roman wondered what such unselfish love felt like.
Chapter Twelve
P
ulling aside the curtains that
draped one of the windows in the lobby of the Red Wolf hotel, Roman watched the newspaper boy pass out Theodosia’s fliers on the street outside. The lad distributed the freshly printed circulars to young and old alike, but no matter the age of the man who received one, he saw, not a single one of them failed to cast a glance toward the second floor of the hotel.
Roman hoped Theodosia wasn’t dressing for supper in front of an open window, but he suspected she probably was. She didn’t have enough sense not to.
He glared at the crowd of men outside for a moment longer, then snatched the curtain closed. As soon as the dark of night fell to hide their activities, the whole slew of randy bastards would come slithering into the hotel like hungry snakes after a chick. And why wouldn’t they?
There wasn’t a man alive who would willingly turn down the chance to receive a hundred dollars in gold for sleeping with a woman as beautiful as Theodosia.
He wondered what she would say if he told her she wasn’t well enough to go through with her plans yet. Maybe he could lie and say that head wounds got worse when the injured person tried to engage in anything sexual. He could say it caused rotting of the brain.
Rubbing his chin, he mulled over the idea, then rejected it when he remembered he’d already used it. For a solid week and a half after the encounter with the Comanche warrior, he’d successfully kept Theodosia out in the middle of nowhere, well away from any towns. It was true that he’d wanted her wound to heal before he allowed her to travel, but he admitted to himself that a full ten days was overdoing it a bit. After all, her head had a bump on it, not a bullet in it.
During the ten days, Theodosia had done nothing but sleep, eat, bathe, read, and share her intellect with him. And he’d done nothing but sleep, eat, bathe, hunt, and be aggravated by her intellect. Finally, after a week and a half of resting, she’d dressed, climbed into her wagon, and started driving, giving him no choice but to follow and then lead her to the next town.
Once in Red Wolf, her shoes had barely touched the street dust before she’d hurried off to the newspaper office to have her dumb fliers printed.
Roman had always liked Red Wolf, and he visited the town whenever he had the chance. He decided now, however, that he didn’t like the town anymore. God, he’d never realized how many womanizers lived here!
He kicked a potted plant that sat by the window and ignored the hotel manager’s loud throat-clearing. In deep contemplation, he ambled toward a large velvet chair, sank into it, and stretched out his long legs.
Why the hell did it bother him that Theodosia would soon give herself to some horny genius? It wasn’t as if he were being forced to share her. To share something, one had to own it.
And Theodosia did not belong to him.
“I don’t want her to belong to me anyway,” he muttered.
“Pardon me?” the hotel manager said, looking up from the registration desk. “My name’s Parks. Oliver Parks. Did you say something to me, Mr. Montana?”
Roman looked at Mr. Parks without even seeing him. “She’s not the woman for me. Hell, I don’t
like
women! But even if I did, she wouldn’t be the one I’d pick. Well, what man do you know who would want a woman who doesn’t understand how to have fun? Oh, she said she had fun at the fair in Kidder Pass, but you want to know what kind of fun she had? Intelligent fun, that’s what. Yeah, the only reason why she had a good time was because she found ways to use her damned genius.”
“Of course, Mr. Montana,” Mr. Parks said, repositioning the inkwell that sat on the desk. “Yes, of course. Whatever you say. Oh, by the way, if you plan to ride out of town anytime soon, be careful. Word has it that the Blanco y Negro Gang is in the area. We just got the news this morning that they shot and killed three people over in Kane’s Crossing, and one of them was a fifteen-year-old girl.”
Mr. Parks shook his head. “You ever heard of any men more dangerous and arrogant than the five in that gang? I’ve never seen them, but I hear tell they wear black from head to toe and they all ride white horses. Sure hope to God they don’t come here to Red Wolf. Thirty bounty hunters have been chasing them since they broke out of jail, but not a one has gotten them. I guess it’ll take a wish granted from heaven to get rid of them. That, or the Devil himself.”
Roman nodded, but his thoughts remained on Theodosia. “How many men do you reckon live in Red Wolf, Mr. Parks?”
“What?” Mr. Parks scratched his whiskered cheek. “Oh, I don’t know. About a hundred and seventy-five or so. Maybe two hundred.”
Two hundred! The number spun through Roman’s mind like a tumbleweed caught in a dust devil.
He ran his thumb over the butt of his Colt, silently vowing that if a single one of the Red Wolf applicants met the requirements for Theodosia’s lover, that man would sorely wish he’d been born short, blond-haired, green-eyed, and extremely stupid.
W
hen Theodosia heard the door
open, she spun away from the window and watched Roman walk into the room.
“Let’s go, Theodosia. I’m hungry.”
“Roman, did you see?” she asked, pointing to the street below. “A little boy is already passing out my circulars. Why, he has even posted them on the front of various buildings.”
Fondling his gun again, Roman slid his gaze down her body, savoring each beautiful part of her.
He’d never seen her wear her hair the way she wore it tonight. She’d arranged little braids on top of her head and stuck green-velvet flowers in it. A few shimmering curls lay upon her slender neck, touching the strand of pearls there. Pearls almost the same pale hue as her skin.
The color of her silky dress reminded him of dawn. Kind of pink, kind of orange, kind of yellow. And just the way those soft colors clung to the morning sky, the dress molded to Theodosia’s curves.
The gown dipped low in the front. Roman suspected that if she sneezed, coughed, or even laughed, she’d spill right out of it.
He wondered what amusing thing he could tell her that would make her laugh.
“What are you staring at, Roman?” Even as Theodosia asked the question, she stared back at him. He’d changed into a black suit and stark white shirt, which looked even whiter next to his dark skin. He wore a black string tie. Its ends fell over his broad chest, as did his thick charcoal hair.
But his dinner clothes did nothing to conceal the raw power that coiled through every part of his massive frame. Indeed, his formal attire emphasized it.
A sweet ache pulsed warmly within her.
“What are you thinking about, Theodosia?”
She noted his crooked yet knowing smile. “You are already aware of my thoughts. Therefore, I see no need to discuss them.” She smoothed her peach skirts. “Upton and Lillian bought this gown for me in Paris. Do you like it?”
He traced her curves with his eyes again. She wore her beauty the way other women wore perfume, he mused. He doubted a man in the world could resist her charms.
The thought made him remember that he would not be the only man enjoying the gorgeous vision she presented tonight. Red Wolf’s townsmen would be treated as well.
Horny bastards all of them, and as her bodyguard, it was his duty to put an end to trouble before it even began.
He folded his arms across his chest, his stance rigid as a frozen tree. “No, I don’t like the dress, and you aren’t wearing it. Put something else on.”
“Something else?” She picked up her skirts and swept them outward. “But Roman, this gown is perfectly suitable to wear to supper.”
He glared at the gown, trying to think of something wrong with it. “It’s too tight. You won’t be able to eat—”
“I will be able to eat just fine.”
He watched the play of shadow between her lush cleavage. “Button up the front.”
She looked at the bodice. “This dress has no buttons on the front.”
He stared at the gown again. “It’s dragging the ground. The streets are dusty.”
“I can have it laundered.”
“Well, the chairs at Victoria’s are full of splinters.
Jagged
splinters. They’ll rip that dress to shreds when you sit down, so take it off and put something else—”
“Victoria’s?”
“Victoria’s Cafe. It’s the only restaurant in Red Wolf, and the chairs aren’t fit for more than firewood!”
She slid her gloves on. “Roman, perhaps you should tell me the truth about what is bothering you about my appearance.”
He suspected if he didn’t tell her, she’d analyze it out of him. “All right. The truth is that that dress is going to attract every ruttish son-of-a-bitch in Red Wolf. You’ve already had your ridiculous fliers distributed, Theodosia, and the men here have already read them. You’re probably the only new woman in town, so they’ll know right away that you’re Theodosia Worth and are willing to pay gold to be bedded. They’re going to crowd around you—”
“As my hired bodyguard, you will take the proper measures to—”
“I can’t fend off a whole damned herd of panting—”
“A herd?” Theodosia smiled. “Really, Roman, you exaggerate.” Still smiling, she draped her lacy shawl over her shoulders and headed out the door.
Roman followed, growling curses all the way. Before they’d even left the hotel, he’d glared down three men, elbowed another four out of the way, and revealed his Colts to two others.
“I don’t know why we couldn’t have eaten in the room,” he muttered, escorting her down the boardwalk.
She slipped her gloved hand into the crook of his elbow. “I thought it would be nice to dine in a restaurant, but let’s not linger. It’s possible a few men will come to the room later, in answer to my circular, and I must be there to meet them.”