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Authors: Linda Lael Miller

Tags: #Westerns, #Fiction, #Romance, #Western, #Historical, #General

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The man looked past her, first on one side, then on the other, as though expecting to see someone else standing there. “You’re alone?” he asked, making no effective effort to hide his surprise.

“Yes,” Becky said, somewhat tautly.

“I don’t know what our policy is in regards to letting rooms to ladies traveling by themselves,” he fretted.

Becky, used to giving orders and having them obeyed, was inclined to grab the little man by his cheap celluloid collar and haul him to his tiptoes, but she restrained herself.“Perhaps,” she said, in a careful voice,“you had better find out.”

He flushed vividly, cleared his throat.“I’ll be right back,” he said, and dashed out from behind the desk, across the lobby, and out the front door. Becky stared after him in consternation, then marched around behind the desk, examined the registration book, and deduced that rooms 2, 5, and 8 were available. She plucked a pen from the stand, dipped it in the inkwell, and wrote her public name beside the numeral 8 with a grand flourish. Then she collected the key from its peg on the wall and made her way upstairs.

She had chosen wisely, as it turned out. Rooms 2 and 5 faced the street, and would therefore be noisy, while number 8 was at the back of the hotel, and closest to the communal bathroom. She unlocked the door, inspected the sheets for signs of previous use and vermin, ran her fingers over the bureau top. The bedding was clean, and the place was only moderately dusty. In a place like Indian Rock, this was probably the best accommodation one could reasonably hope to find.

She rested her parasol in a corner, removed her gloves, and left the room. She reached the lobby just as the anxious desk clerk was returning with the marshal behind him. The lawman grinned when he saw Becky.

“Howdy, ma’am,” he said, tugging at the brim of his hat. He was a disreputable-looking sort, to Becky’s mind, but he was unapologetically male, too, and she liked that. “Clive here tells me you’re a woman alone,” he said.

Becky drew herself up, well aware that she made a picture, standing there at the base of the stirs, one hand resting gracefully on the newel post. Becky had had a lot of practice at striking poses, and she knew how to use appearances—and almost everything else—to her advantage. “Is that a crime?” she asked, with a wry—and admittedly coy—twist just at the corner of her mouth.

“No, ma’am,” he said.“It just doesn’t happen much out here. Clive needed a frame of reference, I guess, so he came to me.”

“Judge Struthers is drunk again,” Clive explained, to show that he’d tried to consult the highest possible authority. “And there’s no talking to him when he’s like that.” He scampered back to his post behind the desk, saw the name she had scrawled in the registration book, and twitched at her.“Mrs. Charles Fairmont III?”

“Yes,” Becky said.

“You have a husband?” the marshal asked. He didn’t seem pleased by the prospect.

“He died,” Becky said.“Run over by a freight wagon six years ago, in St. Louis.”

“That’s too bad,” the marshal responded, but he looked like he’d gotten over the revelation handily enough.“What brings you to the Arizona Territory?”

Clive was still blustering.“You can’t just rent yourself a room!” he sputtered, before Becky could answer. “There are procedures, protocols—”

“Oh, for heaven’s sake,” Becky said, and though she was speaking to Clive, she was still looking at the lawman, “shut up. You wouldn’t help me, so I helped myself. Please be so kind as to send someone for my baggage, and mind you have a care with it, too.”

The marshal stood patiently, hat in hand, watching her. Waiting for a response to his question.

“I’ve come to visit a relation of mine,” she said, supplying it.

“And who would that be?” the lawman persisted.

If Becky had had a fan, she would have snapped it open and flicked it back and forth in front of her face a few times.“Do you question everyone who comes to your town, Marshal?”

He smiled. “Pretty much,” he said, and then waited again. He was, Becky concluded, a damnably patient man.

“Very well.” Becky sighed. “I believe my niece is living near here. Her name is Emmeline—Mrs. Rafe McKettrick.”

Recognition lighted the marshal’s pale blue eyes. “The mail-order bride,” he said. “She’s out on the Triple M, I reckon. That’s about two hours from here.”

Two hours. Becky sighed inwardly. As important as the upcoming interview with Emmeline was, it would have to wait until she’d rested. She wanted to be at her best when she saw her niece again.

“You could get a buggy over at the livery stable,” the lawman went on, when he saw that Becky was at a loss. “You know how to drive a rig, ma’am?”

Becky had never had occasion to take up the reins, running her business in Kansas City. She’d ridden in cabs then, or walked. “Yes,” she said. After all, how hard could it be?

“Fine, then,” said the marshal, and he put out his free hand, still holding his hat in the other. “Name’s John Lewis,” he said. “Welcome to Indian Rock, Mrs. Fairmont.”

Becky hesitated, then responded by putting out her own hand. “Thank you, Mr. Lewis,” she said. Then she turned to poor Clive. “Do send someone for my things,” she added crisply. “I’ll want hot water for a bath, as well, and supper brought to my room at seven. Meatloaf would do nicely—not too spicy, mind.”

“We don’t serve meatloaf,” Clive said in a pettish tone, but John Lewis ran right over his words with a remark of his own.

“I’d be pleased and honored if you’d take your supper with me, Mrs. Fairmont, in the hotel dining room. The cook is a reasonable fellow, likely to make up whatever dish you want, if the price is right.”

Becky smiled gaily and nodded once, graciously. She had never been able to resist a man who took charge and got things done—not that there was any earthly reason to resist.“Are you married, Mr. Lewis?” she asked.

The marshal shook his head. “No, ma’am,” he said. “Not as I recollect.”

Becky was pleased.“Then I should be happy to take my supper in your company.”

And so the matter was settled. They met at seven sharp, in the hotel’s small dining room, sharing a table next to the window, and the meatloaf was delicious, plentiful, and not too spicy.

 

Phoebe Anne didn’t make it even as far as the back porch before she gasped and doubled over between Emmeline and Concepcion. A rush of water soaked her skirts.

“The baby,” Concepcion said grimly.

“I want to die,”Phoebe Anne sobbed,“same as Seth did!”

“Nonsense,” Concepcion replied. “Emmeline, run ahead and light a lantern in the spare room. We’ll need some hot water after that.”

Emmeline didn’t hesitate. She hurried inside, grabbed a handful of matches from the metal container on the wall next to the cookstove, and rushed upstairs. Rafe soon joined her, carrying a whimpering Phoebe Anne in his arms, Concepcion at his heels, warning him to be careful.

Emmeline, having lighted the lantern, drew back the covers on the spare-room bed, and Rafe gratefully laid down his burden.

“I’ll see to the water,” he said. “Pa sent Kade on to town, to bring back the doctor.”

Concepcion was already unlacing Phoebe Anne’s shoes, which were as pitifully worn as her dress. She nodded, without looking at Rafe, and he went out. Concepcion and Emmeline undressed Phoebe Anne, and Emmeline brought her a nightgown to wear, the one Rafe had given her the day she arrived on the Triple M.

“I’m real scared,” Phoebe Anne said, her eyes huge with grief and pain, as well as fear. “What are me and this baby gonna do, with no man to look after us?”

“Don’t fret about that now,” Concepcion said kindly. “You’ll go home to Iowa, soon as you’re well enough, and Seth’s family will take you in.”

Emmeline hoped Concepcion was right, but it seemed to her that the other woman was placing a lot of confidence in the elder Peltons. Nobody knew better than she did that families could be very fragile institutions.

“I’m hurtin’ somethin’ fierc” Phoebe Anne confided.

“I know,” Concepcion said gently. “I know. It’ll all be over soon.”

Phoebe Anne tensed, then let out a haunting shriek. Blood gushed out of her, soaking the sheets and the delicate nightgown.

“Dear God,” Concepcion muttered, barely above a breath.

Phoebe Anne didn’t seem to hear her; she was screaming now, flailing blindly with both arms.

Concepcion tore the top sheet off the bed and began tearing the clean parts into strips. A pile of bloody cloth mounted on the floor at her feet.

“Help me,”Phoebe Anne pleaded.“Oh, God, help me—”

Bile scalded the back of Emmeline’s throat. She wanted to run away, to put this horrible scene out of her mind, but another, stronger part of her wouldn’t have it. “What can I do?”

Concepcion shook her head, trying her best to stop the bleeding by packing Phoebe Anne’s most private place with cloth. It seemed, after a hair-raising few minutes, to work.

Emmeline thought of Kade, off to fetch the doctor, and wished him Godspeed. Two hours to town, and who knew how long, searching for the physician, then two hours back.

Phoebe Anne began to sob, and her breath came in ragged gasps that were terrifying to hear.“It’s comin’!” she cried.“The baby’s comin’!”

There was another rush of blood, saturating the bedding and even the mattress. Concepcion had already thrown back the covers, and sure enough, the baby slipped from between Phoebe Anne’s legs, slick and bloody and very, very still.

Concepcion looked at Emmeline and, ever so slightly, shook her head.

“Get me some clean sheets,” Concepcion said. “Some shears, too. And see what’s keeping Rafe with that water.”

Emmeline nodded and hastened out of the room. In the hallway, she paused, certain she would swoon, and drew in a deep breath. Then Rafe was there, at the top of the kitchen stairs, a bucket of steaming water in either hand.

“I’ll take those,” she said, reaching for the buckets.

“Concepcion wants clean linens and some scissors.”

Rafe nodded, taking in Emmeline’s bloodstained dress, and allowed her to take the heavy buckets. By the time he returned with the items she’d requested, she and Concepcion had washed the impossibly small infant boy, wrapped him, and laid him on top of the bureau.

Emmeline cut and tore the sheets and, once again, Concepcion packed them inside Phoebe Anne, who had already lost consciousness. Rafe lingered in the doorway for a moment, then left the room, closing the door behind him.

Emmeline had not expected Phoebe Anne to survive the night, but when Kade returned just before dawn, with the doctor in tow, the young woman was sitting up in bed, holding her stillborn baby and stroking his downy head with slow, gentle motions of her index finger.

“Seth and our baby, both gone,” she murmured in an almost singsong tone.“Whatever am I going to do?”

Emmeline slipped out of the room and stood in the corridor, with both hands pressed to her face. She sagged against the wall and sobbed uncontrollably; her spirit had gone dark with sorrow, and she was exhausted.

She hadn’t heard Rafe approach, didn’t resist when he took her arm.

“It’s going to be all right,” he said.

She shook her head.

He led her into their room, where the copper bathtub waited in front of the small woodstove, the water steaming. He undressed her, garment by garment, as though she were a weary child, helped her into the tub, and carefully washed away all traces of the horrid night just past.

She wept softly, not only for Phoebe Anne but for herself, and for all women. The realities of childbirth, she’d just discovered, bore no resemblance to the lovely experience of her imaginings.

Chapter 7
 
 

J
EB AND ONE OF THE RANCH HANDS
built two pine-board coffins, one large and one small, and Seth Pelton and his baby boy were buried side by side on the homestead. Angus officiated at the funeral, reading solemnly from the Good Book, since the circuit preacher was miles away. Phoebe Anne was well enough to attend, though just barely, and she swooned, toward the last, and had to be taken back to the Triple M ranch house before the service had ended.

Emmeline explored the tumbledown shack of a cabin while Rafe and Kade and two men from the range crew filled in the graves and mounded them over with stones.

It was sobering to think what it must have been like for Phoebe Anne and her husband, living in that cramped little space, with no creature comforts and barely enough to eat, knowing all along that a baby was on the way.

Emmeline’s eyes filled with tears as she gathered the things she knew Phoebe Anne would want most—a battered Bible, a brown dress with frayed cuffs and collar, a mourning brooch fashioned of human hair, and a few letters from the family she and Seth had left behind in Iowa. The Peltons’ other belongings, pots, utensils, tools and the like—and these were pitifully few—could be gathered later.

Rafe dusted his hands together as he stepped through the front door of the Pelton cabin to find Emmeline sitting forlornly on the bed, Phoebe Anne’s humble treasures in her lap.

“You ready to leave now?” he asked quietly. Things had changed between them in the two days since Phoebe Anne had lost both her husband and her child; Emmeline kept to her own side of the bed at night, and Rafe didn’t reach for her.

She nodded.“This is such a wretched place,” she said.

Rafe held his round-brimmed hat in one hand and ran the other through his dark hair. “You blame me for this, don’t you, Emmeline?”

Her attention had wandered; now she looked directly at her husband.“No,” she said.“It’s not your fault that the baby died, or that Seth Pelton shot himself.”

“Then why, Emmeline? Why are you keeping your distance? Even hen you’re right beside me, it seems you’re a thousand miles away.”

She lifted her chin, unable to answer the question for him because she had yet to answer it for herself. “No one from town came to the service, even though Doc Boylen surely spread the word when he went back to town. None of the neighboring ranchers were here, either. Why is that, Rafe?”

“The Peltons were squatters,” Rafe said in a calm, matter-of-fact tone.

“Phoebe Anne wasn’t, and neither was that poor little baby. They were on this land because Seth brought them here.”

Rafe thrust out a heavy sigh. “You do blame me,” he said.

“You could have been kinder,” Emmeline told him. Their arms brushed as she passed him, carrying Phoebe Anne’s things, headed for the surrey waiting outside.

Rafe followed, but he didn’t speak. He helped Emmeline into the rig and walked around to climb in beside her and take the reins. The drive back to the ranch was a silent one, for Emmeline was lost in the landscape of her thoughts.

 

“Don’t be a fool,” Kade told Rafe, in an earnest undertone, when Emmeline had gone into the house and the two men were out by the barn, unhitching the surrey. “Emmeline’s scared, that’s all. Hell, any woman would be, after watching somebody go through what Phoebe Anne Pelton just experienced.”

Rafe knew well enough what horrors Emmeline had seen; he’d washed the blood off her, carried her to bed, and soothed her until she slept. He’d held her, when she woke sobbing from a nightmare, and in the morning, he’d helped Concepcion scrub down the spare room from top to bottom. He’d burned the mattress and brought another one in from the barn, where he and Kade and Jeb used to sleep on hot summer nights, when they were boys.

He shook his head, but the remembered horrors of Phoebe Anne’s ordeal held fast to his mind. “I’m damn near as scared as she is,” he admitted, “but like I said, it’s more than fear. Emmeline thinks none of this would have happened if I’d welcomed Seth Pelton, told him sure, go ahead, take a piece of our land—”

Kade laid a hand on his brother’s shoulder. “She’s upset,” he said.“Give her some time.”

Rafe sighed, then nodded. The brothers finished their work, then headed into the house.

Concepcion was busy at the kitchen stove, getting an early supper ready, and Emmeline was preparing a tray, probably for Pelton’s young widow, who was most likely settled again in the spare-room bed upstairs. Emmeline wouldn’t look at Rafe when he tried to catch her eye.

Kade hung his hat beside the door and shrugged out of his coat. Then he gave Rafe an almost imperceptible push toward Emmeline.

“Let me take that,” Rafe said, reaching for the tray.

She shook her head, still refusing to meet his gaze.

Concepcion added a chunk of wood to the fire in the cookstove. She was still wearing her funeral clothes, as Emmeline was, though they’d both donned aprons. “Emmeline will be all right, Rafe,” the older woman said quietly.“Just let her be for a while.”

Rafe wanted to take Emmeline aside and tell her that she’d never suffer the kind of horrors Phoebe Anne had, that he’d keep her and all their children safe, no matter what. The only problem was, he couldn’t rightly make such a promise—no honest man could. Life was just too damn unpredictable.

He took in what Concepcion said and nodded grimly.

Twenty minutes later, he and Kade and Angus and Concepcion were seated around the table, dining on cornbread and beans, when Emmeline finally descended the stairs.

Kade, who’d been to town most recently, was in the middle of telling them about the new arrival in Indian Rock, a Mrs. Charles Fairmont, from Kansas City, who already had practically everybody in town calling her by her given name, which was Becky.

The color drained out of Emmeline’s face. Her hands trembled and, before Rafe could make a move to help her, her tray tilted and a full load of crockery clattered to the floor with a reverberating crash.

 

Becky Harding—alias Mrs. Charles T. Fairmont III—was indeed registered at the Territorial Hotel, just as Kade had said at the ranch the night before, after the funeral. In fact, when Emmeline entered the lobby, Rafe having gone on to the livery stable to leave off the horses and wagon, Becky was right there, holding court, clad in an exquisite day dress of royal blue, with a fine coat to match. She stood square in the center of the room, a statue of Aphrodite brought to life by means of some wicked magic, looking positively ageless.

Catching sight of Emmeline, she narrowed her eyes and swept toward her, admirers, gentlemen, and ruffians alike falling back in her wake, like a sea divided.

“Well,” she said, in that familiar, imperious voice. There was no embrace, as one might have expected—anyone besides Emmeline, that is—after a separation. “Emmeline. I was just on my way to see you at the Triple M. What a stroke of good fortune to find you here.”

Emmeline took in the bevy of prospectors, fancy men, cowboys, and farmers assembled to pay homage to her aunt, and whispered,“What are you doing here?”

Becky took her hand in a grip tight enough to fuse her knuckles together. “Why, I came to see you, my dear,” she trilled, and proceeded to drag Emmeline toward the stairs. “We will discuss our business in private. I’m sure these gentlemen will understand.”

Emmeline wouldn’t have dared to object; she had too much to lose if Becky were to explain their affiliation in too much detail. She looked back at the crowd of spectators, all of them staring up at her and Becky, and wondered how much they already knew about Mrs. Rafe McKettrick’s scandalous past.

Becky pulled her into a spacious room at the rear of the hotel and slammed the door hard. Emmeline had never seen her aunt cry, not even in the worst of times, but there were tears in her eyes now, furious ones.

“I wouldn’t have believed you’d actually leave!” Becky raged, in a whisper. “How could you, after all—” She paused, took a breath. “Emmeline Harding, if you
knew
the things that went through my mind—”

“I wrote you a letter,” Emmeline said softly. She regretted the terms she and Becky had parted on, and she was very glad to see her aunt again. Still, she’d come to the Triple M to live with Rafe as his wife, and, hard as it was, she wated to make the marriage work. If Rafe ever found out what she’d done that night in Chloe’s old room, with a complete stranger, and for money, she’d be run out of town on the proverbial rail.

Becky was in a position to ruin everything, and she clearly knew it. She pointed imperiously at a chair. “Sit,” she said.

Emmeline sat, but grudgingly, and with a little flounce of her skirts. She folded her hands and held her head high, though a part of her, the little-girl part, wanted very much to fly into Becky’s arms and cling to her, to say she was sorry. “If you’re planning to ask me to come back to Kansas City,” she said instead,“please don’t.”

Becky had been pacing, arms folded, but at Emmeline’s words, she stopped and flushed to her hairline. “That,” she snapped, “is just about the
last
thing I’d ever do.”

“Then why did you come here? Obviously, you’re still angry with me.”

“Angry? The word hardly suffices. I’d like to throttle you,” Becky said, and then began pacing again, even faster than before. “Have you any idea of the things that couldhave happened to you between Kansas City and this godforsaken outpost? Women traveling alone have been robbed, kidnapped, and even killed. More than a few wind up in Indian camps, slaves, tattoos covering their entire bodies, or find themselves in the hold of some riverboat, bound for New Orleans and a kind of life you couldn’t imagine in your worst nightmares!”

Emmeline swallowed, squirmed a little, waited for the diatribe to cease or at least subside. There would be no reasoning with Becky until some of the steam had escaped.

“Emmeline, I was out of my mind with worry!” Becky cried, coming to a standstill at last. “If you’d only stayed, we could have worked things out—”

Emmeline sighed. “You know what would have happened, and so do I,” she said quietly. “And as much as I love you, I don’t want to be what you are.”

She had not meant the words unkindly, but she saw that their impact was shattering to Becky, even though she shouldn’t have been surprised. Becky had always wanted a different life for Emmeline; that was why she’d sent her to school, encouraged her interest in books and music, and kept her strictly separate from the family enterprise.

Until the Texan arrived, that is.

Becky’s face took on a grayish cast, and Emmeline felt every bit as guilty as if she’d drawn back her hand and slapped her aunt with all her strength.“And what, exactly, am I, Emmeline?” she asked.

The ensuing silence was shrill.

“You are my aunt,” Emmeline said. “You are the only blood relation I have.”

“And I am—or have been—a prostitute.”

Emmeline’s stomach turned over, and though she tried to speak, she couldn’t utter a word. She’d tried many times to separate what Becky did for a living from what she was—a strong, vital, intelligent woman and a determined survivor—but it was hard, given society’s attitude in general. And Rafe McKettrick’s in particular.

“Do you feel superior to me?” Becky asked mildly. Her elegant nostrils had reddened a little, and there was fire in her eyes.

Emmeline shook her head. Whether a woman sold her body once or a thousand, times, she was still a whore. Emmeline had a stack of gold coins to remind her of her own fallible nature; she was in no position to throw stones. “Of course not,” she whispered, but she couldn’t meet Becky’s gaze, even though she felt it burning into her.“I was never ashamed of you. Never. Only of myself.”

Becky started to speak, then stopped. She raised both hands, signaling a respite from their discussion, swept over to the door, opened it, and called for someone named Clive. A few moments later, he arrived, and Becky slipped out to speak with the man in the hallway, ordering hot tea, with plenty of milk and sugar, and cookies, if there were any to be had.

“Mr. McKettrick’s here, asking about his wife,” Clive said, in response.

Emmeline thought she’d exhausted all her sorrows, but now tears threatened once again. As soon as Rafe heard the complete story, and Becky was in just the mood to tell it, she might have no choice but to follow in her aunt’s footsteps.

“I’d like to meet him,” Becky said to Clive, but taking care to make sure Emmeline heard.“Do send him up.”

The door closed. “Do you love him?” Becky asked. “This husband of yours?”

Emmeline nodded, then shook her head, then blew her nose in the starched handkerchief Becky provided. “I don’t know,” she said. She knew what she’d always
imagined
love to be, but what she and Rafe were building together was something different, and not so easily named. “I think we could be happy together, given time.”

“And you’re afraid I’m going to spoil that for you?” Becky had returned to her chair now, and she looked deeply into Emmeline’s eyes.

“I hope not,” Emmeline said, glancing nervously toward the door.

Becky sighed and settled back, her elegant hands resting gracefully on the arms of her chair. “I would never do such a thing to my own child,” she said.“But the truth has a way of coming out, Emmeline. That’s the sad fact of the matter.”

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