Read Jake Online

Authors: Cynthia Woolf

Jake (17 page)

BOOK: Jake
6.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

David and Hannah were silent until the men left.

“Why were those men so mean?” asked Hannah.

“Well,” began Becky. “They were looking for something my da…father, said we would have, but he lied to those men and that made them angry, so they got mean.”

“But it isn’t your fault your daddy lied,” said David.

She looked up at Jake answering to him. “No, it isn’t but that didn’t matter to those men right now. They’ll be back because they won’t be able to find my father. He’ll be hiding in an alley somewhere, losing himself in a bottle of whiskey rather than take the chance that they’ll find him in
The Gem
.”

“Well, now as you can see,” said Jake waving his right arm. “I’m fully capable of using my arm. You kids can go back to your camp. I don’t need to be babysat today.”

“Not so fast, Mister,” said Becky. “Let me see your bandage.”

Jake wasn’t sure he wanted to show her his shoulder, but he unbuttoned his shirt, using his left hand. His injured arm hurt like the devil since he’d unholstered his gun. He just hoped there was no bleeding. Becky would never let him get back to work if there was.

Becky pulled the shirt down his shoulder and away from the bandage.

He waited, biting his lower lip, until she spoke.

“You’re lucky there’s only a little seepage. You can go back to work, but only for part of the day. I want you to rest it in the afternoons, until it gets fully healed.” She turned to the kids. “You two can stay here or go back to your camp and then come back here after the midday meal. What would you like to do?”

David thought about it for a few moments and then turned to talk to his sister. He leaned down and spoke in whispered tones, too quiet for Jake to hear. When he turned back he said, “Me and Hannah are goin’ to stay here. We already brought stuff over to play with and Uncle Jake might need us sooner than he thinks. Daddy says he’s stubborn and will probably go back to work too soon.”

Becky smiled.

Jake grumbled. “I’m not stubborn.”

She laughed out loud. “Not stubborn? You’re one of the most stubborn men I’ve ever met. Always certain you’re right, which I have to admit, so far you usually are.”

Now it was Jake’s turn to smile. He figured it took a lot of guts for her to say that. No one wants to admit they might have been wrong.

“Thanks. You’re pretty stubborn yourself.”

Her back stiffened. “I come by it honestly. Look at Billy. I had no choice.”

“It’s not a criticism. If you weren’t so stubborn you wouldn’t have survived. You couldn’t have saved Hannah or be here with me.” He pulled her into his arms. “No, I’m happy you’re as hard headed as you are.”

He captured her lips with his in a searing kiss.

Jake felt a tug on his pant leg. He broke the kiss and looked down at Hannah.

“Uncle Jake?”

“Yes, Hannah,” he answered.

“Are you gonna keep kissing Aunt Becky?” She looked up at him with her deep blue eyes. Eyes that some man would eventually get lost in.

He squeezed Becky when she would have giggled.

“I certainly am. Does that bother you?”

“Well,” she rubbed her eyes. “I just wondered if since you like Aunt Becky now…what about me?”

Jake dropped to his knees and opened his arms as wide as his injured shoulder would let him. Hannah ran to him and wrapped her arms tight around his neck.

“Oh, Hannah, baby girl. You’ll always be my special girl but that doesn’t mean I can’t love Becky, too.”

Becky felt all the breath leave her body in one big whoosh. Jake loved her? Did he mean it or was he just soothing a scared little girl? What about a scared big girl?

“So does that mean we can stay?” asked David, impatiently.

Jake ruffled the boy’s hair. “Yes, you can stay. Your father is probably right. I won’t be able to work a full day, but I’ll work as long as I can. In the mean time, you can fish and Hannah can play with her doll.”

“Thanks, Uncle Jake.” David said and then he turned and walked down the hill to the river.

“Aren’t you goin’ to read to me?” asked Hannah, holding up the book she brought. “It’s the one about the man on the island you read me before.”

“You mean Robinson Crusoe. I remember. I promise I’ll come back in time to read to you before supper. Okay?” Jake walked over to the tent and got his waders.

She pouted a bit but nodded her little head, her pigtails swinging about her shoulders. Then she sat down in the camp stool Jake had been sitting in and started talking to her doll. “Uncle Jake will be up soon to read to us.”

Jake shook his head, sat down next to her on the other stool and pulled on his rubber waders.

“How come you wear those funny boots? My Daddy and Uncle Zach and Becky and Davie all have some. Why don’t I get some? Huh?”

“Because, young missy, you don’t go into the water. As a matter of fact,” he stared hard at her, “You don’t go anywhere near the water. Isn’t that right.”

“Yup. I don’t want to go to the water. I might fall in again.”

“That’s right. You might and Becky might not be there to save you next time.”

Hannah looked up at him, unshed tears in her eyes. She snuffled a little. “I’m glad Becky’s here so she can save me.”

“Ah, sweetie, don’t cry. Becky’s here to stay. As long as I’m here, Becky’s here. You understand, pumpkin? You got no reason to fear, but that doesn’t mean you can go by the river. Okay?”

She nodded and two fat tears rolled down her cheeks.

“Good. Now why don’t you get that stick we used yesterday. It’s there by the tent opening. That’s what we’re going to use to do your letters from now on. You can practice on what you learned yesterday.”

She set her doll on the stool, ran to the tent and found the stick while he finished putting on his boots and got ready to go pan for gold.

Hannah came back with the stick he’d carved for her. “This one?” she asked holding it up in front of her.

“That’s the one. Now you sit here and practice your letters and I’ll check them when I come back up to camp. Just leave them here in the dirt when you’re done. If you want you can go take a nap in the tent.”

“Uncle Jake,” she said it with such exasperation that Jake nearly laughed. “I don’t take naps anymore. I’m a big girl now.”

“So you are, pumpkin, so you are.” He couldn’t disagree, as much as he wanted to. She was growing up, had grown up on the way here and turned into a pleasing little girl. She didn’t whine and usually didn’t pout much, did exactly as she was told and missed her Mommy and her Daddy, too, since he was always working.

She was trying to hang on to the only family she had. Hannah could have gone the other way and become a real brat, but she hadn’t and for that, Jake was grateful to her father. He had taken off from work when Mary had died. But he’d worked long weeks before that and after to make up the time, so he could be with his children when they needed him most.

Jake raked a knuckle lightly down her cheek. “You may be growing up but you’ll always be my special girl.”

“I will. You just told me so.”

He nodded.

“Even after you and Becky have babies?”

“Yes, even then.”

She beamed at him.

CHAPTER 13

Billy watched the camp from the hill above, hidden by the thick forest of trees. From there he could see if Jake had visits from his brothers with any frequency. It seemed no one expected Billy to be here much less be sober. He hadn’t had a drink in days, not since Becky and her fucking
husband
brought in the bodies of those two bounty hunters. The bounty hunters made a stupid mistake. They wanted Jake alive. They wanted the damn bounty and they paid for that mistake with their lives.

Not Billy. All he wanted was the gold. And that meant he needed Becky back and so Anderson had to die. As long as he lived, Becky was out of Billy’s reach.

Becky was his to do with as he fucking pleased. She was his daughter. He’d already sold her to Winters and Winters wanted his money back or he wanted Becky. Billy wasn’t going to give that money back. Couldn’t. He’d already drank it.

That was why he was sober. No damn money. He could pan for gold in the river but that was too much work and he liked it so much better when he could just get the dust or a nugget from Becky. He wasn’t going to put in the work if he didn’t have to.

There was the problem of the bastard Andersons though. He hadn’t worked that out yet. They wouldn’t let him just kill Jake and not come after him. Whatever he decided, Jake would be dead. No one treated Billy the way he did and got away with it.

~*~

Jake hated to admit it but Liam and Becky were right. He had gone back to work too soon. He felt the blood ooze from his wound and knew when Becky saw it, there was going to be hell to pay. For some reason, his little wife had made herself his keeper since they were married. Marriage changed things. He knew he was protective of her in a way he hadn’t been before. Oh, he never wanted to see Billy abuse her but he felt that way about any woman. There was no way he would stand by and allow them to be beaten while he was there to stop it.

But with Becky the feelings were more than that. He didn’t want anything to hurt her. No person, no illness, no accidents, anything. She’d worked her way into his mind and if he admitted it, into his heart. He was closer to her than he’d ever been to Elizabeth. He and Becky were building something together. A life. One he couldn’t fathom without Becky in it.

Was this what Liam felt for Mary? The pain he went through, was still going through, after losing her…Jake didn’t know how he did it. As short a time as they’d been together and he could only
imagine
how lonely his life would be without Becky. She laughed with him and fought with him. She was stubborn and hard headed and sweet and gentle. She was everything at once and all that he could ask for in a wife.

He walked up the hill to the camp. He heard Hannah singing to her dolly in the tent. David had cleaned his catch and put them in a pan setting on the stones circling the fire ready to fry. They would make a good meal. David was a good fisherman and provided for his family and now Jake and Becky, too.

Jake put down the gold pan he’d been holding with his good arm and called to David. “Can you help me, please? I need help to take off these waders.” Jake sat down and worked the one boot off as much as he could with the toe of the other.

“Sure Uncle Jake. Are you tired now? Daddy said you would be.” David pulled on Jake’s boots, one at a time, until both were off and Jake was in his socks.

“Well, your father was right,” said Jake, “as much as I hate to admit it. Don’t tell him I said so, though. It’ll just make it harder for me to live with him.”

“I don’t understand. You don’t live with him. How will it be harder?” David took Jakes waders and set them next to the tent to dry in the bright sunshine.

“Never mind. It’s just a saying.” Jake pulled on his regular boots and laced them up as tight as he could with one dud arm.

“Grown-ups are strange,” observed David.

Jake laughed. “You’re right, we are.”

“We are what?” asked Becky as she walked over to them.

“Strange,” said Jake.

She looked at Jake and then at David, both of whom suddenly broke out in laughter.

“Don’t worry about it. It’s nothing important,” said Jake, with a groan.

Becky dropped her pan on the ground and hurried to his side. “You hurt yourself didn’t you. I told you it was too soon. Take off your shirt,” she demanded.

Jake didn’t dare
not
do what she asked. He knew he needed the bandage changed. He unbuttoned his shirt and shrugged it off his shoulder.

“It’s bleeding, not just seeping,” said Becky. “I’ll change the bandage but you need to stop trying to do what you shouldn’t. All the wound needs is a few more days and you’ll be able to work the river again without breaking it open.”

“All right,” said Jake, resigned to the fact he was going to have to lay low for a few days. “I’ll work with Hanna on her letters and David and I will take turns reading to her.” He looked around the camp. “Where is Hannah? I don’t hear her singing anymore.”

“She’s in the tent. Sleeping.” David yawned. “Sometimes, I wish I could take a nap, too.”

“Don’t we all, David, don’t we all,” agreed Becky.

Becky quickly changed Jake’s bandages. Dried blood caked the old bandage as fresh blood seeped on to it from where he’d opened the wound with his working.

“You’re lucky, it’s not as bad as I thought. There are a couple of small tears but for the most part it’s still together and I don’t think you’ll need more stitches. Do this again and I’m going take you to Doc Cochran.”

Jake felt like a chastised child but guessed he’d sort of been acting that way. He hadn’t listened to Liam or Becky when they told him to take it easy and let the wound heal. It bothered him that he couldn’t work. He was afraid Becky would start to compare him with Billy and he didn’t ever want to be lumped in with the likes of him.

~*~

Billy crept slowly toward the tent. They’d gone to bed long ago and would be asleep now. He’d waited until he was certain. Jake was wounded and Becky, well once Jake was out of the picture, Becky would be easy to control as she always was.

BOOK: Jake
6.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

6 Miles With Courage by LaCorte, Thomas
Fire Witch by Thea Atkinson
The Savage Dead by Joe McKinney
The Black Book of Secrets by F. E. Higgins
Lightbringer by McEntire, K.D.