MB01 - Unending Devotion (28 page)

Read MB01 - Unending Devotion Online

Authors: Jody Hedlund

Tags: #Inspirational, #Romance, #Christian, #Historical

BOOK: MB01 - Unending Devotion
3.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Connell could recite Dad’s words in his sleep. Yet for once he wanted to interrupt Dad’s tirade and ask him if all his success had made him happy. Was he satisfied with life?

Even more than that, didn’t he have the least remorse for the ruthlessness with which they operated? How could they live with themselves if they continued to overlook crime and injustice and evil, just so they could heap up more wealth they didn’t need?

And how could they live with themselves if they didn’t start taking better care of their workers?

Mam had told him about one of Tierney’s sawmill workers who had fallen in the path of a large circular saw and been cut in two. Mam had been taking food to the wife and child left behind. McCormick Lumber didn’t offer any compensation to the mill workers or to the shanty boys, not for injuries or for death.

But he couldn’t help thinking that maybe they wouldn’t have to worry about Carr or other men like him stirring up problems with their workers if they provided an environment where the workers were treated with common decency.

Connell ran his finger around the silver rim of his coffee cup. His mind filled with numbers—the low wages and the long hours—and he blocked out his father’s angry voice. Numbers had always been his escape.

The clearing of a throat from the entryway of the dining room brought his head up.

His gaze landed upon Lily—but not the Lily he’d come to know. Instead, somehow she’d been transformed. She wore a deep red silk dress that was slim fitting, outlining her womanly curves. The skirt was fashionably layered with a mound of ruffles in the back. And the bodice was equally flattering with velvet trim and braided cuffs.

He quickly pushed back his chair and stood, his heart clattering with wild admiration.

She gave him a shy smile. “What do you think? Your mother insisted I wear one of her gowns today while mine is laundered.”

The dark red of the dress brought out the rich walnut of her eyes and the creamy honey of her skin. Even her curls had been brushed into submission and coiled up onto her head with short ringlets dangling by her ears, as if to entice him to kiss her there—again.

“You look lovely.” His words came out more breathless than he’d intended.

Her thick lashes fell against flushed cheeks. “Your mother fixed my hair too.”

“She did a fine job.”

When her lashes lifted, they knocked him off his feet and swept him into the air. There was no doubt about it, she’d captured his heart and stolen his affection.

He may have bantered with her about it, but the truth was he’d never so thoroughly and completely cared about a woman before—not even Rosemarie.

“Son.” Dad had risen from his chair. The angry lines had disappeared, replaced by a calm façade. “Ye are forgetting to introduce us to yer guest.”

For all his ambition, Dad had the decency to be respectful toward women—at least when they were in his presence.

“This is Lily Young.” Connell smiled at her. “She works with Oren Evans, a photographer with a shop over on Washington Avenue. She came north with Oren to help him take pictures among the camps and to look for her sister.”

Dad nodded at her. “Nice to meet you, Miss Young.” And even though his eyes narrowed with the frustration of Connell’s involvement and all it had cost him, he was polite enough not to say anything more about it.

“I’m pleased to meet you too, Mr. McCormick.”

Connell shuffled around the table toward her.

But Tierney sat back, pushing his chair into Connell’s path. “Don’t forget to tell Dad Lily’s the whore you were living with up in Harrison.”

Lily gasped softly. Her face paled and she took a step back, her eyes widening with horrified embarrassment.

Dad’s jaw clenched and his eyes darkened.

Tierney grinned up at Connell and then took a slurp of coffee.

Fury set Connell’s blood on fire. He grabbed Tierney by the front of his shirt, crunching the wrinkled cotton into a fist. “I told you not to call her that ever again.”

“Or what? You gonna beat me up?” Tierney’s face held no fear—only scoffing.

Suddenly Connell saw himself reflected in his brother’s eyes—a weakling. He was the first to give in to pressure, the responsible one who did what was expected, the kind one who never fought back.

Tierney thought he was weak.

Was he?

Connell gripped Tierney’s shirt harder, pulling him up and suspending him above his chair by at least two inches. “I oughta give you the licking you deserve.”

“I’m so scared.” Tierney’s grin crooked to one side, daring Connell to do something.

Lily took another step back out of the room. The pain in her face reached out and gripped his heart, wrenching and slicing it so that her pain became his.

How could he stand back and do nothing? Especially when Tierney was attacking her honor?

“Good ol’ Connell,” Tierney said. “Go ahead. Hit me. I dare you.”

Connell lifted Tierney another inch.

“Or are you too nice to fight me in front of your whore?”

“She’s not a whore!” Fury tore through Connell again, and he knew he could do no less than fight for Lily’s honor.

He slammed his fist into Tierney’s gut with all the strength he’d developed lifting logs and cutting trees.

Tierney grunted at the unexpected blow and fell into his chair. Surprise flitted across his face.

But before his brother could stand up and swing back, Connell pounded his fist into him again, his resentment finally unleashed. He knocked Tierney backward in his chair so that he crashed against the floor. Tierney rolled and tried to scramble away, but Connell jumped on him. And this time he swung his knuckles into his brother’s face, clobbering him first in one eye and then the other, then in the mouth.

Tierney roared with sudden rage and took a swing at him, his fist connecting with Connell’s eye.

At the jolting pain, Connell reared his head. But Tierney’s other fist slammed into his mouth with the force of a man well practiced in the art of brawling.

Pain radiated through Connell’s jaw, and the sting of his tooth slicing into his lip took his breath away.

The sticky metallic taste of blood oozed onto his tongue.

For an instant Connell feared the fight would end in his humiliation, that Tierney might overtake him, and that Dad and Lily would witness the defeat.

But he only needed to picture the humiliation in Lily’s face at Tierney’s insult and his strength returned with renewed effort. He couldn’t let Tierney win. Everything within him demanded that he avenge Lily’s honor and teach Tierney never to insult her again.

He struck his brother again and again. The heat of his anger blinded him to anything except the fact that Tierney needed to suffer.

“That’s enough, son.” As if from a distance, Dad’s voice broke through the fury.

But Connell couldn’t stop himself from slugging Tierney in the stomach, only faintly realizing his brother wasn’t fighting back anymore.

“Enough.” Dad’s hands gripped him. With a strength that belied his age, he heaved Connell off Tierney and tossed him away like good-for-nothing cull lumber.

Connell bumped into a pedestal. The Oriental vase toppled and smashed to the floor. His shoulder slammed into a porcelain plate mounted on the wall. It too crashed against the hard wood.

He caught and steadied himself, his breath coming in heaving gasps.

Tierney lay sprawled next to his overturned chair—unmoving.

Fear spurted through Connell. Had he killed his brother?

Dad shoved Tierney with the tip of his boot.

Tierney groaned.

“He’ll survive,” Dad said.

A sick load dumped into Connell’s stomach. What had he done? What had come over him to resort to such violence?

“The boy needed a good kick in the pants.” Dad leveled a look at Connell that contained a hint of admiration—or the closest thing to admiration Dad could muster. “It was long overdue.”

Connell swallowed a rise of nausea. Was Dad proud of him for beating Tierney senseless? After he’d tried all his life to do the right things, to work hard, to make Dad proud, he’d finally earned the coveted favor by getting in a fistfight?

He shook his head, disgust adding to the heavy weight in his middle. He pressed the coarse sleeve of his mackinaw to his busted lip and winced at the pain.

“Get up.” Dad nudged Tierney.

His brother rolled to his side and groaned again.

A flash of red in the door caught Connell’s attention. He blinked through the painful swelling in his eye in time to see Lily turn away.

“Lily. Wait.”

But she dashed across the hallway and disappeared.

He shoved away from the wall and skirted past Tierney.

“Good fight,” Tierney croaked.

Connell stopped and stared at his brother.

Blood trickled from Tierney’s nose and dripped onto the thick Turkish rug. He cracked one eye into a narrow slit, and a corner of his mouth lifted into a grin. “Guess you’re gonna marry that woman.”

Connell’s heartbeat slammed to a halt.

“You never fought like that for Rosemarie.” Tierney edged himself up onto his elbows, cringing with each slight movement. “Guess that means you’ve finally found someone worth fighting for.”

Tierney’s words were like a fist in his gut, knocking the wind out of him. Tierney was right—at least about not fighting for Rosemarie. The day he’d found her with Tierney, he’d walked away. Sure, he’d been outraged and devastated at Tierney’s betrayal. But he’d retreated like he’d always done. He’d opted for peace and safety.

What had happened this time to push him to fight for Lily?

He’d grown to care about her. He wouldn’t deny that. He glanced to the hallway, and his heart resumed beating at double the speed.

But he couldn’t marry Lily. Could he?

“Don’t worry,” Tierney mumbled. “I won’t try anything on her while you’re gone.”

If Tierney had meant to reassure him, his promise had the opposite effect. With a growl, Connell stuck his boot onto Tierney’s breastbone and pressed down.

Tierney cried out as Connell twisted his heel deeper.

“If Lily tells me that you so much as look at her the wrong way, I’ll make you wish you were blind.”

Tierney gave a weak laugh.

“And leave Daisy alone too. Stay away from her. Stay away from them both.”

He gave Tierney a last shove before stepping away from him. He didn’t know when he’d have the chance to return to Bay City to see Lily, not during the busiest time of the lumber season. Of course Mam had reassured him the girls could live there as long as they needed.

But if he wasn’t around to make sure Tierney stayed away, how would he be able to keep them safe?

“Just go home.” Connell’s tone was as hard as his muscles. “And start being a good husband and father.”

He started toward the door, but Dad shoved the stack of bills against his chest. “Take this. Clean up the mess ye made. And leave James Carr alone.”

Connell hesitated. He’d stood up to Tierney. Could he stand against the pressure of Dad too?

Dad slapped the wad harder.

Connell took it and stuffed it into the inside pocket of his mackinaw. “I’m taking the cash, but I’m going to handle the situation the way I think is best.”

Then, without waiting for Dad’s reaction, he exited the room.

“Lily,” he called softly. His footsteps echoed in the deserted entryway. He strode toward the parlor and peeked in.

She was standing near a big bay window and staring through a crack in the thick curtains.

“Lily?”

She didn’t turn. Instead, she lifted her chin.

“I’m sorry about what Tierney said.” Connell stepped into the room and made his way around the love seat.

“I promise he won’t demean you like that again,” he said, coming up behind her.

She stared outside at the snow-covered lawn and the wide muddy street beyond.

He waited for her to turn. The lacy collar of her dress covered most of her neck, leaving only the long graceful curve behind her ears exposed. The soft creaminess beckoned him to bend and taste, even though he knew he wouldn’t, or he’d unleash the passion that was growing each time he kissed her.

Her shoulders and back were rigid.

“Lily,” he whispered, daring to touch a hand to her waist.

She didn’t resist him.

Slowly he spun her around until she faced him. And he tipped her chin up until she had no choice but to look at him.

Her eyes glistened with sadness. “I wanted your family to like me.”

“They do like you.”

“They think I’m a loose woman like Daisy.”

“Don’t listen to what Tierney says.”

“I’m from a completely different class altogether, and now the rumors only make it worse.”

“You’re not from a different class. My parents started as nothing more than poor Irish immigrants.” He released his hold on her chin. “Besides, I didn’t take you as the type of woman who cares what others think about her.”

“You’re right.”

“We don’t have anything to be ashamed of.” At least mostly. He couldn’t help feeling slightly guilty for the moment of intimacy he’d shared with her in front of Rosemarie. He’d reacted out of anger and hurt. But still, he shouldn’t have done it.

She lifted her fingers to his face and poised them above his eye. “Your face is a mess.”

“That’s very kind of you to say.” He tried to grin, but winced at the pain in his lip instead. “I defended your honor and got myself battered in the process.”

She smiled. “You were really brave.”

“It was a first. I’ve never fought anyone like that before.”

“Well, you handled it as well as any shanty-boy fight I’ve ever seen.” She skimmed her fingers over the puffy skin next to his eye.

His breath hitched in his chest.

She was standing less than six inches away and was altogether too beautiful. When she lifted her fingers to his swollen lip, his entire body ignited with the touch.

The softness of her graze reminded him of the gentle sweetness of her lips.

He could probably sneak another kiss. They were alone. No one would know. He was leaving. What harm could come from kissing her again?

Other books

Death Benefits by Thomas Perry
djinn wars 03 - fallen by pope, christine
The Bag of Bones by Vivian French
Balestone by Toby Neighbors
A Matter of Souls by Denise Lewis Patrick
Near a Thousand Tables by Felipe Fernandez-Armesto
Viking's Orders by Marsh, Anne
No More Black Magic by A. L. Kessler
Marea viva by Cilla Börjlind, Rolf Börjlind