Never Marry a Cowboy (25 page)

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Authors: Lorraine Heath

BOOK: Never Marry a Cowboy
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Jasper scoffed. “Surrender? Are you loco? I'm fixing to put you six feet under.”

Kit slowly, steadily moved his gaze from one man to the other until he'd given all six a pointed glare. “Then when you are ready, gentlemen, take your best shot, for I guarantee you that it shall be your last.”

 

Ashton awoke and smiled at the white rose resting beside her on the pillow. Kit had been here, and no doubt left her to sleep. She picked up the flower and inhaled the sweet scent.

Dawn had been easing over the horizon before she'd finally fallen asleep, Christopher's words tumbling through her mind. Her husband wasn't a murderer. He was a savior. Why had she ever thought otherwise?

She sat up in bed and glanced at the clock on the bedside table. A few minutes before noon. Kit had probably already had his breakfast and was now either visiting with his family or working in his office. She needed to talk with him, set things right between them.

She would still go to Dallas, but at least there would be no hard feelings between them. His place was in England, not beside her. But she wanted him to go with a clear conscience and the knowledge that she now understood his actions. She was not completely comfortable with them, but she also realized she was in no position to judge him.

She scrambled out of bed and quickly donned the dress he'd purchased the night before. She smiled as she glanced in the mirror. A perfect fit.

She unbraided her hair, brushed it vigorously, pulled it back, and tied a bright yellow ribbon around it to hold it in place. She would go to greater lengths to make herself attractive later. Right now, all she wanted was to see Kit, to explain that she understood, and to tell him that she loved him.

She opened the door and hurried down the stairs. Mrs. Gurney stood at the window in the front room, staring out.

“Mrs. Gurney, have you seen my husband this morning?” Ashton asked.

Mrs. Gurney spun around, horror reflected on her face. “He didn't tell you?”

“Didn't tell me what?” Ashton asked, foreboding sweeping through her. Had he already left to accept his place at Ravenleigh?

Mrs. Gurney bit her knuckle and shook her head. “Land o'goshen, he should have told you.”

Christopher walked out of his room and held his arms out toward her. “Ashton, come here.”

She took a step back, afraid for reasons she couldn't understand. If Christopher was still here, then Kit hadn't left, but everyone was too solemn. “Where's Kit?”

“It's them outlaws,” Mrs. Gurney blurted. “They called him out, and he's facing them this very minute.”

“Outlaws?”

“The men who attacked the stagecoach,” Christopher explained. “Apparently, they are to have a duel.”

“A duel? You mean a gunfight?”

Christopher looked surprised. “Yes, of course, guns are involved in a duel.”

Ashton shook her head, refusing to believe what she was hearing. “No, no. It's not a duel like you think. It's a bloodbath. He'll be killed. We have to stop it!” She began running for the door.

Christopher grabbed her, holding her close, pinning her body against his. “It's too late to stop it.”

She fought to break free. “You don't understand. He thinks I hate him. I have to tell him that I understand now. I love—”

She heard exploding thunder, a deafening cacophony as round after round was fired.

“No!” she cried, slumping against Christopher, her body trembling and tears streaming down her face. “No.”

But neither her words nor her tears could stop the echo of gunfire.

“I
need a bloody drink,” Gray said, a tremble in his voice.

“I need a bloody bottle,” Harry responded, his voice equally shaky. “Two bottles. Three. Three bottles sound quite extraordinary. Shall we each have three bottles of whiskey?”

“None for me,” Kit said, as he walked toward the men sprawled over the ground, their blood seeping into the earth. Such a damned waste. But at least the town was safe from this particular group of outlaws. As were stagecoaches and saloon floors.

“Harry!”

Kit glanced over his shoulder and watched Jessye throw her arms around Harry's neck. Harry latched his mouth onto hers with such passion that Kit knew a pang of envy.

Harry leaned back. “I couldn't leave Kit to face them alone.”

Tears filled Jessye's eyes as she nodded. “I know.” She looked past Harry and held Kit's gaze. “Would have been here myself if I wasn't afraid we might leave our daughters orphans.”

“You made the right choice, Jessye,” Kit said quietly. “You always did where your daughters are concerned.”

She picked up Harry's cane and handed it to him. “Let's go home and give those girls a hug.”

Harry slipped his arm around her. “Let's stop by the saloon and pick up a bottle of whiskey on the way, shall we? Then I feel a strong need to practice giving you a daughter.”

“I'm already expecting.”

“Yes, but I need to stay in practice so I can give you another.”

A movement caught Kit's attention, and he turned to see Abbie walking toward Grayson. She stopped within an arm's reach of him. “I lost you once before. Don't know how I would have survived losing you again.”

Grayson drew her into his embrace, lifted her off the ground, and kissed her deeply. When he released her, he said, “Let's gather up the children and go on a picnic.”

Kit watched them begin to walk away. Grayson turned slightly. “Did you want to join us?”

And witness what he would never possess
? He shook his head. “No, I need to finish up here.”

Grayson nodded and pulled his wife more snugly against his side as they walked toward the livery stable.

Thank God, his friends had survived unscathed, although he suspected it would be several nights before either of them slept peacefully. Even when the action was justified, taking a life was not an easy burden to carry.

“What do you want me to do with 'em, Marshal?”

Kit turned to the mortician. “Pilfer their pockets, Mr. Dawson. See if you can determine who they are. Then use plain pine boxes and bury them at the back of the church cemetery. Fortune will cover the expenses.”

“I'll handle the matter right away.”

Kit saw people cautiously leaving their shops. “Make it quick,” he said to Dawson. “This sight is not one people need to witness.”

He walked toward the boardinghouse, knowing he had other matters that needed his attention. The door swung open and Ashton burst outside, running across the lawn as though the demons of hell nipped at her heels. Tears dampened her cheeks. She flung her arms around him, and he could feel her body trembling violently.

“What's wrong?” he asked.

He gazed over her head to see Christopher standing on the porch. He turned his attention back to Ashton, slipped his finger beneath her chin, and tilted her face up. He captured a falling tear with his thumb. “Why are you crying?”

“You went to face death without even telling me goodbye.”

“I'd made arrangements to see that you were well cared for.”

She stepped out of his embrace. “Is that all you think I wanted?”

“Quite honestly, yes.” She closed her eyes and tears leaked from the corners. “Look beyond me, Ashton. I am Death. I am what you fear above all else.”

She opened her eyes to reveal limpid pools of sadness.

“For a while, with you, I was able to forget. You gave me moments of great joy that shall sustain me for the remainder of my life. But you'll never be able to look at me again and not see the darkened shadows that hover inside my soul, and I shall see them reflected in your eyes, and that, sweetling, I cannot bear.”

“You can't possibly know how I'll look at you!”

“Yes I can, because you've looked at me in that manner since our first night in the cave.”

She looked as though she wanted to say more, but her eyes suddenly widened and she gasped. “You're bleeding.”

He glanced at his throbbing shoulder. “Just a nick. Bullet went through.”

She grabbed his uninjured arm. “Where's the doctor?”

“The other end of town.”

“We need to get your wound taken care of before infection sets in.”

The determination in her voice made him want to smile. He looked past her to Christopher. “I have some business to finish up, and then I'll return so we can settle our affairs.”

Christopher nodded and walked into the boardinghouse.

“You're shaking,” Ashton said as she strolled beside him, clinging to his arm.

“I always do after I've killed someone.”

She jerked her gaze to his. “You enjoy reminding me that you kill.”

“Not particularly, but it is a fact of my life, and it's suddenly become imperative that you not forget it.”

“Do you ever count how many lives you might have saved?”

“No, because the count is inconsequential. I could not save the lives that mattered most.”

 

Ashton walked around the jail, taking note of its stark, drab appearance. Kit had told her that he'd needed to tend to some paperwork so they'd come here after the doctor had stitched up his shoulder.

She had so much to tell him and didn't know where to begin.

She stopped inside a doorway and peered into a desolate room that she was certain had once been used for storage. It held a cot and a carton of books. Clothes hung on the wall beside a shaving stand. It wasn't a place of solitude, but of loneliness. “Is this where you live?” she asked.

Kit glanced up from the papers strewn across his desk and met her gaze. “Yes.”

“It's not very fancy.”

“I don't need fancy. I only need useful.”

The front door opened and a tall, thin man walked in carrying a small box. “I was able to get some identification off a couple of 'em.” He set the box on the desk. “I don't think these here things originally belonged to any of them.”

Kit pulled a watch out the box.

“The initials on that there watch is CS. I don't think
any of them had a name that matched the initials,” the man said.

She watched Kit nod and place the watch carefully back into the box.

“I think I've managed to identify them from the wanted posters.” He closed his eyes and sighed. “A shame I didn't check the posters the night they were shooting up Harry's saloon. Three innocent men might still be alive.”

“Can't see the death of these outlaws as any great loss.”

Kit opened his eyes. “The ending of any life is a loss, Mr. Dawson. Even when that life was not put to good use.”

“Iffen you say so. Me, I say good riddance.”

Mr. Dawson turned and tipped his hat at Ashton. “We are surely proud to have your husband as our marshal, Mrs. Montgomery.”

“So proud that you all stood beside him.”

“We was there, we just wasn't visible on account of him telling us—”

“Thank you, Mr. Dawson,” Kit cut in.

“It wasn't our fight and we was to stay out of the way.”

“I think you've adequately taken care of the business at hand, Mr. Dawson,” Kit said. “Once I've finished completing the forms, I'll see that you're reimbursed for expenses.”

“'Preciate it, Marshal.”

Mr. Dawson walked out of the office, leaving a deafening silence in his wake. Kit cast Ashton a quick glance before he returned to scribbling on his papers.

“You told the townspeople to stay out of sight?”

Kit continued to write. “Wounded pride brought Jasper back to Fortune. His quarrel was with me.”

She studied the room where he lived. “It looks like a prison.”

“Of course it looks like a prison. It's a jail.”

“I meant the place where you live. There's not an ounce of comfort anywhere here.”

“I have my books.”

“You're punishing yourself.”

She heard the scratching of his pen fall into silence.

“Other than irritating the devil out of me, what are you doing here, Ashton?”

She crossed the room and planted her hands on his desk. “Trying to figure you out. You couldn't save Clarisse, so you try to save everyone else. You feel guilty for taking her life, so you place yourself in situations where you might lose yours.”

“Asinine assumptions.”

“But true.”

He tossed his pen aside, leaned back in his chair, and pinned her with his hardened gaze. “Your point being?”

“I love you.”

“You can't possibly, after knowing all that you know.” He picked up his pen and began to write fervently. “I have details to which I must attend. So many details. Sometimes I can get lost in them…incredibly lost…that for a second or two I can forget the feel of her final breath whispering across my flesh. I can forget…I need you to leave. I have to fill out reports on the deaths that occurred today. Detailed re
ports. I can't concentrate on the details with you standing there.”

Slowly, quietly, she walked around the desk and knelt beside him. She saw the tears welling in his eyes, and her own eyes began to burn.

“I must concentrate on the details. Will you please leave?” he asked.

“No,” she replied softly.

He jerked his head around and within the depths of his eyes, she saw the agony with which he'd lived for so long. Tears rolled along his cheeks. Reaching up, she cradled his face. “Oh, Christian.”

“A completely inappropriate name for me. One of life's sick jokes.”

“I don't think so.”

His fingers came incredibly close to touching her face before he curled them into a fisted ball.

“Giving Clarisse an abundance of pain medication seemed the right thing to do at the moment. She was in so much agony.” He released a wretched sob. She rose and slipped her arms around him, pressing his face to her bosom. “Then she was dead and the doubts and regrets slammed into me. And they have plagued me since. It was my suffering that I wanted to end. I could not bear to watch her valiant struggle when I knew the outcome. I wanted her to face death with a measure of dignity before her disease stripped it all away.” She felt the shudder rack his body. “Selfish, so incredibly selfish of me. She was not mine to love. Her life was not mine to end.”

She pressed a kiss to his neck. “I love you.”

“How can you now that you know what I am capable of doing?”

Leaning back, she trailed her fingers along the tears staining his face and held his gaze. “I love you more. You must have known the guilt you would suffer if you granted her wish.”

“My suffering is nothing compared to what hers had become.”

“But yours is eternal, and you knew it would be when you made your decision.”

He slammed his eyes closed. “Yes.”

“Will you take my life?”

He opened his eyes and captured her gaze. “If you ask it of me.”

She brushed her lips lightly over his. “I won't.”

“That is easy enough to say before every second is measured by the depth of your pain.”

Standing, she took his hand. “Come with me.”

“I have things to which I must attend.”

“So do I.” She tugged on his hand. “Lie on your cot with me.”

He shook his head. “Ashton, bringing you pleasure will not solve our problems.”

“I only want you to hold me.”

“It is a very narrow cot.”

“Then hold me close.”

He stood and followed her as she led the way to a room she'd already come to despise. How could he have lived here all these years?

He stretched out on his side on the cot with his back against the wall. Gingerly, she lay down, pressing her body closely against his and wrapping her arm around his waist so she wouldn't fall onto the floor.

“You see? I told you it was narrow,” he said.

She lifted her gaze to his. “How do you sleep here?”

A corner of his mouth lifted. “On my side.”

“It has to be the most uncomfortable thing I've been on.” She unbuttoned the first button on his shirt. “You don't wear a hair shirt, do you?”

“No, but I do give myself mental floggings every morning.”

“Why?”

He sighed deeply. “I took an innocent life, Ashton.”

“Christopher knows.”

His eyes darkened with fury. “You told him?”

“He told me.”

He raised up on an elbow. “What do you mean, he told you? He doesn't know I killed Clarisse.”

“You told me that you know each other's thoughts.”

“Not this one. This one I buried deeply inside myself. He couldn't have found it with a shovel.”

She placed her hand over his heart. “He knows you, Kit, as well as you know yourself. Why do you think he sent for you?”

She watched the fury recede to allow in the doubts.

“He wanted me to kill her?”

She nodded. “Because he couldn't bring himself to do it.”

He cradled her face. “He told you this?”

“Last night. I couldn't sleep and I went to the kitchen. We shared some cocoa.”

Kit gazed at the far wall and nodded. “He has a passion for cocoa.”

He lay back down, and she could see within his eyes all the battles he waged. Disbelief, acceptance, understanding. But no anger. She had expected anger.

“He used you,” she pointed out, “because he was too weak—”

“Because he loved her too much.”

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