Warrior (3 page)

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Authors: Elizabeth Lowell

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Western

BOOK: Warrior
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“Did anyone mention the name of the cat expert?” Nevada asked.

“I don’t think so. Why?”

For a moment Nevada said nothing, remembering Eden’s gentle voice and surprisingly strong hands, and the utter lack of fear in her eyes when she had seen the elemental violence in his.

Do you make a habit of collecting and taming wild animals?

No. I’m a wildlife biologist, not a zookeeper.

Eden’s voice, her scent, the tactile memory of her alluring warmth

they had haunted Nevada’s waking hours. They might have haunted his sleep as well, but he would never know. It was a pact he had made with himself years ago. He never remembered dreams.

“There was a young woman in West Fork last Saturday,” Nevada said evenly. “She said something about being a wildlife expert.”

“Last Saturday?” Ten said, his gray eyes narrowing.

Though Nevada had said nothing, word of the fight had gone through the Four Corners area of Colorado like forked lightning.

Nevada nodded.

“A woman, huh?”

Nevada nodded again.

“Pretty?” Ten asked, his handsome face expressionless.

“Why? You getting tired of Diana?”

The idea was so ridiculous that Ten laughed aloud. Then his smile vanished and he looked every bit as hard as his younger brother.

“The next time you go one on five,” Ten said, “I’d take it as a personal favor if you’d let me guard your back. Luke made the same offer. So did Cash.”

The left corner of Nevada’s mouth turned up very slightly, as close as he ever came to a smile. “Cash, too, huh? Does that mean he’s finally forgiven me for noticing that Mariah was pregnant before he did?”

“When a man is unsure of a woman, he’s apt to be a bit blind,” Ten said in a bland voice.

“He’s apt to be a horse’s buff.”

“Your turn will come.”

“Yours sure did,” Nevada retorted, remembering the tense months before Ten had finally admitted that he was irrevocably bound to Diana. “I’ll tell you, Tennessee, if I never tangle with you again, it will be too soon.”

“Yeah, well, the hands are taking bets on that one too, especially since word got out that Utah’s coming back as soon as he gets out of the hospital. Guess he’s finally gotten his fill of jungle fighting.”

“At least they don’t need to worry about Utah getting in a brawl over a woman. Not since Sybil.” Nevada leaned forward in the saddle. A flick of his hand freed the packhorse’s lead rope from the corral railing. “The real shame about Sybil is that she wasn’t a man,” Nevada continued, reining Target toward the mountains. “If she were a man, I’d have killed her.”

Before Ten could speak, Nevada kicked the big Appaloosa. “Shake a leg, Target. We’ve got a long ride ahead.”

Even with the eager, powerful Appaloosa beneath him, it was afternoon before Nevada rode into Wildfire Canyon’s wide mouth. In all but the worst winter storms, the canyon’s alignment with the prevailing winds kept the flat floor swept relatively free of snow. Patches of evergreens clothed the sloping sides of the canyon, tall trees whose ages were almost all the same. The fire that had given the canyon its name had swept through eighty years before, burning the living forest to ash, leaving behind a ghost forest of heat-hardened skeletons. A few of those skeletons still stood upright amid the new forest, their weather-smoothed shapes silver and black in the full sun or moonlight.

The on-again, off-again warmth of March had melted the snow in places, revealing dark ground. Snowdrifts remained in narrow gullies and ravines, and beneath the most dense forest cover. Yet even in the higher altitudes, winter was slowly losing its white grip on the land. Water sparkled and glittered everywhere, testimony to melting snow. Drops gathered into tiny rivulets, joined in thin streams, merged into small, rushing creeks. Today the drops would freeze again, but only for a short time. Soon they would be free to run down to the distant sea once more.

Soon, but not yet. The storm that had threatened three days before hadn’t materialized. It was coming now, though. As Target followed the zigzagging trail that led out of the northern end of Wildfire Canyon, Nevada could smell the storm on the wind, feel it in the icy fingers ruffling his beard and making his eyes sting. Even the rocks around him weren’t impervious. They had known the grip of countless winters, water silently freezing, expanding, splitting stones apart. Evidence of the silent, inexorable power of ice lay everywhere in the high reaches of the canyon, where slopes too steep to grow trees were covered with angular stones that had been chiseled from boulders and bedrock by countless picks of ice.

At the top of the steep trail, Nevada reined in and let Target rest for a few minutes. Between gusts of wind, the silence was complete. The tiniest sound came clearly through the air – a pebble rolling from beneath steel-shod hooves, a raven calling across the canyon. Target’s ears flicked and twitched nervously as he tried to hear every sound. When a pebble dislodged by water clattered down the slope, the horse’s nostrils flared, the skin on his shoulder flinched and he shied.

“Take it easy, boy,” Nevada said in a soothing voice as he gathered in the roping rein more tightly.

Even as Nevada’s left hand managed the reins, his right hand checked that the rifle was still in its saddle holster. The gesture was so automatic that he was unaware of it, legacy of commando training and years spent in places where to be unarmed was to die. The rifle’s cold, smooth stock came easily into his hand, then settled back into the sheath.

Target snorted and bunched his haunches, wanting to be free of the pressure of the bit. Nevada glanced at the packhorse. Daisy was ignoring Target’s nervousness.

“Settle down, knothead,” Nevada said calmly. “If there was anything around but wind and shadows, Daisy would know it. She has a nose like a hound.”

Target chewed resentfully on the bit as the wind gusted suddenly, raking the landscape with fingernails of ice. Nevada tugged his hat down more firmly and guided the horse out onto the exposed slope. For the first hundred yards, a faint, ragged line across the wind-scoured scree was the only sign of a trail. The line had been left by generations of deer, cougars, and occasional Indians. In modern times, deer and cougars still used the game trail, as did Rocking M cowhands who were working both Wildfire Canyon and the leased grazing lands beyond. Target was in the center of the scree when the black flash of a raven skimming over the land spooked him. Between one heartbeat and the next, Target tried to leap over his own shadow.

There was no time for Nevada to think, to plan, to escape. Reflex took over. Even as Target lost his footing on the loose stone, Nevada was kicking free of the stirrups, grabbing the rifle, and throwing himself toward the uphill side of the trail. Inches away from his rider’s body, Target’s powerful hooves flailed as the horse lost its balance and began rolling down the slope in a clattering shower of loose stone. Nevada fell too, turning and rolling rapidly, surrounded by loose rocks, no way to stop himself, nothing solid to hang on to.

At the bottom of the slope, a massive boulder stopped Nevada’s body. Before the last stone in the small landslide had stopped rolling, Target staggered to his feet, shook himself thoroughly, and looked around. When nothing happened, the horse walked calmly to the edge of the recent slide and looked for something edible. A few minutes later the packhorse joined Target, having found a less dangerous way to the bottom of the slope.

Before long the gray sky lowered and dissolved into the pale dance of countless snowflakes. The horses turned their tails to the wind and drifted before the storm.

Nevada lay unmoving, rifle in hand.

*

Baby’s ululating howl brought Eden to her feet in a rush of adrenaline. The wolf had been running free all day, for Eden hadn’t yet needed Baby’s keen nose. She would put him to work after the storm had passed, leaving a fragile shawl of white over the land. Then she would roam widely, noting and recording the cat tracks that would show clearly in the fresh snow. Once the snow melted away, Baby’s nose would make certain that Eden could follow the cats even across solid rock.

A steaming cup of coffee in her hand, Eden went to the cabin door, opened it and listened. The slow glide of snowflakes to the ground and muffled sounds limited visibility to a hundred feet.

Baby howled again, calling out in the eerie harmonics of his wolf father.

Eden listened closely and muttered, “Not his hunting song. Not his lonely song. Not his great-to-be-alive song.”

The haunting cry rose again, closer now, piercing the snow’s silence.

“I hear you, Baby. You’re coming back to me.” A black shape materialized at the edge of the snowfall. With the ghostly silence of smoke, Baby came across the meadow clearing to the cabin. There was a brief hesitation in his gait, a slight asymmetry in his stride, which was the legacy of the steel trap that had maimed him years before.

Instead of greeting Eden and going about his business, Baby caught her hand delicately in his mouth and looked at her with intent yellow eyes. Curiosity leaped in Eden. Baby rarely insisted on having her attention. When he did, it was to warn her that they weren’t alone any longer – men were somewhere near.

“Company is coming, hmm?” After what had happened in West Fork, Eden was glad for the presence of the huge, dark wolf. “Well, don’t worry. I just made a big pot of coffee. Come on in, Baby. We’ll greet whoever it is together.”

Eden tried to withdraw her hand. Politely, gently, Baby’s jaws tightened.

Curiosity gave way to a fresh rush of adrenaline in Eden. A picture condensed in her mind – eyes of pale icy green, a thick black pelt of hair and beard, a face that was too hard to be called handsome and too fiercely good-looking to be called anything else.

Stay away from me, Eden

I want you more than all the men in that bar put together.

It was not the first time Eden had thought of the dark stranger who had come to her aid. His image condensed between her eyes and the hearth fire, the wild sky, the rugged land. He haunted her with questions that couldn’t be answered.

Who are you, Nevada? Where are you? Is it your scent on the snow-wind that is calling to my wolf?

As soon as the hopeful thought came, Eden pushed it aside. Nevada hadn’t looked back after he had walked away from her. He hadn’t left any message for her the following morning. He hadn’t even told her his last name.

Eden looked into Baby’s eyes and wished futilely that she could truly communicate with him. Baby had been this insistent only once before, in Alaska, when it was a silvertip grizzly sniffing around downwind rather than a lonely trapper smelling smoke and hoping for a cup of fresh coffee.

“Are you sure it’s important, Baby? Mortimer J. Martin, Ph.D., personally assured me there were no bears left in this part of the Lower Forty-eight. That’s why I left my rifle with Dad.”

Baby made a soft, somehow urgent sound deep in his throat and tugged on Eden’s hand. Then he released her, trotted away about twenty feet and looked over his shoulder.

“You’re sure? Compared to the Yukon there isn’t enough snow to mention, but I’m really not dying for a hike in the white stuff. There’s not enough snowpack for cross-country skis or snowshoes, which means—”

Baby whined softly, pleading in the only way he could. Then he threw back his head and howled.

The hair on the back of Eden’s neck stirred in primal response. Not even for the grizzly had Baby been so insistent.

“Baby, stay.”

Knowing without looking that the wolf would obey, Eden spun around and ran back into the cabin. She grabbed a canteen, filled it with hot coffee, banked the hearth fire, yanked on two layers of snow gear, shrugged into the backpack she always kept ready to go and ran out the front door in less than three minutes. She glanced at her watch, wondering how long she would be gone. If necessary she could live out of her backpack for several days. She would just as soon have the comforts of the cabin, however.

“Okay, Baby. Let’s go.”

The wolf didn’t waste any time. He set off at a purposeful trot across the meadow through the evergreens. Eden walked swiftly behind, pacing herself so that she would neither tire quickly nor become sweaty. Sweat was one of the greatest hazards of snow country, for when a person stopped moving, sweat froze, creating a layer of ice against the skin that sapped warmth dangerously.

Baby was careful never to get out of Eden’s sight. Nor did he run with his nose to the ground as though following a trail. Gradually Eden realized that Baby was retracing his own steps – in places where snow had gathered, his tracks went in both directions.

Eden had been following Baby for ten minutes when she saw the first hoofprints in a patch of snow. Two horses, one with a rein or a rope dragging. They were headed roughly southeast and she was headed roughly north. Baby ignored the horse sign even though Eden could see it was very fresh. The softly falling snow hadn’t yet blurred the crisp edges of the tracks. She stopped, stared off through the snow and thought she saw a vague shape that could have been a horse standing in the shelter of a big evergreen.

“Baby!”

The wolf stopped, gave a short, sharp bark and resumed trotting.

After only an instant of hesitation, Eden kept on following Baby. She would trust the half-wild, half-tame animal’s uncanny instincts. If Baby wasn’t interested in the horse it was because he had more important game in mind.

Without turning aside even once, Baby retraced his own tracks. The forest ended at the foot of a scree slope. Automatically Eden checked the barren slope first. Even beneath the veil of falling snow, the story of what had happened was clear: at least one horse had come skidding and rolling down through the scree, starting a small rockslide in the process. Hoofprints led away from the disturbed ground. There was no sign of any horse nearby.

Baby never hesitated. He darted over the loose debris left by the slide and sat near a massive boulder ten yards from Eden. There the slide had parted like water, leaving behind larger rocks before closing around the downhill side of the car-size boulder.

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