Read Wolver's Gold (The Wolvers) Online
Authors: Jacqueline Rhoades
"Mrs. Hornmeyer? Shall I tell you what Bertie and I were speaking of back in Room 3? Then you'll share a secret and a burden of mine."
Mrs. Hornmeyer's red rimmed eyes sparked with interest. She patted the corner of her neatly made bed, inviting Rachel to sit. "If we're going to be sharing our secrets, dear, perhaps you should call me Liddy."
Daisy's bright yellow carriage
careening past the Hotel's front porch was what caught Rachel's eye. The fancy open carriage was the same color as the body of the big Victorian house, with wheel spokes painted a garish purple and seats upholstered in pink to mimic the trim on the house.
The neatly painted sign by the brick walk that
led to the house read 'Miss Daisy's Bouquet,' in fancy script and beneath it, in plain bold letters, 'Bordello', and beneath that, 'Family Tours at 10, 12, 2, and 4. Adult Tours at 11, 1, 5 and 7. No children allowed without accompanying adult.'
The carriage flew past at least three times a day, carrying
two or three of the flamboyantly dressed flowers, as Miss Daisy called the girls who made up her bouquet. Soiled Doves is what they were, and the tourists loved their ribald jokes and raucous laughter. Such places were an essential part of any large Victorian aged town in the American west and Gold Gulch prided itself on its authenticity.
The tourists never cottoned to the fact that the girls weren't playing fictitious role
s. They were the real thing and, after closing the gates to outsiders each evening, the bordello was as busy with wolver business as the saloon.
The goings on at Daisy's Bouquet
was a secret everyone knew, but no one talked about. The subject was never broached among the upstanding ladies since they weren't supposed to know what went on behind those bright yellow walls, though a couple of them had resided there before finding respectable mates.
Rachel envied the Soiled Doves,
another secret of hers, not for what they did so much as their freedom to do it. No one frowned or scolded when they laughed too loud. No one turned up their nose when a flower forgot her corset or turned their back and huffed in disgust when one of the girls showed too much leg. Daisy paid others to wash and clean. The flowers hardly worked at all during the day. They took turns leading tours through the house or playing hide and seek with tourist children.
For some reason,
Challenger McCall came to mind, though she couldn't imagine why. She shrugged. Perhaps it was because he was a fine specimen and the flowers would probably have a high time over at the Bordello tonight. And a profitable one. Lucky them.
She, on the other hand, had to get the
Tea tourists out of the dining room, sweep up, mop up, get supper for the hotel guests on the table, iron a fresh shirtwaist for tomorrow…
"Will you be open Thanksgiving Day?" a pleasant faced woman asked, distracting Rachel from her thoughts and yet adding to them. "There's only my husband and myself and I get so tired of cooking."
"So do I," she wanted to say, "In fact, I'm so tired, I could cry." But she smiled pleasantly and said instead, "No, Ma'am, I'm afraid not, but we will be open that weekend."
"That's disappointing," the woman said, and then she shrugged. "Ah, well, I suppose it's not fair to expect you to work just because I don't want to."
How right she was, but again, Rachel only smiled and exchanged her thought for a pleasant comment.
"I'll still be cooking," she said, cheerfully, "We have a community Thanksgiving. The whole town will be there."
"Did you hear that, Harry? That's so sweet!" the woman said to her husband, "Wouldn't it be wonderful to turn back the clock and live the simple life they lived back then; no rushing here and there, and spending time with neighbors instead of being distracted with TV or computers."
"I'll take that check, now," Harry told Rachel and to his wife, "I want to get
back to the hotel in time to catch the end of the ball game."
"You see?" the woman laughed.
Rachel took the bill from her apron pocket and waited while the man fished his credit card from his wallet. She did see, but the woman didn't. Like most people, this woman saw the past as a simpler time, less stressful than the modern world, more peaceful. They thought it quaint and enviable that the folks of Gold Gulch lived that life even when the town was closed to tourists. They had no idea of the endless drudgery involved.
Rachel ran the credit card through the machine concealed behind a high wall built atop the counter to further the illusion that this was
the 1800s and electricity was a thing of the future.
'A necessary evil' is what Mayor Hoffman called
electricity and each business and household was restricted in its use. Rachel had a vacuum, for instance, but she could only use it before or after business hours. It was the same for washers and dryers, which were a godsend, though the all-natural fabrics still had to be ironed. Refrigerators, for businesses at least, were required by law.
Tourists often commented on two features that couldn't be hidden; flushing toilets and hot, running water. Shouldn't there be outhouses, they'd laugh. Rachel would laugh with them, but modern bathrooms were one thing she wouldn't mind giving up. Each one of the hotel's
fifteen bedrooms had one and each one needed to be cleaned.
Bertie, who shared most duties with Rachel, was just finishing up when Rachel came back to the kitchen, having finished her dining room chores.
"Pots and pans are done," she said as soon as Rachel came through the door. She drew her shawl around her shoulders and picked up the two plates covered in foil;
supper for her and Victor. "And you remember to tell that Eustace if he soaks my fry pan one more time, his keester's goin' to be the next thing frying in it. Where is the little weasel anyway? Always disappearing when there's work to be done."
Rachel would have challenged the criticism of Eustace, but she knew Bertie didn’t mean it. The two made a game of bickering and complaint.
"Papa sent him to fetch luggage. We have a new guest. Remember?" she asked tiredly. The extra money would be welcome, but it meant more work as well.
"
Ah, yes, the new sheriff with the funny name. What was it again?"
"
Might be new sheriff," Rachel corrected, "and I don't think there's anything funny about Challenger McCall. It's a very masculine name and it suites him. As it would any officer of the law," she added when Bertie snickered.
The cook
nodded, but her lips kept twitching. "Where's your father? Sleepin' or primpin' to go out?"
"Sleeping and don't start, Bertie."
"It would be a waste of breath. I know you love him," the older woman said with as much as kindness as her personality allowed, "It don't mean I have to and it don't change what he is."
"Please?" Rachel knew how Bertie felt about Joseph
us Kincaid, but she just couldn't listen to another tirade about her father's selfishness. "Not tonight."
Bertie must have seen it in Rachel's face because she changed the subject. "That guest feller,
the might-be new sheriff, he alone or got somebody with him?"
"He has a dog, a big one, and Papa woke up in time to tell him he could keep it in the room."
Rachel tried repeatedly to enforce the no dog rule, but Papa, just as repeatedly, rescinded it and it was Rachel who was left to scrub out the stains the animals left in the carpets or the puddles they left in the hall.
Bertie whipped off her shawl and reached for another plate from the shelf. "Not likely he had supper. I'll just fill a plate with leftovers and you can bring it to him when he comes in." She
loaded a plate with roast beef and added a dab of potato salad and coleslaw on the side. "I'll put it right here next to Eustace's supper."
"Bertie," Rachel warned.
"What? The man might be hungry," she said, "and as he's paying for his supper, he ought to get one."
Rachel dug in the pocket of her apron and pulled out the
day's tips. She doled out some to Bertie, saved some for Eustace and some for the cookie jar on the top shelf over the stove and the rest would go in the bag for Arnold Slocum, the pack's banker.
"You shouldn't," Bertie said, but it didn't stop her from stuffing the money in her own apron pocket. "One of these days Arnie's gonna catch on."
All money earned was supposed to be turned in to The Bank where Arnold Slocum withheld the proper taxes and paid the pack's bills. He then returned what was left to the people who earned it.
"You think Daisy's girls turn in all of their tips?" she asked as she always did.
"Daisy's girls earn their tips from the men's pay packets. That's different," Bertie answered as she always did.
"
Of course it is. We work for it," Rachel told her with a wink. "Don't spend it all in one place."
Later, much later, when the day's work was almost done, she heard Eustace laughing, and the new guest shushing him, as they came in through the back entrance with the luggage that should have been brought in hours ago. She left them to it, though she would get after Eustace later for leaving her to do all of the cleanup alone. She wasn't his regular employer, but she fed him three squares a day and gave him a warm, dry place to sleep in the shed. He did his bathing and she did his wash at the hotel, too, so she shouldn't feel guilty for expecting something in return.
But as soon as she thought it, she felt just that. Eustace might be an omega in the pack, the lowest of the low, but he earned his keep far more than many of the higher ups and she shouldn't begrudge him a few hours of fun.
She wasn’t sure what he’d done to be reduced to his low station. No one spoke of it as if it was too shameful to whisper. It wasn’t because of his handicaps, no matter what the Second hinted.
She put their suppers
on the table with forks and napkins, but it was only Eustace who came whistling down the stairs a few minutes later, and swaggered into the kitchen on his crooked legs. He was grinning like the cat who stole the cream.
"Don't know why we had to drag all that shit up there, when we're gonna drag
it all down tomorrow," he said.
He smelled of the
pickled eggs they served at the saloon and beer had loosened his tongue enough for bad words to slip out, something that rarely happened in front of Rachel. She ought to reprimand him for it, but didn't have the heart.
"Why's that, Eustace?" she asked instead,
because she knew he'd want her to and she was curious. "Is he leaving tomorrow?" She poured the last of the lemonade in a glass and set it on the table next to his napkin and fork.
"Yep."
The lemonade teetered, but didn't spill.
"He
's already met with the Mayor, then?" The Mayor was Sterling Hoffman, the Alpha of Gold Gulch pack. Her curiosity grew along with something else she couldn't identify.
"Yep."
"So he didn't get the job?" Was it disappointment she felt? Surely not.
"Yep."
With each single word answer, Eustace's grin g
rew wider and Rachel's annoyance grew along with it. She blew at the tendril of hair that always managed to fall down the middle of her forehead when her patience was wearing thin. Then she remembered the bargain she'd made. She pulled the remainder of her tips from her apron pocket. Adding her cookie jar money to Eustace's portion, she slapped it on the table and sat.
"Tell," she insisted.
"Every word."
Eustace's grin disappeared. "Aw, Miss Rachel, I was just having some fun watching
the looks on your face. You sure do got some doozies. I don't want your money."
"Never mind the look
s on my face and a bargain is a bargain. Sit in that chair and tell me what happened."
Eustace now looked ready to begin. He sat at the table and leaned forward,
fork in fist, his body braced on his forearms.
"Well," he said, drawing the word out, "He's
movin' out, but he's not movin' on. No, ma'am, he's stayin' right here in Gold Gulch. We got us a new sheriff in town, Miss Rachel, and he's movin' into the back room of the jail." Eustace started in on his dinner.
"Oh. I thought he would stay here," she said, this time making sure whatever it was she was feeling didn't show. "We could use the money."
"The Mayor looked disappointed, too, and said he's welcome to stay here, but McCall says he and his dog are used to their own company and don't need much in the way of space."
"I think, perhaps, we should call him Mr. McCall, Eustace," Rachel chided gently. "He's neither family nor friend."
He seemed so proud and happy in the use of Mr. McCall's familiar name, but someone in Eustace's position needed to be careful.
"Yes he is," Eustace said, a bit defensively
, Rachel thought. "You want this from the beginning or just the gist."
"From the beginning," she said decisively. She was paying for it, wasn't she? She didn't really care what was said, but the money was spent and she always made sure to get her money's worth.
"Then let me tell it my way." Eustace sat back in his chair, made himself comfortable, and began.
"Well, Me and
McCall was moseying through town kind of slow like so I could tell him this and that about the place. He seemed real interested and asked a lot of questions about the businesses and the pack. You know, people's names and what the shops sell 'n such. He was particularly interested in the women. You want to hear about that?"