Authors: Shelly Thacker
Tags: #Historical Romance, #Colorado, #Western Romance
“Well, the moccasins are better than nothing,” she said. “They’re lined with fur—”
“Why didn’t you take his boots?” He gestured toward the bounty hunter before he holstered his gun.
Her eyes widened, as if the thought had never crossed her mind. She looked like she might be ill. “Take bloodstained boots off a
corpse
and wear them?”
Lucas sighed. “No, of course you wouldn’t.” He started to shake his head, then stopped himself, wincing. “You are so...”
He didn’t finish.
“What?” she asked archly.
Sensitive. Delicate. Tenderhearted.
“Impractical.” Frustrated by the pain and dizziness and assorted other feelings that threatened to knock him off his feet, he forced himself to ignore them all and stalked over to the dead bounty hunter.
Lucas pried both pistols from his hands, then rifled through the man’s nearby saddlebags for anything that might be useful.
When he turned, he found Antoinette watching his actions with that same wide-eyed, faintly ill look. A visible shudder went through her. “Are... are we just going to leave him there?” she asked. “Shouldn’t we at least bury the body?”
“Take too long. We spend an hour burying him, next person who comes along will have to bury us.” Slowly, a bit more steadily, Lucas returned to the rocky overhang, stowed the bounty hunter’s belongings in his own saddlebags, then picked them up along with his canteen.
Then he turned toward Antoinette. She looked frightened, and he regretted his comment about someone burying the two of them.
She had never seemed quite so vulnerable before, her slender body wracked by shudders beneath the two blankets, her hair wet, her skin ruddy with cold. It was a miracle she hadn’t died of exposure already. He doubted that she had enough strength left to walk more than a few yards, never mind a few miles.
Her lower lip quivered as she glanced from his bandaged head to the western sky, which had already darkened to shades of violet and purple. “Well, Marshal,” she said lightly, as if she were trying to sound brave, “it’s almost sundown. What are we going to do?”
He wished he could pick her up and carry her, hated that he felt too weak to even try it. “Get to that shelter before nightfall.” He walked over and removed the blankets from her shoulders, then took off his coat and wrapped it around her.
“You can’t give me your coat,” she protested as he buttoned it. The garment swamped her, the bottom trailing on the ground, the sleeves hanging several inches below her hips. “You need it, or
you’ll
freeze.”
“The exercise will keep me warm.” He tucked both blankets around her.
She immediately slid them off and handed them back. “At least take the blankets.”
“I’ll be all—”
“You’re wounded, you’ve been bleeding all day, and you need some protection from the wind.” She held them out toward him.
Reluctantly, he accepted them and put them on over his shirt. Before he could turn to start leading the way down the trail, she moved to his side and slid one arm around him.
“Put your arm around my shoulders,” she said firmly.
He started to pull away. “You’re barely strong enough to walk—”
“And you won’t make it a quarter mile unless you let me help you.” She hung on to him, looking up to meet his gaze. “And we have to get to that shelter before dark, or we’ll both freeze to death.”
He frowned at her. Stubborn, determined little elf. Her grit and tenacity caught him by surprise.
Unfortunately, she had a point. Lucas fought off the waves of dizziness, ignored the pain throbbing between his temples, and allowed himself to lean on her.
As they set off, she muttered some comment he didn’t quite catch about his head being harder than any bullet.
~ ~ ~
Tough enough to chew nails and spit tacks.
The newspapers hadn’t exaggerated, Annie thought, after they had been walking almost an hour, leaning on each other—Lucas helping her as much as she helped him.
It was snowing again, thick flakes that turned the darkness white around them. But despite all her fears, and the chills that raked her, and the danger they were in, somehow having him beside her made her feel... safe.
A short distance ahead, across an expanse of moonlit snow sprinkled with pines, their branches heavy with ice, the shelter finally came into view—an odd little cabin, built right up against the side of the mountain.
“We did it,” she said in astonishment, her voice a raspy croak.
“Looks like a dugout.” Lucas sounded exhausted. A few yards away from the cabin, they stopped in the trees. He slipped his arm from around her shoulders and settled her against a pine, handing her the blankets. “Wait here.”
“Why—”
Before she could even finish the question, he vanished into the darkness, looking shaky on his feet as the night swallowed him up.
A few minutes later, she saw him circling around toward the front of the cabin, with his gun drawn, and she understood. The place might not be as empty as it looked. The bounty hunter might’ve had a partner.
She held her breath as she watched Lucas nudge open the door and disappear inside. He was in no condition to face any kind of enemy.
But a few minutes later, he came out, his pistol back in its holster.
“Deserted,” he said as he returned to her side. “It’s not much, but right about now, it looks damn good.”
Annie sighed, too tired even to speak. He put his arm around her again, they crossed the last few yards, and trudged through the open door.
A dank, musty smell filled the place, which appeared to be a single room with no windows. Annie couldn’t see much else in the darkness, other than her breath on the cold air. Lucas eased her down onto a hard, wooden seat and lit a lantern that hung on the wall with a tin of matches next to it.
By the flickering glow, she saw that the dugout matched its name: half-cave, half-cabin, carved right out of the mountainside—no doubt for protection from the snow and wind. It looked like it might be an old trapper’s place from fur-trading days.
Lucas had been right. It wasn’t much, but at the moment, it
did
look damn good. A suite at the fanciest Denver hotel couldn’t have looked better.
The back and part of each side wall were rough-hewn rock, the rest of it logs and mortar, and it had a dirt floor. Lucas set the lantern on a potbellied stove in the middle of the room, taking a few pieces of wood from a metal bucket nearby.
Annie started untangling herself from the blankets and his coat while she looked around. When she was very young, she had lived in a place much like this.
Before Papa ran off.
Other than the stove, the dugout had few furnishings: a couple of plain chairs and a table in one corner, some animal pelts and antlers on display. An old trunk sat against the rocky back wall, beside a bed of chipped white iron, with a striped ticking mattress rolled up at the foot.
She also noticed a black frying pan and some cooking implements hanging from hooks above the table, and dared hope there might be food somewhere as well. With a violent shiver, she set the blankets and Lucas’s coat aside, and started rubbing her arms, trying to get some feeling back into her muscles. Her dress and undergarments clung to her body, damp and cold, and her feet felt numb, despite the moccasins.
Lucas arranged the logs inside the stove and lit the fire. Black smoke leaked from the wide metal pipe that led up to the roof—which also made an odd chirping noise. He coughed and whacked the stovepipe a couple of times with his fist.
There was the sound of something skittering up the pipe.
“Squirrels,” Lucas said. The smoke stopped pouring into the room and flowed out through the metal chimney. Lucas took the rest of the wood from the metal bucket and set it on the floor. “You all right by yourself for a minute?”
Annie nodded, mute, still staring at the spot where she had heard claws skittering on metal. It had been a long time since she had lived in a place like this. A very long time.
Lucas picked up the empty bucket and went outside—as usual, without telling her where he was going or why.
Annie frowned as the door closed behind him. Lucas McKenna was definitely a man of action, not words. That was something else the newspapers hadn’t exaggerated about.
She supposed a marshal had to be decisive and independent, that he had gotten used to just making decisions and carrying them out. Without asking what anyone else might think.
Or feel.
She looked down at the dirt floor. There was a lot between them that needed to be said. A whole lot. And neither one of them seemed to be saying it.
She wanted to ask why he had risked his life, gotten shot, to save her. But she was almost afraid to ask. Was it purely because he wanted to take her back to Missouri to stand trial? Was he so bent on seeing her punished? Did he still believe she was capable of cold-blooded murder?
Annie sighed, closing her eyes, shuddering with cold. If she knew one thing, it was that Lucas was not the most understanding, forgiving man. And she wasn’t up to an argument. They were both exhausted, hungry, hurt.
Tomorrow, she thought wearily. Tomorrow would be soon enough to bring up everything that had happened, and what might happen in the future. Tonight they had more immediate problems to worry about.
She stood up and tried to scoot her chair closer to the stove, but quickly sat back down. Her feet and legs had started tingling painfully, like she was being jabbed with a thousand needles all at once.
A gust of cold wind and snowflakes blew through the door as Lucas returned. “No sign of any horse,” he said, carrying the bucket, now heaped with snow, over to the stove. “Or supplies.”
Annie whispered a curse, partly because of the pain in her legs, partly out of anger at the bounty hunter. “He lied,” she said in disgust.
“Maybe. Or the horse might’ve got spooked by the ice storm and ran off,” Lucas said, his voice low and tired. “Or some traveler happened along and helped himself when he saw nobody was around. Storm wiped clean any tracks that might’ve been out there.”
He left the bucket of melting snow on the stove and carried the lantern over to the steamer trunk in the corner, crouching down to examine it.
“I don’t suppose there might be food in there,” she said hopefully.
“Let’s find out.” He straightened, drawing his pistol and aiming at the lock.
“Wait—” Annie winced, covering her ears as the roar of his Colt echoed off the stone walls. “Was that really necessary?” she asked in irritation.
“It was practical.” He lifted the trunk’s lid and started hunting through the contents, taking out an old quilt, a woven coverlet, a few tools of some kind, and a couple of small burlap sacks, one of which seemed to be empty. “Looks like there was some food.”
“Was?”
“Something got to it first. Mice or some such.” He dug a handful of grain out of one sack. “There’s a hole in the bottom of this trunk.”
Mice... or some such?
Annie lifted her feet off the floor, drawing her knees in and wrapping her arms around them as she peered at the dirt in the dim light of the lantern. She didn’t want to think about what
some such
might include, out here in the mountain wilderness.
Lucas closed the lid of the trunk, setting the quilt and coverlet on top and opening the other burlap sack.
“No horse,” Annie said tremulously, beginning to understand the seriousness of their situation. “No food—”
“Coffee.” Lucas held up the sack with an expression of pleasant surprise.
“I’m so happy the mice left the coffee for you,” she said dryly.
He set it on the trunk, glancing toward the stovepipe. “Roast squirrel’s not too bad.”
Annie blinked, trying to tell if he was serious. “Is this what it’s usually like on the frontier—living in a cave, competing with mice for food, roasting squirrels?”
“Colorado doesn’t count as the frontier anymore. It’s an official state. Frontier’s a ways west of here.”
She frowned at him. “Thanks for the geography lesson.” She took off her moccasins and started to rub her feet, then stopped, inhaling a sharp breath as feeling started to return to them swiftly and painfully.
“Keep at it. You’d better get the blood flowing.” Lucas walked over to her.
“It hurts.”
“Good. That means maybe you don’t have frostbite. And maybe you won’t have to have them amputated.”
She glared up at him. “Must you always be so—”
“Truthful?”
“Blunt.” She started rubbing the soles of her feet again, cautiously, gingerly.
Lucas knelt in front of her and brushed her hands out of the way. “Not like that.”
He took one of her feet in both his hands and started massaging.
“Ouch... ooh... ow... that...
hurts
,” she protested. But he didn’t release her, no matter how she tried to wriggle out of his grasp.
And after a few moments, it didn’t hurt so much. In fact, the powerful strokes of his fingers along her cramped muscles started to feel rather... pleasant.
Warm and tingly and... oh, yes, right there. The cold and pain faded, rapidly replaced by a flush of heat as Lucas’s callused hands moved over her arch, and sole, and heel, and rubbed every toe, and stroked the surprisingly sensitive curve of her ankle bone.
She bit her lip by the time he shifted to her other foot, and not because of the pain in her muscles.
When he finally finished and released her, she drew her legs under her, feeling a bit breathless. For the first time all day, she was warm. “Th-thank you.” After a moment she added, “Marshal.”
“Next time you find yourself in a snowstorm,” he admonished, looking up at her with a weary sigh, “keep your shoes on.” He straightened and crossed to his saddlebags.
“Next time you find my shoes lying in the snow,” she muttered, trying to gather her scattered senses, “pick them up and bring them with you.”
He dug a tin cup and some other items out of his saddlebags, then returned to the stove, where the bucket of snow had become water. After unwrapping the bandage from his head, he started tending to his own injury.
Annie stood up, experimentally taking a few steps, relieved to discover that her feet and legs felt much better. The dirt floor, however, was cold, almost frozen. The potbellied stove might be good for melting snow—and maybe for roasting squirrels—but it didn’t provide enough heat to make this place very comfortable. She could still see her breath.