Cowboys 08 - Luke (36 page)

Read Cowboys 08 - Luke Online

Authors: Leigh Greenwood

BOOK: Cowboys 08 - Luke
7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Valeria stopped and looked behind her. Luke was nowhere in sight. What if he wasn't coming?

She couldn't believe that. She didn't know what had happened, but sooner or later Luke would come after her. The question was, what to do in the meantime. She couldn't continue to stand in the middle of the road. She was tired and thirsty. She would examine all of the saloons, then choose the one that appeared to be the cleanest and most genteel.

She rejected the first saloon with no more than a glance. The stench of whiskey, tobacco, coal oil, and human sweat that poured through the open door nearly made her gag. The second and third saloons were only marginally better. The next saloon had a second floor. It appeared to be a combination of saloon, restaurant, and hotel. But Valeria didn't see any women inside. She continued down the street, rejecting each saloon as she passed.

She crossed the street.

Most of the buildings on this side were dark, closed. One was a law office. Another, an assay office. A third, a barbershop. A fourth, a laundry. The fifth, another saloon. Valeria saw a brightly dressed woman inside. Her momentary hope was dashed when she saw a man fondle her as she laughed and teased him by tickling him under the chin with an egret feather.

Music came from the next saloon, but since the men were dancing with each other, Valeria assumed there were no women inside. She had no intention of being the first. As she stood there, trying to make up her mind, two men stumbled out of the first saloon. Valeria moved back into the shadow of a doorway.

They stopped at the steps going down from the boardwalk to the street. One grabbed onto a pole to steady himself. The other leaned against a post and lit a cigarette. "I can't wait to get out of this place," he said to the other man. "What's the use of getting rich if we ain't got any women to spend it on?"

"We ain't rich, not by a long shot."

Drink slurred their speech, but Valeria could understand every word.

"I got twice as much money in my pocket right now as my brother back in Alabama makes in a year, and I got nothing to do with it."

"You can spend it on Squirrel Annie."

"That woman is uglier than a swamp hog. She'd have to pay
me
to spend an hour with her." He leaned back and blew smoke rings into the hot night air.

"Probably just as well, since there ain't no nice looking women about. We wouldn't know what to do with them." "I would, too."

"Neely, you ain't nothing but a dumb dirt farmer from Alabama. You ain't even started shaving regular. A real woman would scare you to death."

"I'd still know what to do." "And just what would that be?"

When Neely elaborated, Valeria could feel the heat all the way down to her toes.

"Well, there ain't no point in getting yourself all worked up," the other boy said. "There ain't no women around here, so we might as well go off to bed. Tomorrow ain't going to be no easier just because you're horny tonight."

Neely tossed his cigarette into the street. "I'm horny every night."

"Don't think about it," his friend advised. "I can't stop thinking about it."

"Well, I'm going off to bed. You coming now, or you going to have another beer?"

"I ain't going back in there," Neely said. "Any more needling about my pretty face, and I'm going to smash Navez right in the nose."

"Yeah, and get beat to rat bait."

"I ain't afraid of him."

"If you had good sense you would be. Come on, I'm worn to the bone."

They started down the boardwalk toward Valeria. She pulled farther back into the doorway, hoping they'd pass without noticing her. They did, only Neely changed his mind and decided he wanted another beer. When he turned around, he saw Valeria.

He turned white, looked like he had come face-to-face with an apparition.

"Gawd Almighty!"

The exclamation startled Valeria into darting from the safety of the doorway.

"She's real," Neely exclaimed. "I ain't seeing things, Albie."

Albie appeared beyond speech. Neely started toward Valeria, his hand outstretched as though he had to touch her to believe what he saw.

"She's beautiful," Albie whispered reverently, "purtier than any angel."

"Shush!" Neely said. "Don't talk so loud. Somebody might hear you. I want her all to myself."

"Me, too," Albie said. "Don't forget me."

"What's your name?" Neely asked. Valeria backed far ther away. "We won't hurt you."

"We just want to have some fun."

"Shut up, you fool. You're scaring her."

"I ain't the one trying to grab hold of her."

Neely looked at his hand as though he hadn't been aware of what it was doing. He dropped it to his side. "You're mighty pretty," he said. "I ain't never seen a girl as pretty as you. Want me to buy you a beer?"

Valeria shook her head.

"Maybe she wants whiskey," Albie suggested.

Valeria shook her head more vigorously.

"You ought to know a pretty girl like her wouldn't want none of that rotgut," Neely said. "She'll want something fancy."

"Like what?" Albie asked.

Neely clearly wasn't able to think of a drink he considered fancy enough. "What would you like?" he asked Valeria. He rattled the coins in his pocket. "I'll buy you anything you want."

"I'd like some water," Valeria said.

"Water!"

Now that she could see how young they were, she didn't feel frightened.

"And something to eat," Valeria added. "I'm hungry."

She realized as soon as the words were out of her mouth that she didn't have money to pay for food. She wasn't naive enough to think these boys would pay for her dinner without expecting something in return. And Neely had been kind enough to explain exactly what that was.

"But I don't have to eat," she added quickly. "Just some water."

"You come with me, babe," Neely said, trying to act like an older and more experienced man. "We got plenty of water in our room."

"Why don't we go to a saloon?" Valeria said, pointing to the saloon she remembered as being part restaurant.

"You don't want to do that," Neely said. "It's full of men who'll grab at you. You come on with us. We'll be real nice to you."

"I'm not the kind of woman you think," Valeria said. "My guide is camped over that hill. He's taking me to a ranch in the Rim country."

Both boys looked taken aback, but Neely recovered quickly. "You don't need to haggle over price. We'll pay you real good."

"But I don't want to go with you," Valeria said backing away. "I really am going to the Rim country."

"Yeah, and you've got a handsome cowboy who'll come riding to the rescue. Look, you and I know there ain't no female within ten miles of this place what doesn't wear her price painted on her chest. Whatever it is, Albie and me will pay it."

Albie nodded enthusiastically as Neely reached out and took hold of Valeria's wrist.

Valeria backed away. She had a notion the men in the saloon might be very much like Neely said, but they wouldn't do anything to her in public. If Neely and his friend got her into their room, she was quite certain what would happen. She wrenched her arm from his grasp and darted off the boardwalk into the street.

"You go up the street and I'll go down," Neely told Albie. "We'll cut her off."

The young men were faster than Valeria. Though she ran first one way and then another, she couldn't get around them. She could either stay here until they caught her and dragged her into their room, or she could run into the saloon and depend upon the public nature of the place to be her protection.

With a single backward glance toward the hills and a silent plea to Luke to come quickly, she turned and headed toward the saloon.

"Don't go in there!" Neely called when he saw what she intended to do. "Please, lady, don't go in there." But Valeria had already stepped inside the door. "Now look what you've done," she heard Albie say. "I didn't mean to."

"We have to go after her."

"You sure?"

"Yeah."

Valeria hadn't gone two steps into the saloon before every eye in the place was on her. She'd spent her entire life on public display, but never like this. There was admiration in the gazes all around her. There was also hunger and lust that didn't hide behind polite smiles, well-rehearsed compliments, or hooded gazes. Here it was in the open, naked, raw, and unrestrained.

She was aware of a low sound that gradually filled the room, settling into corners and behind tables. It sounded unnervingly like the growl of a hungry animal when it sights food.

Keeping her gaze straight ahead, Valeria approached the bar, where a man was serving drinks. No one moved to give her room, so she went to an empty space at the end.

The bartender looked at her for several seconds before he moved in her direction, a look of disbelief on his face.

"What do you want?" he asked.

"I'd like a glass of water."

The growl stopped. For an instant, the room was completely silent.

"Okay," the bartender said, disbelief turning to a sneer.

"You want a glass with some water in it."

Valeria took an instant dislike to him. "Thank you." "Now what do you want in it, and which one of these men are you going to con into paying for it?"

"You charge for water?" Valeria asked. "I charge for whiskey."

"I don't want any whiskey. I want water." "I don't serve water." "But that's all I want." "Give the lady her water."

Valeria turned to see a huge man get up from one of the tables and come toward her. She wondered why she thought there was something familiar about him, then realized he was a miner. He looked like the men she'd seen in Bonner.

"You gonna buy some whiskey, Soderman?" the bartender asked. "I don't run this place to serve up water."

"Sure, I'll have a whiskey," Soderman said. "Make it a bottle. I might be able to talk the little lady into changing her mind."

"Thank you, but water is all I want. I have to get back to my camp."

Soderman's smile made Valeria uneasy. One missing and one broken tooth made him look dangerous.

"No use playing games, girl. We know there's nothing in those hills but snakes and scorpions."

"My guide is out there," Valeria said.

"I just can't figure where you come from," Soderman said, ignoring her words. "There's no way this lousy town could hide a beauty like you."

"She came with me." Neely strolled into the saloon with a show of bravado. A less courageous Albie followed.

Soderman took one look at Neely and broke out laughing. "No woman with her looks would settle for a kid like you. I bet she ran away 'cause she wanted a man."

Neely walked up and grabbed Valeria's hand. "I'm man enough. Me and Albie is more than enough for any female."

Valeria didn't trust Neely, but he was obviously trying to protect her. She'd go with him and worry about his intentions later.

But she didn't get a chance. Soderman backhanded Neely and sent the boy stumbling halfway across the room into Albie, both of them going down in a heap.

"Nobody gets between me and a woman I got my eye on."

Valeria had been frightened nearly out of her mind, but Soderman's hitting Neely replaced fear with fury. She pushed past him to where Neely lay on the floor, blood dripping from his mouth. "Are you all right? Do you need a doctor?"

"He don't need no doctor for a little blood," Soderman said. "He needs one for being stupid."

Valeria strode past Soderman without even looking at him. "I want my water," she said to the barman.

"I don't see-"

"Now!" The authority of twenty-five generations of imperious kings resonated in that single word. She picked up the glass handed to her and turned to face the men in the room. "Does anyone have a handkerchief?"

The man closest to Neely offered his.

"Thank you." She knelt down, soaked the handkerchief in water, and began to clean the blood from Neely's mouth.

"Don't waste time on me," Neely muttered. "Get out of here while you can. Albie will help you."

Valeria shook her head just as Soderman grabbed her by the shoulder and jerked her to her feet. "Stop wasting your time on that kid."

"Get your hands off me," Valeria said, icy disdain dripping from each word. Soderman stared at her, apparently uncertain how to react to her regal disdain. "I said, remove your hand." Maybe it was all her ancestors standing behind her, but Soderman released her.

Other books

Turn Up the Heat by Susan Conant, Jessica Conant-Park
Lilac Spring by Ruth Axtell Morren
Against A Dark Background by Banks, Iain M.
MeltMe by Calista Fox
Winds of Fortune by Radclyffe
Farthest Reef by Karl Kofoed