Read Love's Revenge (Entangled Scandalous) Online

Authors: Joan Avery

Tags: #Historical romance, #entangled publishing, #1880s, #Entangled Scandalous, #denver, #new orleans, #Scandalous, #Western

Love's Revenge (Entangled Scandalous) (19 page)

BOOK: Love's Revenge (Entangled Scandalous)
7.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Morse made a small effete signal with his right hand and two men appeared from behind the heavy velvet drapes that covered the entry to the stairs behind him.

He recognized them from two years ago. Hired help. They managed to keep Morse’s hands clean even when the blood flowed freely. Morse pushed back his chair and rose from the table. His heavy brocade satin vest was a garish anomaly in the morning light. It was the only touch that suggested that Morse was not to the manor born.

“So why have you come, Worth?”

“I’ve come to warn you.”

“Warn me, how considerate. What is it that you’ve come to warn me about?”

“It’s not over.”

“I think it is over. Your reputation is tainted, your friends no doubt have abandoned you. Your wife”—Morse shook his head mournfully even as his eyes glinted with malevolence—“sadly is dead. I think it is time to return to England.” He paused only briefly. A sneer warped his thin lips into an ugly smile. “But I have forgotten. You are a Remittance Man. You are not wanted even in your beloved England. What got you sent here, Worth? An affair with a man’s wife, a bad gambling debt? Tsk, tsk. How unfortunate that once again your reputation is in shreds. I think it is time to move still farther west. I understand that they welcome men like you in Australia. It used to be a penal colony, I believe.”

“You’re not fit to be called a human being, Morse. I wouldn’t want to waste a bullet on you. It would be too kind. Know this. I’ll use every legal means I have to see you hang. It may not be today or tomorrow, but someday you’ll hang, and I’ll be there to pull the trap.”

Morse sobered slightly at Stephen’s words. Stephen fought for control. His hand still lay on his Colt. It would be so easy to end it here. So easy.

He forced his hand away from the gun. “It’s not over, Morse, and it won’t be over until you’re dead.”

He strode toward the door almost knocking over a lone customer in a plaid suit who was trying to enter.

Chapter Twenty-three

Metal hit rock with a force that sent shards flying. One caught Stephen as he scrambled off his horse to take refuge behind a boulder. It sent a sharp shooting pain through his shoulder.

He did not have to ask who was shooting at him. Morse had wasted no time. Another shot whizzed past him to bury itself into an aspen. The shooter’s aim was high. He cursed himself for being so stupid. His mind had been on Kate.

He rolled across an open stretch of ground to a larger boulder. His move only drew fire from the one source of gunshots. There had been two men in the saloon with Morse. Where was the second man?

He rose from his crouch and fired in the direction of the first assailant. A shot followed his, but again it came from the same location. If there had been two men, one would have circled behind him, but there was no one behind him. Where had the second man gone?
Kate. God no. Not Kate.


Kate’s horse whinnied. She stopped her packing. The Winchester was against the wall, next to the bureau. She picked it up and cocked the mechanism. Then she listened. All was quiet. She moved cautiously to the window and peered out. The horse had quieted. There was no one in sight.

She was being foolish. She released the hammer and replaced the rifle. Curiously, she pulled open the top drawer of the dresser. Lizzie’s things still lay there. She fingered the fabric of a petticoat. Her sister was with her in the room. She could feel her. Every pore, every hair on her body told Kate that Lizzie was here.

The horse whinnied again, this time sounding more disturbed than last. Kate reached for the rifle.

She returned to the window. Standing far enough back so that she remained in the shadows, she peered out. The horse worked nervously at its bridle, trying to free itself from its tether line strung between two aspens. She searched the surroundings. There was no movement. No sign of anyone approaching.

The horse grew more nervous and with him Kate. Perhaps it was a mountain lion again. Or another animal—a bear. But deep inside of her, Lizzie’s voice was whispering a warning. The animal outside was human.

At first there was only the sun glinting off his rifle. Then she saw the man. He had a brazenness about him that told her he knew she was alone.
Lizzie...
Lizzie... Lizzie...
Her unvoiced litany was half invocation, half prayer.


Stephen calculated the odds of his making it to his horse alive. His shoulder was bleeding badly. A terrifying sense of déjà vu overwhelmed him.

He should never have brought Kate. What had he been thinking
?

It was all his fault. He had been too late to save Lizzie. Was he doomed to repeat the same fate with Kate?

He wouldn’t let it happen again. He worked his way along an outcropping of rock until he could gain higher ground. His attacker still had the advantage, but whoever pursued him was cautious. The man had moved slightly lower but there had been no more shots.

Stephen could no longer afford to be cautious. He listened, his ears attuned to the slightest shift of gravel, the softest footfall. There was nothing. He climbed higher.

The man would not have given up the chase. He would have to face Morse if he failed. That would drive any man to risk death.

A shot grazed by his ear so close that it seared his flesh and left a bloody mark on his fingertips when he touched the wound. Still he could not see his pursuer. Too many rocks, too many trees. They offered a hundred places to hide.

He had to get higher still.

He clawed at the handholds the rocks offered, moving up the steep hillside. With any luck, the man was still above him and without a good angle to shoot; if not he was now an easy target.

His left arm was growing weaker. The blood had soaked his shirt, leaving it clinging to his sweat-covered body. Sweat ran down his forehead into his eyes. Only a few more feet and he would crest the top. He was weak with the exertion and loss of blood. He lunged over the top panting for breath only to find himself staring into the barrel of a rifle and the leering face of one of Morse’s henchmen.

“Come on up. Weather’s mighty nice up here. Wouldn’t want you to miss such a beautiful day, considerin’ it’ll be your last.”

Stephen pulled himself up and struggled to a standing position.

“Don’t try nothin’ fancy. I’d just as soon shoot you. But Morse said it was to look like an accident and I ain’t about to ruffle Morse’s feathers on this one. Seems like you did a good enough job of that.” The man spit a wad of tobacco on the pine needles at his feet. “He’s certainly a mean bastard. All dressed up like a gentleman while he’s ornery as sin inside. Makes you wonder about human nature now, doesn’t it?”

Stephen tried to stall as he searched for an escape. “I’m constantly astounded by human nature.”

“You too, huh?”

Stephen needed to somehow distract the man. “For example, why you would face the risk of hanging while Morse sits comfortably in Silverton?”

“Well, it’s an odd thing. But mainly it’s the booze and women. Morse got the best of them and that’s about all that interests me.”

The man stepped forward, the rifle never wavering from his chest. “Now if you’d kindly take a step back.”

“There’s no room to move back.”

“I think you’re catching on real good now. It would be a real tragedy if you fell and broke your neck, now wouldn’t it? I’ll bet that pretty lady of yours would be mighty sorry for your loss if she weren’t about to be joinin’ you real soon.”

Stephen’s hand moved reflexively toward the Colt.

“Wouldn’t want you to mess up Morse’s little scheme by getting a bullet in you, but it could happen. If I was you, I’d take my chances with the fall.”

He realized his options had dwindled to almost none. “But I’m not you, am I?”

He reached for his Colt. He was not fast enough. Before he could clear the revolver from his holster, a rifle shot broke the silence.

His assailant looked almost as surprised as he was. But the look of surprise in his pursuer’s eyes soon became glazed with the unction of death as the man crumpled to the ground.

Stunned, Stephen stared at the man on the ground and the pool of red that formed underneath him, pine needles floating in its crimson tide.

“Sorry about that. Would have been here sooner and saved you grief, but my horse got a stone in his shoe and I had to finish the last of it on foot.” The stranger panted with the exertion of talking. He removed his derby hat and pulled a handkerchief out of the pocket of his plaid suit to wipe his sweaty brow.

Stephen was still in shock. “Thank you—?”

“Patrick Gilhooley’s the name. Pinkerton man. Been following you for days now. Lucky for me I happened to walk into that saloon this morning.” Stephen shook the man’s hand.

“I don’t understand.” He removed his own handkerchief and used it to staunch the blood flow from his shoulder. Thankfully, the shard had left muscle and bone intact.

“Been following you since St. Louis. Work for Mr. Barker. George Barker. His niece tried to fire me, but the old man said to keep on your tail and so I did. Lucky for you, I was in the saloon when Morse ordered his men after you. I thought I’d just follow in case you could use some help.”

Stephen barely heard the man. “Thank you, Mr. Gilhooly, but I’ve got to go. Morse has another man. I think he intends to kill Katherine Barker.”

Gilhooly nodded. “Take this scoundrel’s horse. He tethered him down about a hundred feet. I’ll walk down to yours.”

Stephen half ran, half stumbled down the rocky incline. Using his good hand, he freed the horse and threw himself on. He spurred the horse into a gallop and the wind caught his whispered prayer, sending the entreaty heavenward.


Kate backed more deeply into the shadows. The man had not seen her in the window. He must have left his horse at the base of the hill because he walked up the small embankment spotted with pines in front of the cabin. He made no effort to hide behind the trees. He might have been on a hunting trip, but for the way his eyes always found their way to the cabin. If he was hunting, she was his prey.

Mixed with a fear for her own life that left her mouth dry as parchment, there was another growing fear—that Stephen was already dead. Had Morse succeeded this time?

She cocked the Winchester and raised it to her shoulder. She would have to wait until the man was closer. She was not sure of her aim, and once she fired, he would know she was armed and prepared to defend herself.

He picked his way up among the pines and rocks. Here and there he offered her a clear shot. Still he was too far away.

She peered through the sight, her finger tight to the trigger. He was there and then gone. She lowered the gun. He had disappeared into a wash. She waited but he did not reappear.

She listened. The horse had stopped its whinnying but pawed the ground anxiously. He was close. Very close.

A thud on the roof distracted her. The sound was too slight to be a man. She looked out the window. There was no sign of anyone.

Then she smelled it.

Smoke.

It oozed through the cracks in the roof boards, spiraling down as if seeking her out.

“Where’s Worth?” The demand was bellowed from somewhere very near. “I got business to settle with him.”

Perhaps Stephen wasn’t dead. Not yet, at least.
Kate tried to keep her wits about her. All was not lost. There was still hope.

“Don’t mean you any harm, lady. Just come on out and tell me where Worth is and I’ll be on my way.”

“I won’t come out until I can see you.”

A laugh was his response. “I ain’t stupid. All I have to do is wait here a spell and you’ll be happy to come on out, I expect.”

She coughed as smoke filled the upper third of the small cabin. It seeped in through every crevice in the roof. She crouched lower, gasping for fresh air. She couldn’t go out. The first traces of heat against her cheek alarmed her. Above her, the fire had broken through the roof. It was only a matter of time.

If she could hold off long enough, he might get bolder. Might come closer to the door. If he did...

She coughed again. The smoke stung her eyes and seared her lungs. She had to hold on longer. She defied a fate that would see her repeat the tragedy of Lizzie’s death.

“Well, I guess if you ain’t comin’ out, I’ll just have to come in.”

The man was close, so close that Kate could no longer see him in front of the cabin. Time was running out.

She heard the report of a rifle. The bullet didn’t penetrate the door.

She raised her own rifle. Ready for the final attack. The impact of the door as it was kicked in forced her to take a step back. Her finger on the metal trigger was wet with sweat.

She could not breathe.

Stephen burst into the smoke-filled room. The gun fell out of her hands and she collapsed to the floor in relief.

“Kate! Oh God, Kate!” Stephen rushed to her.

Scooping her up, he carried her out of the burning cabin, stepping over the lifeless body of the man he must have shot.

He set her down on a bed of pine needles. “My love, are you all right?” He pushed her hair away from her face. “Kate, Kate... Please, answer me.”

It was a command that demanded an answer.
He was alive. Thank God. He was alive.

“Stephen.” The word was half spoken, half coughed.

“Kate.” He pulled her to him and rocked, repeating her name over and over.

Epilogue

“Mama. Mama.”

“Lordy, lordy. It’s them. Dusty, come quickly. They’re back. They’re back.”

Kate didn’t know whether to laugh or cry as Andy toddled across the polished floor of the foyer. She ran forward and scooped the boy into her arms.

“Have you been a good boy while I was away?”

“Sure, he’s been as fine a boy as you could ever want. Haven’t you, Andy?” Peg was in the doorway to the kitchen, her hands covered, as usual, in flour. She was wiping them furiously on her big apron.

“Well, I’ll be darned. If it ain’t them after all.” Dusty had come in through the kitchen and was now behind Peg in the doorway.

“Well, move ahead, woman, so’s I can give a howdy to the group.”

Peg rushed headlong toward Kate, embracing both she and the boy in her arms. “Oh, but you’re a sight for sore eyes. A day didn’t go by that I didn’t fear you’d been eaten by a bear or frozen in some mountain.”

Kate laughed. “We’re perfectly fine, Peg. Perfectly.” She looked toward Stephen, who had set down her valise next to the hall table.

“Well, did you get the bastard?” Dusty blurted out.

“Morse and several of his men have been taken to Canon City for trial thanks to the persistence of a Pinkerton man Kate hired. They’re to stand trial for Lizzie’s murder and for attempting to murder us as well.”

“Murder you? Oh, Lord.”

“Everything is fine now, Peg.” Kate smoothed away a stray curl that had fallen into Andy’s eyes.

Stephen moved to Kate’s side. “We’ve a story and a half to tell you all, but first...” He held his hands out to Andy. “Tell your mother she must share you.”

“Papa!” Andy moved into his father’s arms.

Kate caught Peg and Dusty exchanging a glance. Stephen had never referred to Kate as Andy’s mother. It was something he had meticulously avoided in the past.

“Well?” Peg asked. Dusty’s eyes were wide with curiosity as well.

“Well what?” Stephen kept one arm around Andy and wound the other around Kate’s waist.

“Don’t torment us, boy. We’re too old for such game-playing.” Dusty stomped his foot.

“What is it you want to know?” Stephen teased.

“You know, about...”

“Oh, about that.” Stephen raised an eyebrow. “I think my wife should be the one to answer any questions about
that
.”

“Your wife?”

Kate beamed. “Yes, we were married in Canon City day before yesterday.”

“Married.” Peg elbowed Dusty. “I told you, but you wouldn’t believe me.”

“Well we’ve a surprise of our own. Did you tell him to come?”

“Of course I did woman. He was right on my heels.”

“Uncle George?” Kate rushed forward to embrace the man who appeared in the kitchen doorway. “What are you doing here?”

“I couldn’t stand not knowing that you were safe. I came after the Pinkerton man sent his first report. Just yesterday I got a telegram here in Denver from him.” He extended a hand to Stephen. “I’m sorry, son. We were wrong about you from the beginning. I’ve forgiven you and I’m sure Mary Katherine will as well.” He put an arm around Kate’s shoulder.

She smiled. “Oh, I have, Uncle. You have not heard. I’ve found a new metallurgist to help us with the smelting operation.”

“And who would that be, my dear?”

“My husband, Uncle. My new and dearly loved husband.”

Uncle George was momentarily taken aback. But he recovered quickly seeing his niece’s happiness. He folded her into an embrace.

Stephen smiled. “I think it is time to celebrate. A cookie and some milk would do the trick. What do you think, Andy?”

“Cookie?” Andy brightened.

“Yes, a cookie.” He put his free arm around Kate and led the small group toward the kitchen. He smiled down at Kate. “Maybe even two.”

BOOK: Love's Revenge (Entangled Scandalous)
7.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Simply Unforgettable by Mary Balogh
Speak Its Name: A Trilogy by Charlie Cochrane, Lee Rowan, Erastes
Christmas Daisy by Bush, Christine
The Price of Justice by Marti Green
Land of Hope and Glory by Geoffrey Wilson
Bound for Canaan by Fergus Bordewich