SIEGE
Prologue:
Lines of Convergence
It was inevitable that this day would come.
The men who ran supreme over much of the West had
watched and waited for decades, stemming the tide where it was possible and
being swept away when it was not. They waged their campaign against the
intruders like generals on the battlefront, fighting for each hill and every
patch of land that was waiting possession by those who arrived first to claim
it. For a long time, they held their ground through sheer determination because
it took raw courage to thrive in a land though supposedly flowing with milk and
honey required nothing less than blood and sweat to yield such ambrosia.
Nations built across the globe on the hard work of such individuals, whose
character and strength were largely responsible for the opening of new
frontiers.
In the West, it had been no different. Some would say
it was even harder because it was more than just the land they had to fight, it
was a way of life. The axioms of the
Twenty years before the end of the century and the war
was more or less lost by the patrician ranchers who were the first conquerors
of the new territories.
Settlers, some from the cities, others from further
across the
Stuart James and Guy Royal were men whose fortunes had
built on the work of their forebears and understood how eminent defeat was.
They were raised in the traditions of their fathers who believed that there was
no such thing as defeat so long as the will to fight still remained. For them,
there was no possibility of surrender and they allowed the new arrivals to
believe that for the moment, they had been overwhelmed into complacency. They
watched and waited, their resolve giving way to a begrudging acceptance that
this was the way things had to be. After awhile, it almost became tolerable,
the loss of prestige dulled by the taste of stagnant power and the invasion of
what they deemed to be theirs had ceased. For a time, there seemed to be no
further indignity to which they were forced to succumb and they came to a
painful yet necessary realization.
The settlers were here to stay.
As much as they disliked admitting it, James and Royal
could deny that settlers to the West had mettle that could survive most trials.
Those who could be forced out were not meant for living here and only made room
for those who could when they departed. In the town of Four Corners, both men
had learned how that its townsfolk was a testament to the frontier spirit and
nothing could not dislodged the settlers who had dared to encroach upon land
that should have been theirs for the taking. It was not to say that James and
Royal did not try. The attempts to remove the troublesome colonists had proved
unsuccessful, almost to the point of being fatal for the men who were the
architects of the forced exodus.
Eventually the ranchers agreed to leave things as they
stood for it would serve no one by expending too much time and resource on
removing the usurpers when there was little hope of victory. Particularly when
there were seven guardians who would ensure failure of any plan to such an end.
Despite all efforts to rid the town of the seven, each fresh attempt was met
with failure. It was almost as if the town was as protective of its guardians
as the seven were about
For a time, a stalemate had formed between Stuart and
Royal's feud with
It had to do with the railroad.
Guy Royal had been perfectly aware of the railroad
coming for some time now and had prepared himself for it by buying up as much
land as he could. He had hoped to make the company's purchase of land as
difficult as possible buy owning as much of the required territory. However,
even he had to concede to the pressures from government bodies insisting that
he sell up or face the wrath of Federal authorities. Royal had made himself a
great deal of money from the sale but even he knew what the coming of the
railroad would mean to him and his kind. True, the grazing land would not be
affected but settlers would be coming on a scale that the ranchers could not
hope to circumvent or cope with. The moment the first train rumbled down its
new tracks, both Stuart and Royal knew it would sound the death knell of the
power they had once wielded in the Territory.
"So you appreciate our problem." Guy Royal
said to the woman who sat across his on the porch of his spread.
"I do," she nodded, lifting the glass of
lemonade to her lips. "Unfortunately, what you want will not be cheap. My
services alone will cost you."
Stuart James tried not to be skeptical, even though he
had been examining the woman closely since his arrival at this luncheon arranged
by Guy Royal. Both men who had been discussing the dilemma facing them with the
arrival of the railroad had agreed that the time to do something was now with
Royal taking the steps that saw them here today. The woman who made the
triumvirate at the table was every much the siren, with her mahogany coloured hair and deep coloured
eyes. Her ability to turn heads was without question although he doubted her
assertion that she could mount the expedition to rid them of their present
problem with
She was dressed like any well-bred woman with red
riding coat, high-necked shirts and riding boots under her flowing skirt. At
the moment, she seemed more at place riding on a manicured path in one of those
fancy gardens common in large eastern cities, not sitting here with them
plotting mayhem and murder.
"We have the money if you can do the job."
James said with unmasked doubt in her ability.
Royal threw him a dark stare at the remark because
Royal was perfectly aware of the lady's reputation even though it took some
shifting to find it and her.
Although most of the intelligence had first indicated
that she was dead, it had taken more money and underground contacts to learn
that she was still very much alive and making a good living, hiring out her
services as a mercenary. From what he knew about her work, she was very good at
what she did and rarely failed at undertaking a mission. Royal wondered how
much that had to do with her being a woman because it was easy to be disarmed
by her looks.
"I can do the job and I won't be hiring just any
rabble to help me, when I do so either." She pointed out, making reference
to the time when Royal and James had hired men to drive the residents of
"That was a bad decision." Royal swallowed,
unable to deny that they were lucky to escape that debacle without being
implicated. If it were not for one of the seven killing Earl, the man they had
hired to organize the whole affair, Royal had no doubt that Earl would have
spilled the truth to save himself and both he and Stuart James would now be
languishing in jail. "However, I gather you have a better idea?"
"Well for starters, I know men who would fight an
entire army if paid well enough. A job is contract to such men, not to be
discarded when it becomes inconvenient. For what you wanted to do, you should
have had professionals, not any rabble that can carry a gun. Furthermore, you
want people to leave; you just make it very uncomfortable for them to stay.
Chasing them out will simply make their defiance all the more persistent. You
want someone gone; you wear them down continuously until they are grateful to
leave. Its all a matter of knowing the target."
Although James was begrudged to admit it, he was
impressed by her words. "Where do you find men like this?" He was
genuinely curious.
"I know a few," she said with a faint smile,
meeting his gaze because she knew he was underestimating her because of her
sex. It was not a new experience. This was after all the West and this was a
land tamed by men who usually forgot the women who were working alongside them.
It was the height of chauvinism to assume that they were alone in their harsh
existence, nevertheless this was hardly the time for such debates.
"However the man I have in mind is south of the border."
"You mean Mexicans?" Guy wrinkled his nose
in distaste.
"Bandits to be precise," she replied, not
caring if this offended his delicate sensibilities. "These men do not care
who they kill or what uniform they are shooting at. As long as they know that
there is a great deal of money waiting for them at the end of the road, they
will do anything and do it with a song in their heart."
"I don't care." James said firmly. "I
just want that town gone. I want it to be an example to anyone who even
considers settling on its burnt ashes for the next twenty years. I want the
railroad to take one look at the mess and decide that it isn't worth the
trouble and go somewhere else. I don't care whom you have to kill to get the
job done as long as
"That can be arranged." She answered coolly,
a stark contrast to his vehement outburst. "Any particular requests?"
"Yes," Royal nodded without hesitation.
"I want you to personally see to it that the seven lawmen who protect that
town have their hides nailed to a wall."
"That is not a problem," a slow smile stole
across Selena Quint's face. "I had always
intended to do that. I have some history with them."
Part One
Hired Guns
Even though he was in body, playing a game of cards
with Ezra and the others in the saloon, Chris Larabee's
mind was anything but centered on the game. Since his marriage of four months
ago, one thought had been preoccupying his mind with such intensity that he
knew it was time to look at the issue despite the urge to brush it aside with
the customary indifference he viewed most things that troubled him. After
almost five years on his own, leaving living a life that bordered on a hand to
mouth existence, Chris had almost forgotten the full implications of what it
was to be married again. After he had sold the land where he and Sarah had
built their lives, Chris had put the money in the bank and forgotten all about
it until he stumbled into
A dollar a day with room and board might have been
acceptable when he was on his own but now that he was a married man, Chris was
forced to recognize that he had financial obligations as well as emotional ones
to contend with these days. Of course, neither Chris or Mary had ever discussed
such things prior to their marriage and Mary had what Steven had left her to
support herself and Billy, without requiring Chris to provide for them, not to
mention the revenue generated by the newspaper. Still, Chris was old-fashioned
in the belief that a man ought to be able to provide for his family and somehow
he knew he was not going to manage it on a dollar a day.
He had no intention of walking away from his duties as
lawman but he did know he had to make some hard decisions on whether this was
all he intended to be. There was a time when he had made a pretty decent living
at horse ranching and besides killing, it seemed to be one of the few things he
was quite good at. The parcel of land he had bought outside of town was ideal
for the purpose and Chris confessed an unconscious desire in choosing that
particular property for that reason, even though horse ranching had been the
furthest thing from his mind at the time of its purchase. Still, he had enough
money left in the bank to make a good living of it and it would not detract
from his obligations to
Until trouble actually came rolling into town, he and
the seven were seldom required on an around the clock basis. There were enough
of them to ensure that
"Mr. Larabee," he
heard Ezra's voice break through his ruminations.
"What?" Chris looked up from his cards even though
he had no idea what he was holding in his hand.
Ezra rolled his eyes in resignation and repeated
himself. "Are you sitting with those cards?" The gambler asked and
Chris realized that Vin and Buck were staring at him, waiting for him to
discard so that they could continue the game they were playing.
"Sorry," Chris grumbled and made a quick
survey of his hand before tossing two cards into the pile of discards before
Ezra handed him another pair to compensate.
"At the risk to life and limb," Ezra spoke
up. "Might we inquire what has your attention so intently?" The
gambler asked as he continued dealing.
"No." Chris retorted and surprised no one
with his response.
"Very well," Ezra shrugged, accustomed to
his answer because Chris rarely like intrusions into his private life by
anyone, even his friends. "It would make a pleasant change from Mr.
Wilmington's endless diatribe on why Inez has not accepted his proposal of
marriage."
While Chris had no intention of being a change of
subject for those at the table, he could appreciate Ezra's dilemma. For two
months now, they had heard nothing from Buck but endless, complaints,
arguments, debates and whatever verbalization the man could express on why the
object of his affections was so adamant in not marrying him, even though she
was carrying his child. Today had seen no lapse in the pattern of behaviour they been observing these past weeks and although
Inez was nowhere in the saloon at this time of morning, Buck was nonetheless
searching for her each time someone came through the door.
"Hey!" Buck exclaimed slightly hurt that his
feelings could be so easily ridiculed by his friends. "I can't help it if
the woman is crazy."
"Why is the woman crazy?" Ezra stared at
him, his hands still handling the cards deftly. "Forgive me for saying
this, you are not exactly the most ideal example of paternal potential."
"What do you mean?" Buck asked, looking to
Chris and Vin for support with both men opting to remain silent instead of
being drawn into this debate, or more particularly, another debate. "I can
be a good husband."
Vin who was just about to swallow a mouthful of beer
nearly choked at that statement, producing an expression of smug satisfaction
from Ezra to Buck. The tracker gulped badly and started coughing before he gave
Buck an apologetic look. "Sorry Buck." He said clearing his throat.
"How hard could it be?" Buck stared at them
in defiance. "I seen Chris do it and it weren't that hard."
Chris who was trying not to be noticed by paying close
attention to his cards, hoping that the question would not fall to him,
grimaced sightly. "It isn't that hard at
all." He muttered hoping that was as much input Buck would need on the
subject.
"Inez requires a good provider," Ezra
pointed out as they continued playing. "Last time I looked, a man making a
dollar a day plus room and board was hardly appeared to be considered as
such." In truth, Ezra was very protective of Inez in her fragile state,
especially with most of the town aware that she was now with child. While Inez
had enough friends around her to offer support in her time of need, the town
itself was viewing the pregnancy with distaste by keeping their distance from
her. Inez was his friend and as far as he was concerned, while it was the
intelligent thing to accept Buck's proposal, he could also understand why she
was so reluctant to do so.
"Okay," Buck frowned forcing to concede that
Ezra was correct on that score. "What else?"
"You gotta be
around." Vin pointed out since he knew from first hand experience what it
was like to have a father that was never present. In fact, if his mother had
not told him he was a Tanner, the tracker would have doubted whether he ever
had a sire in the first place.
"I got that covered," Buck replied, also
perfectly aware what it was like to be without a father to know that he would
like to be involved in the child's life. "I love kids." He grinned at
Ezra, defying the gambler to put up any obstacles before him he could not
cross.
"You have to be content with one woman."
Ezra said putting forward the most difficult hurdle in Buck Wilmington's road
to paternity.
"I can handle it." Buck glared at him with
narrowed eyes.
"For more than two hours." Chris could not
resist adding. As the one person who knew Buck the longest, Chris knew just how
susceptible Buck was to a pretty face.
"Okay," Buck groaned, throwing down his
cards because his luck, gambling was as promising as his chances as a
prospective husband, according to his friends. "Maybe I ain't treated her
the way I should. The question is what do I do?"
"Take cold showers, lay off the ladies and grovel
like hell until she gives you time of day." Chris said with a faint smile
as he called Ezra's bluff.
"Ouch." Buck grimaced, unable to imagine how
he was going to stand abstinence when every time he saw a woman, he saw the
possibility of an extremely enjoyable time.
"Come on Buck," Vin declared while studying
what Ezra had on the table; "you're a tough guy. You can keep that animal
magnetism on hold for awhile." The tracker was trying not to smirk since
Ezra was doing that to smug perfection already.
Refusing them the pleasure of seeing him defeated and
also because he was slightly annoyed at their lack of faith in his ability to
win Inez over, Buck decided he was going to abstain. "You're right. I can
do this. No problem." He said standing up from his chair since he was more
or less out of the game and Ezra had taken more of his money that he was
willing to part with already. "I gotta date with
the new saloon girl, I'm gonna break it off right now."
"A good start," Ezra remarked as he
presented his cards to Chris with a slight smile and caused the gunslinger to
frown as Ezra took the pot, again.
"You'll see," Buck called out striding past
the semi-quiet morning crowd. "I'll show her that I'm the marrying
kind." With that, he walked out of the saloon, determination dogging every
step of his departure.
"How long do you give him?" Vin asked no one
in particular as Ezra started dealing again.
"A day." Ezra replied with a faint smile.
"You're being generous." Chris met his gaze;
perfectly well aware how long Buck could last. "I wasn't kidding when I
said two hours."
"Care to lay a small wager on that?" The
gambler asked with a suggestive gleam in his eyes.
"Ezra, you ain't got no shame." Vin
retorted, unsurprised that Ezra would make something like this a sport for
gambling.
"Five dollars." Chris spoke and cut Vin
short.
"Well Mr. Tanner?" Ezra looked at him with a
hint of challenge.
Vin let out an exasperated groan and replied,
"I'm with Chris on this one. Five dollars for me."
It was some time later when Chris and Vin had left the
saloon to relieve J.D. and Josiah at the jailhouse did Chris have a chance to
speak about what had been preoccupying his thoughts lately, aside from Buck's
difficulties. Chris knew that any venture of this sort would naturally have to
involve Vin Tanner since Chris had become so accustomed to having the young man
at his side that it seemed odd when Vin was absent. From the beginning, both
had seen something in each other that made words unnecessary and somehow the
friendship that was borne from that initial encounter was one that Chris knew
would last forever, just as he had known that Buck would be forever in his life
from that first moment. Chris who found it difficult to trust anyone, let alone
rely on them, had found no such difficulties with Vin because there was a
streak of dependability in the young man that was almost unexplainable. Chris
knew that no matter what hell he chose to ride into, if he asked, Vin Tanner
would be right at his side, riding shotgun. He would do so without question or
argument, until he felt strong enough about something to make him opinion
known. The instance of that happening was so rare that it was wise to take heed
to it when it happened.
"You've been fading away quite a lot lately, pard." Vin spoke up as they made their way down the
street. "Want to tell me what's on your mind?"
Chris allowed himself a faint smile, unable to deny
that it was almost as hard to hide things from Vin as it was from Mary. The two
of them had different kinds of perception but no less accurate in its way.
"I've been thinking about what I'm gonna do beyond looking out for this
town."
Vin did not understand. "What do you mean?"
"Well I'm married now," Chris replied.
"A dollar a day with room and board was a good deal when it was just me,
but it ain't just me now. There's Mary and Billy. I got a family to keep. I
can't expect Mary to take care of the house and everything without taking some
responsibility myself."
That, Vin did understand. As someone who was in love
with a woman who was so self reliant it was frightening at times, Vin knew what
it was to desire being able to provide financially for the women in their
lives. He could appreciate Chris' dilemma because he had the same concerns with
Alex. It bothered him that she had more money that he could ever dream of
having and that financially; she had no need of him. While it was a small thing
in itself, it burned right to the traditional core of him that he would never
be able to provide for her in the way she was accustomed.
"I see where you're coming from." Vin said
with perfect sympathy for Chris' situation. "What can you do about it
though? Its not like we can get a raise or nothing."
"I had an idea." Chris volunteered and saw
Vin's interest immediately aroused. "I used to ranch horses." He
admitted, even though he was certain that this was information Vin already
knew. "I got that piece of land out there, I can do that again."
Vin considered the idea and had to agree that it was a
good one. The parcel that Chris had selected for himself was ideal for the
purpose. It was of terrain that horses could thrive and it was a large enough
property to accommodate a ranch.
"You'd really go back to ranching?" Vin
asked, unable to imagine Chris Larabee indulging in
anything so domestic. Then again, when Vin had first met him, he had not
thought Chris would be the kind to settle down and get married either. Lately,
he had done both so Vin was hardly surprised by anything that Chris could throw
at him.
"Yeah," Chris nodded. "I would. Looking
after this town doesn't take up too much time for most parts and I got enough
money in the bank to get started." Chris did not add that there was not a
horse ranch anywhere in the immediate vicinity of
"I think you should go for it then," Vin
said full of confidence that if anyone could make such a enterprise work, it
would be Chris. "If I can be any help to you. ."
"Actually," Chris met his eyes with a slight
sparkle. "I thought you might like to come into it with me."
Vin stared at Chris unable to think of what to say to
that offer. It took a moment for him to answer. "You mean like
partners?"
"Yeah," Chris smiled, liking how that
sounded. "Partners. I was going to ask Buck as well but he's probably with
that saloon girl now winning us money from Ezra so I'll ask him later."
Vin was about to refuse when he actually considered
the question and realized that he had no reason to do so. Thanks to his bounty
hunting these past few months he had about a thousand dollars in the bank that
was accruing interest as Ezra explained it to him when he had allowed the
gambler to explain his passbook to him. Horse ranching was something he could
do as well as tracking and at some point; he was going to have to think of the
future. While he was not married yet and would not be for sometime thanks to
Eli Joe and Tuscosa, that mess might resolve itself
in the future. There was no reason for him to idle the time away when some
productive might be achieved in the interim.
"You don't have to answer straight away,"
Chris remarked, taking Vin's silence to mean that he was somewhat reluctant
about idea. After all, he could understand Vin's reasons for not wanting to
commit himself to one place or throwing his lot entirely with Chris. "I
know it ain't no small decision."
"Its nothing like that," Vin quickly spoke
up so Chris would not misunderstand. "I just never thought about it. I use
to think that I'd worry about the future and marrying Alex after I get my name
cleared in Tuscosa but I'm wondering now whether
that's such a good idea."
"How so?" Chris asked genuinely interested
as the jailhouse came into sight.
"Well, clearing my name could take a long time
and I can't ask her to wait forever." He replied, his brows knitting as he
spoke, as if he were thinking about it even now. "I ain't rushing to get
married and I know she ain't either but when we do get hitched, I want to be
able to give her more than my name you know?"
"Look," Chris shrugged because this was also
something he had considered even though he had not voiced his deliberations to
Vin. "At some point soon, we're going to have to deal with this thing in Tuscosa. I know that you believe the truth is enough but it
ain't gonna be in this case. We're going to have to spend some serious time
trying to get your name cleared. However, until that time comes, you ought to
be thinking about what you're going to do in the meantime. You're right, you
can't make Alex wait forever and you sure as hell can't put your life on a
standstill until that price comes of your head." As Chris spoke, the
gunslinger suddenly felt very much his age and saw Vin not as a friend but a
younger person needing some sound advice
"You're right." Vin said after a long pause.
"I guess I gotta move on somehow, even if my
name ain't cleared. You know," Vin sighed. "I never wanted to tame
land or be no farmer. Closest I ever got to settling for less was when we ran
across each other that first day when I thought I might make a good store clerk."
"Who could forget?" Chris laughed
remembering that very well and also thinking how ill suited to the vocation Vin
had been.
"I meet her and everything I want changes.
Suddenly, I'm thinking about providing for a family and kids and God knows what
else."
"When it's the right woman, you surprise
yourself." Chris admitted, remembering how much he had been willing to
sacrifice when he met Sarah. All the hard living and drinking simply melted
away when he decided to make her his wife. After that, it had been church on
Sundays, coming home for dinners and finding that the highlight of his week was
when she served dumplings. When she had died, all those little things had been
lost until recently when he began his life with Mary.
"I've been surprising myself a lot." Vin
admitted trying not to look embarrassed as he spoke about how he felt about
Alex. It was not easy for him to talk about his feelings, which was one of the
reasons why he and Chris got along so well.
Chris just seemed to have an idea what was happening
and would give him a nudge or a word of warning when he needed it. After a
moment, he met Chris' gaze again and allowed a small smile to run across his
face as he regarded the gunslinger. "Partners, huh?" He asked.
"Yeah," Chris grinned as he suddenly had a
premonition on what Vin's answer was going to be. "Partners."
"I guess I'm in," Vin replied as they
arrived at the jailhouse. Despite the lingering doubts of uncertainty he felt
over this venture, Vin could nod deny that he felt as
if he had made the right choice.
"Partner." He extended his hand towards
Chris.
The gunslinger seemed to smile wider as he took Vin's
hand in his own and returned the handshake. "Just make sure I never let
Ezra talk me into letting him do the books." Chris laughed.
Nathan Jackson was not having a good day.
He and Rain could see the town of
The journey had not been this long even when he had
first made the ride to the village with Chris Larabee
and the others, preparing to do battle with a rogue army of Confederates with
five to one odds. Whatever was infuriating Rain so much was not something she
was about to reveal but she complained about everything until Nathan almost
contemplated the idea of taking her back to the village and continuing on
alone. Despite her behaviour, it was the reason for
it that was most confounding to Nathan. He had said and done nothing that might
possibly offend her even though he was forced to admit that women could be
funny creatures. Things that would not upset a man could turn a perfectly
reasonable young lady rabid with fury.
Rain was not that far from being that.
"We're almost there." Nathan had said as she
rode along side of him.
"Good." She said icily.
Her manner raised his ire to no end and made Nathan
increasingly agitated. He resisted the urge to shout; since they had both been
doing a great deal of that throughout the journey. However, he hated this state
of affairs between them and finally found himself asking her what was the
reason for it. "Rain, what's the matter?"
"Nothing is the matter with me." She stated
firmly, her jaw setting in that way he knew was her way of hiding a lie.
"Good Lord woman," he said exasperated. "Even
a bear with a thorn in its foot ain't as mad as you are! Now you've been trying
to take my head off since I got to the village which kind of makes me confused
why you're coming back with me now."
Rain shifted her gaze at him. Her brown eyes narrowing
as if there was much fury behind them, being contained in an iron cage of
resolve.
"I am sick of waiting for you." She
declared.
Nathan simply stared at her because this was not a
dislike she had confessed prior to this visit. "What do you mean sick? You
know I gotta be in
"Then why do you not ask me to stay with you in
In truth, he had never considered it. He had always
believed she was happy in her village and that she had no wish to leave it.
Nathan had not asked because he did not think it fair to naturally assume that
she was willing to leave behind everything she knew simply because he asked.
"I never thought you wanted to leave." He said stunned.
"Well you were wrong." Rain said glaring at
him. "I do not feel like I am a part of your world Nathan." She
declared. "Every time you come to visit, I hear talk about everyone,
Josiah, Buck, Ezra and Alex and I believe that they are more real to you then I
am. I am only a visitor in your life, not a permanent part of it."
Nathan was horrified that Rain could believe such a
thing. Did she not guess how much he loved her? How many times had he ridden to
see her, even when he was exhausted and ready to drop, he would rather die than
break his promise to return to her. Sometimes, all that kept him from going
insane was the thought of seeing her as he rode into the night, with only the
memory of her smile to keep him company. There were always opportunities with
other women and if Nathan had wished to exploit those avenues, he would have
but he loved Rain and was unprepared to be one of those men who fidelity lasted
as long as it took for them to meet the next woman who happened by.
"Rain that's crazy!" Nathan exclaimed.
"What gave you an idea like that? You're the most important thing in my
life. I'm learning to be a doctor with Miss Alex and studying for exams so that
we can be together." He leaned over form his horse and took her hand in
his, enveloping the warm of her delicate fingers with his own.
As he held her hand in his, Nathan saw the hard edge
of her eyes starting to soften slightly and guessed that she was sorry at her
earlier behaviour even though her pride would not
allow her to admit it to him. "I am tired of being left behind
Nathan." She said after a moment, her eyes falling to the dusty road
before them as if she was preparing to drop another astonishing revelation in
his lap. "I am returning with you to
"To stay?" Nathan's eyes widened.
"Yes," she said with a tone in her voice
that made Nathan's heart sink. He knew that determined expression in her eyes
all too well. There would be no argument or any hope of convincing her
otherwise. "I will stay in
"You mean you want to get married?" Nathan
was almost afraid to ask. "I think that's a bad idea!" He stammered.
"We don't know each other, not really. I mean we've been together for a
long time but not really together and..and..and.." he was running out
things to say.
"What are you talking about?" She looked at
him perplexed by his gibbering stutter. "I do not wish to marry you
immediately either." Rain rolled her eyes and then straightened up in her
horse with haughty indignation at what he had been babbling about. "What
do you mean it's a bad idea?" She said angrily. "I'll have you know Nathan
Jackson, that I had no plans of marrying you when I came back with you today. I
only wish to see a little bit of the outside world myself." She pulled her
hand away from his and stared at him imperiously. "I can take care of
myself."
"Come on now Rain," Nathan groaned, cursing
himself for landing his foot right in his mouth for his stupid remarks earlier.
Why didn't he just give her the chance to explain before assuming that marriage
was what she had in mind? "I didn't mean it that way. I was just thinking
that.."
"I know exactly what you were thinking." She
retorted with a voice that sounded positively glacial in its delivery.
"This may surprise you but you are not the end and be all of my life. Did
it ever occur to you that I might wish to see something of life outside my
village? I have been there all my life and with my grandfather gone, I have no
reason to stay."
"That's all well and good," Nathan replied.
"I can take care of you as long as you like."
"I don't need you to take care of me like I am
some child!" She barked so loudly than those townsfolk walking by had
reason to pause and stare at them as they rode by. "I can find a job. This
is a growing town, I am sure I can find some work."
Nathan liked this less and less and he wished he knew
what had inspired such a burst of independence, not to mention stubbornness. He
knew she was strong willed but Rain had never exerted her presence so
prolifically until now. "What kind of work?"
"I don't know!" She retorted. "I will
find something. It cannot be that hard. I have spoken to Inez, she said she
might need some help in the saloon with the baby coming."
"In the saloon?" Nathan exclaimed with
nothing less than horror. He knew how hard a time Inez had in the
establishment, dealing with Ezra, fighting off drunks, dealing with angry
customers, the occasional bar room brawl and then there was Ezra! To think that
Rain might be embroiled in such unsavoury happenings
was enough to make his blood boil. "No way, you gonna work inside that
place! I forbid it."
"You. .forbid. .it?" She asked slowly.
"He actually said that?" Alexandra Styles
asked Rain half an hour after the young woman had arrived at her home.
"Nathan actually used the word forbid?"
Rain had arrived to find Alex entertaining Inez, Julia
and Mary who were gathered at the kitchen table over a pot of tea and hot
blueberry pie. As the young woman nestled herself in the tight knit circle of
friends, she explained the argument that she had just concluded with Nathan. An
argument that was ended with her embarrassing him in public by telling Nathan
and possibly half the town that she was not his property and the day he forbid
her to do anything and expected her to obey was the day she lost her mind.
Naturally, Nathan had not taken this well and Rain had escorted herself to
Alex's who often gave her a place to stay when she was in town.
"Yes and all because I told him that I was
thinking of taking your offer Inez." Rain said glancing at the Mexican who
was presently devouring her second piece of pie with none of the other women
raising an eye in amazement. Inez's appetite was something they had become
accustomed during the past few months and was now common place to all who knew
her present condition.
"Forbid." Julia mused. "I don't think
I've had that word used on me since I was ten." The redhead replied
sipping tea from the dainty china Alex produced only for these afternoon
sessions with her female companions. "And that was mostly because my
father found out Bobby Fisher wanted to play doctor."
"I don't need to know." Alex retorted and
Julia threw her a wicked smile before raising her cup to her lips again.
"Well, working in a saloon is not exactly the
idea place." Inez pointed out trying to play devil's advocate. "Some
men may have a problem with that."
"Why? It's a job." Rain countered, impatient
with the whole idea what was proper work for a woman. She had spent her life
harvesting crops, planting fields and digging up irrigation trenches. What
passed for women's work in the Seminole village had been greatly expanded in
description owing to the lack of men to and the necessity for survival.
"You are grown woman Rain," Mary said
serving the girl a piece of pastry while Rain poured herself a cup of tea after
Alex had handed her a cup. "You have the right to live as you wish.
Besides, Inez does need the help. She can't be in the saloon serving drinks and
fighting off drunks when she gets further into her term."
"Thank you for reminding me what fun filled days
I have to look forward to," Inez groaned and felt the need for more pie.
Turning to Alex, she looked at the doctor. "I don't suppose you have any
cream to go with this, or jam?"
Alex rolled her eyes and then added. "Inez,"
she said sweetly. "I know we are eating for two, yourself and the baby but
we are talking about a human baby here, not a buffalo. A little moderation will
make delivery a little less painful when the time comes."
"DO YOU HAVE THE CREAM OR NOT!" Inez
screamed and made Alex jump back, startled.
"Thar she blows!"
Julia laughed. "That famous hormonal temper rises to the occasion, yet
again." Her amusement was shared by everyone else at the table including
Alex, who was more than used to this kind of display. Rain was looking at the
pregnant woman with confusion as the others around her were laughing at Inez's
outburst.
"Scream at the doctor now," Alex warned as
she went to get the cream. "And you risk suffering when it comes time for
that internal exam." The doctor smiled with as much deviousness as she was
capable of sending in Inez's direction.
"I'm sorry," Inez replied, feeling so
embarrassed by her temperamental moods. It seemed she was incapable of
tolerating any kind of argument lately and was prone to flying off the handle
at a moment's notice. "I'm just moody."
"Its perfectly understandable," Mary said
clasping Inez's hand in warm support, completely aware of what pressures the
woman was enduring.
Even though her immediate friends had no difficulty
supporting Inez in what was almost a scandalous decision, the rest of the town
had started to treat the Mexican as something of a leper. As the manager of a
saloon, she had never been held in very high esteem anyway by the supposedly
Christian folk of
Inez threw Mary and the rest of the women present at
the table a warm smile, wondering if they could even guess how valuable their
friendship was to her at this point in time. With what she had chosen to embark
upon, Inez felt comforted knowing that she would not be alone in the hardship
ahead of her. "Thank you. I know I'm acting a little crazy, it's just that
I really wanted that cream."
The table exploded into riotous laughter that even
Rain was now participating. Alex was still giggling as she produced the jug of
cream that Inez had been so adamant about receiving. The doctor pushed the pie
plate in Inez's direction as well since there as only one piece left and it was
never wise to deny a pregnant woman the right to her pie and cream.
"Look," Alex said pulling up a chair at the
table and rejoining the group. "Nathan will just have to get over
it." She advised Rain. "He's used to having you at the village where
it was at his discretion whether or not he saw you. Your decision to stay in
"Well I am staying and Inez," Rain looked in
the direction of the future mother to be. "If your offer still stands I
would like very much to help you in the saloon."
"You can stay here as long as you like."
Alex offered. "Although I suggest not running into Nathan for a while if
he has a problem with you and the saloon."
"Actually," Julia spoke up, having something
of her own contribution to this discussion. "I have a large house with
many rooms and no chance for you to run into Nathan on a daily basis. You're
welcome to board with me if you like."
"And it's closer for you to get to the
saloon." Mary added.
"If you don't mind." Rain said meeting
Julia's gaze. After Nathan's reaction to her decision to stay in
"I'll be glad to have you stay." Julia said
genuinely meaning it for she liked Rain and supported any woman who wanted to
find her own place in the world as she had once been driven to do.
"Thank you." Rain smiled at the beautiful
emporium owner. "I just cannot believe how pigheaded Nathan can be about
this."
"They're men!" Mary exclaimed as if this
explained everything. "If you look in the dictionary under the word,
stubborn, pig-headed, arrogant, annoying. ."
"Don't forget brooding, somber." Alex
reminded.
"Superior and smug." Came Julia's voice into
the fray.
"There would be a picture there of the seven men
we know." Inez concluded with a mischievous smile.
Another series of giggles and titters followed before
the room returned to some measure of seriousness again. "If it were any
other way, I would be married already." Inez continued. "Not living a
life as a woman who has sinned." She sighed, searching for something else
to eat. Alex slid the cookie jar perched on the other end of the table in her
direction.
"You didn't sin," Mary groaned. "You
succumbed to how you felt about Buck. Who knew the man could be so fertile in
one night?"
"What makes you think its him that's
fertile?" Alex spoke up. "He has slept with everything that moves. If
he could get Inez knocked up after just one night, we'd be up to our knees in
little Wilmingtons by now."
"And thank you for putting so much romance into
your description." Inez smirked at Alex who winced when she realized what
she had said.
"Romance in this place?" Mary looked at her
best friend in scepticism. "When was the last time
any one of us had anything in the way of romance? Come on girls, fess up.
Chocolates, flowers, tokens of love? Anyone?"
No one spoke and a cricket somewhere was making itself
heard most prolifically.
"Exactly." Mary replied folding her arms.
"I love Chris, I truly do but if I ever got a bunch of flowers from him. I
would die from the shock."
"Well Vin takes me to places where there are
flowers," Alex said thinking, uncertain whether that counted or not.
"And sometimes I get poetry."
"You. .get. .poetry?" Julia stared at her.
"The last thing I got from Ezra was a bracelet he won off some man who was
using his wife's jewellery as a stake!" She said
with slight hint of outrage. "This will not do."
"I don't need to tell you what I got from Buck
but suffice to say, I'll will be breast feeding it soon." Inez grumbled.
Suddenly, the kitchen door opened and Vin Tanner made
his entrance. "Hey Darlin', I didn't come at bad
time did I?"
Anything else he was going to say was immediately cut
short by the ferocious glares being thrown in his direction by the women
present at the table.
Normally, Vin could take five to one odds but judging
at the icy stares aimed in his direction, the tracker decided he was not going
to risk it. He swallowed and bid a hasty retreat. "Maybe I'll just come back later."
The town was hot and dusty and it sat on the edge of
the border that separated
Selena Quint had been
through this area several times in her life and though she was not exactly what
one could call a figure that was a local personality, those who lived here knew
well enough to leave her alone. Although she appeared to be a well dressed lady
of good fortune, those who had been unwise enough to interfere with her in a
manner she found disagreeable soon learnt that under the facade of beauty was a
most fatal combination of cool professionalism and ruthlessness. She dismounted
her animal and glided through the street, catching a few curious glimpses as she
made her way through the town.
Her appointment should already be waiting for her and
she hoped that he would not keep her waiting for it was a long ride back to
what she deemed to be civilization and she had not intention of remaining in
this town for any longer then necessary. To her, it was nothing more than just
a place to conduct business, as any watering hole might serve the purpose in
that way. Still, as much attention she might draw to herself with her presence,
Selena knew that people here did not talk about whom they saw here. Those who
did seldom survived to regret the mistake.
The cantina was like any other, just as redeeming as
the rest of town. She recognized the horse tethered to the hitching post and
knew that he had already arrived. The grey mare was almost as worn as its
master and just like its master, had more fight in it then anyone suspected.
She had met him years ago when she had conducted business south of the border,
trading her skills with the politicking that was the lifeblood of corrupt
little demi-gods grasping for power. When she had
known this man, he was already as vicious and greedy as any scum she had
happened upon but out of their mutual need came a healthy respect for another's
abilities and over the years, she had chance to call on those skills.
As she stepped past the beaded entrance into the dim
innards of the establishment, she was immediately bombarded by the odor of
cheap liquor and the cigar smoke, among other things, which Selena preferred
not to identify. Her eyes scanned the room, searching for him in the sunless
rooms of cantina, among the dark corners where occasionally a feminine voice
would giggle in Spanish followed by soft whispers that left no doubt as to the
intent it carried. Selena who could speak fluent Spanish sighted her party soon
enough.
He waited by the bar, flirting with a rather round
Mexican senora who was doing the honour behind the
counter. He did not see her when she approached, moving across the floor with
the silence of the wraith and just as much stealthy presence. Selena did not
speak until she was almost to the stool next to him and even then, her response
was a single word.
"Diaz."
He immediately turned around, making no apology to the
woman he had been attempting to charm. The bar tender gave Selena a dark look
as if she had intruded on what might have been a pleasant dalliance with this
man. Selena could not imagine such a thing since he had passed his prime a
lifetime ago and his once fine figure now reeked of the booze that had sallowed his bronze skin and loosened the taut muscle that
made him something of a ladies man.
"Querida." He
smiled. "It has been a while."
"Two years." Selena nodded, as she looked
over her shoulder at the bartender. "Tequila please."
"I taught you well." He grinned, revealing
teeth that were yellowed and missing in place. Selena had no doubt that he had
traded the gold fillings long ago. "You drink like one of us."
"I am not one of you." She said firmly,
disliking any thought of those days when she had considered Diaz someone she
cared for. In the days of long ago, he had taught her much and she had expanded
that knowledge beyond anything he could have imagined. However, it was sad for
any student to see a master in decline and Selena felt some semblance of sorrow
to accept that this was the way things were between them now. "Are you and
your banditos still riding for hire?" She inquired.
"More or less," he said grimly. "These
days, it is getting harder and harder to find decent employment. My men talk
about finding better work but most of them are bound to me because there is
nothing else for them and they know it. We will ride until we drop."
"You have to eat." She pointed out as she
downed the tequila with one sharp toss of her head. She noticed Diaz smiling at
her as she did that, pleased that she still drank in the manner he had taught
her since it was he who had introduced her to the drink.
"We do." Diaz replied. "But we do not
need a job for that. There are a lot of little villages like this own around
the border, far away from the army or the law. We ride in and take what we
want, ride out again before anyone can raise an alarm. I suppose we are
scavenging." He chortled even though his voice indicated that there was
nothing at all amusing about living that way.
Once again, a pang of sadness reached her heart over
his circumstances but she crushed it ruthlessly, having no wish to grieve over
things that should have no concern for her. "I have a job for you and I
can guarantee you that it will pay extremely handsomely."
"What kind of job?" He asked, his voice
perking up considerably even though he was trying not to show it.
So, he did have some pride left, Selena thought.
"Does it matter?"
"No," Diaz shook his head. "I suppose
it does not but I would like to know something more about it. I have to tell my
men something."
"That is fair." She had to concede to that
particular demand. "I need you and your men as a show of force. We are to
be instruments of a very abject lesson to be remembered for the next two
decades, if my employers have their way. You will be provided with everything
you need from ammunition, supplies and fresh horses if they are required.
However, you will not see a cent of your money until the job is done. I will
have none of you run out of me until the contract is completed. Do we
understand each other Diaz?"
He saw the glimmer of menace in her eyes and knew that
it was not a request made lightly. "My men will not like being held to
ransom." He pointed out unhappily.
"And I will not have you running at the first
sign of trouble." She said coldly. "You stay for the duration or you
will not get a cent. Tell your men that if they stay until the job is done, I
can guarantee they will walk away with no less a thousand dollars each."
"A thousand dollars does me little good."
Diaz retorted, making his bid for money, as Selena was certain he would.
"I would go through that in a month."
"As leader, I have ensured that you will five
thousand dollars American." She stated, prepared for this.
"Five thousand?" He said trying to hide that
he was impressed since the lure of the money was nothing he could refuse.
However, Selena allowed him his dignity. These days, it was all he had. "For
five thousand, I will ride with you but I wonder what I am agreeing to for such
a sum."
"You're agreeing to nothing, you are getting paid
to show up and fight." Selena retorted. "Now get yourself sobered
up." She said rising to her feet. "We ride at first light
tomorrow."