“Yes, it’s a deal.”
“I’ll be leaving then.”
“Hurry, Jack, and be careful.”
Travis groaned then, but Emily couldn’t take her attention away from the entrance to their hideaway long enough to see if his eyes were open or closed.
“It’s going to be all right, Travis,” she whispered.
Clifford came flying across the entrance. She didn’t even have time to cock her gun before he reached the other side. She had to put both hands on Travis’s gun to keep it steady. Her arms were outstretched in front of her. Tears streamed down her face, but she didn’t dare take her hand away from the gun to wipe them away. She needed to concentrate, and most of all, she needed to pray.
Travis opened his eyes and looked at her. He saw the gun in her hands, heard her sob low in her throat, and wanted more than anything to take her into his arms and comfort her. He couldn’t move. He knew something was wrong, yet he couldn’t figure out what it was. He thought he must be pinned against something, and whatever it was was burning the hell out of his back.
He tried to focus on his surroundings. Emily was sitting in front of him with her back pressed up against his chest. There were two long lines side by side in the dirt leading up to her, and he had to think about it for a long while before he realized someone had dragged something heavy across the narrow clearing.
She’d dragged him to safety. Dear God, it all came back with startling clarity then. He’d been shot, and Emily was sitting in front of him to protect him. The O’Toole brothers must still be out there, and he’d left Emily to fend for both of them.
She needed to get the hell out of there.
He whispered her name and willed himself to stay awake. “Emily, what are you doing? You’ve got to leave.”
She didn’t turn around when she answered him. “It’s all right, my love,” she whispered. “You can sleep now. I’ll keep you safe.”
Who was keeping her safe? No, no, it was wrong. He should protect her, he knew, and, Lord, he didn’t want to sleep; he wanted to take the gun out of her hands and shoot the bastards because they’d made her cry. Then the black waves were suddenly rushing toward him, and he was once again pulled under into the dark.
She didn’t know how long she sat there, hoping and praying. Their situation was becoming hopeless. Dusk was fast approaching, and she doubted help would arrive before nightfall. She reminded God that hopeless situations weren’t difficult for Him, and though she didn’t know what would happen, she was fully prepared for the worst. Only one thought drove her now. She would die protecting the man she loved.
Nine
The sound of gunfire at close range jarred Travis awake. It took him a long while to find the strength to open his eyes, and when at last he succeeded, he thought he was looking up at the blue sky.
Suddenly the sky began to move. He couldn’t understand what was happening. He closed his eyes and tried to concentrate on the whispers floating around him, and when he was able to focus again, he saw a man leaning over him . . . a big man, with blue eyes. Was it Cole? No, he realized, it wasn’t his brother. It was someone else.
The stranger was moving him. Travis’s head dropped down to his chest, but his eyes remained open. He stared in puzzlement at a gleaming gold object the stranger wore clipped to his leather vest. He thought it was a pocket watch.
He heard Emily whisper. She asked the stranger if there was still time to get to the Perkinses’ home before dark, and it was only when she called the man “Mr. Ryan” that everything clicked into place. His gaze moved from the gold case up to the blue eyes, then back again.
No, it wasn’t a pocket watch as he’d assumed. It was a compass.
The bastard pulling him every which way was wearing Cole’s compass. Travis became incensed. He let out a low growl and tried to rip his brother’s gift away from the stranger, but, damn, he was so weak, he couldn’t even lift his hand.
The effort drained his strength. He felt as though someone had put a hand on top of his head and was shoving him under the water again.
And then he slept.
* * *
Travis came awake with a start to find Millie Perkins leaning over him with a razor in her hands. Instinctively, he knocked the razor out of her grasp and sent it flying across the room. It landed on the dresser, skated across, and dropped to the floor.
He’d given Millie quite a start. She jumped back and let out a shout. “Lord, you’re quick. I see you’ve finally decided to come back to us.”
“How long have I been asleep?”
“Off and on, almost four days now. You needed sleep to get your strength back, at least that’s what the doctor told us. He must have been right because the glazed look is gone from your eyes now. I was going to shave you,” she added with a nod. “You could sure use it. You’re starting to resemble a bear.”
Travis rubbed his whiskered jaw. “I’ll do it,” he said. He yawned, stretched the muscles in his shoulders, and felt only a twinge of fire. “I was shot.”
“Yes, you most certainly were,” she agreed. “They got you in the back, but more to your side than in the center. The bullet went on through, and the doctor assured us there isn’t any chance of an infection now because you didn’t catch a fever. You were sure lucky. You had an angel looking out for you.”
Travis smiled. “I must have,” he agreed. His gaze slowly moved around the room. It was familiar to him, and it took him a minute or two to realize why. He was in the same bed Emily had slept in.
One thought jumped to another. “Where is she?”
Millie seemed hesitant to tell him. “I assume you’re asking me about Emily. Do you remember any of the last four days? No, I don’t suppose you do,” she continued before he could answer. “Emily sat by your bed day and night, worrying and praying about you. Yesterday your sleep turned real peaceful, and when Doc Stanley came back by, he convinced her that the worst was over and that you would be just fine.”
“Where is she?” he asked again. He could tell something was wrong from the way she was nervously smoothing down her apron and looking everywhere but at him. He had a feeling he wasn’t going to like her answer.
She took a step back before answering. “She’s gone.”
He immediately threw off the covers and swung his legs over the side of the bed. Millie’s hands flew to her eyes, and she turned around so quickly she almost lost her balance. He realized then he didn’t have any clothes on, let out a whispered expletive, and dragged the covers back up. He leaned against the headboard and muttered, “Damn, I’m weak.”
“You should be weak. You lost some blood, but not too much, according to Doc Stanley. It was the hit you took to your head when you fell off your horse and struck a rock that made you sleep so long.”
“I fell off my horse?” He was horrified by the mere thought. Cole would have a heyday with that bit of news if he ever found out. His brother would never let him live it down.
“Millie, you can turn around now.”
She was blushing like an old spinster and still smoothing her apron when she did as he suggested.
“According to Emily, you did fall off your horse. She was the angel looking out for you, Travis. She dragged you a good long way to safety, and if you don’t mind me saying so, that woman loves you more than any other woman ever will, and you’re a fool if you don’t go after her.”
Travis shook his head. “She was all set to marry O’Toole, remember? And do you know why? Because she was hell-bent on marrying a rich man with a grand house and a curved damned staircase.”
The longer he thought about it, the madder he became. What kind of a woman would take off without even bothering to say good-bye first? A damned inconsiderate one, that’s who.
Millie, he noticed, was vehemently shaking her head at him. “She was not going to marry O’Toole. She told me so before you took her up to the crest.”
“No, she decided against marrying him the second she saw him and his s
hack.”
Millie snorted. “You sure are getting yourself worked up into a lather about it. If I were you, I’d get out of that bed and go after her before it’s too late.”
“I ought to, just to give her a piece of my mind. It was downright thoughtless of her to sneak out like that. Did she leave in the dead of night?”
“No, of course she didn’t. She left in the light of day. She’s on her way home to Boston, as a matter of fact. I was telling John that sooner or later, some other man is going to snatch her up. Oh, Emily’s made up her mind never to marry because of what happened, but in time some smooth-talking man will be able to convince her. Of course, you won’t care about her having another man’s children, now will you?”
Travis refused to answer the question. “Why didn’t she tell me she’d changed her mind before I took her up there?”
“Because she knew you wouldn’t take her, that’s why. She was determined to do the right thing and tell that no-good rodent face-to-face that she’d changed her mind.”
“Rodent?”
“That’s what she called him, all right. Of course, she didn’t know he was a rodent before she met him. She believed he was a decent man and that she owed him an explanation.”
“Let me get this straight. She thought she owed that bastard, but she couldn’t wait around long enough for me to wake up?”
“She admitted it was her own foolish pride that landed her in this pickle and that she had learned a valuable lesson. She didn’t tell me why she was leaving though. She knew the stagecoach only goes through Pritchard on Sunday, but she needed to go sooner. Guess you’re going to have to go after her and ask her your questions. I can’t answer them.”
“I’m going back to Golden Crest and shoot those bastard brothers before I do anything else.”
“The O’Tooles are already dead. A real nice gentleman shot them for you. It was a fair fight, I suppose, what with them trying to kill Emily and you. And the law’s on his side,” she added with a chuckle. “No doubt about that.”
He didn’t understand why she was so amused. “I guess I should thank him. Is he still here?”
She shook her head. “He took off right after he dropped you in that bed, but he stopped by yesterday on his way to Pritchard. Emily asked him if she could ride with him.”
“You let her ride off with a stranger?”
“He didn’t seem like a stranger to us, Travis. John talked to him a good long while. John was downstairs having an early snort with old man Kiley when they left. My husband was going to take Emily, but he was convinced he should stay here and look out for me. There’s a gang hiding in these hills. You remember John telling you about them? They’ve done a lot of killing and robbing. They even murdered a young mother and her little girl.”
Travis closed his eyes. “The man was Daniel Ryan, wasn’t he?”
“Yes.”
He remembered everything . . . those cold, piercing blue eyes . . . and the gleaming gold compass. . . .
“He was wearing my brother’s compass.”
“He sure was,” she agreed. “Emily asked him to give it to her, but he wouldn’t. He let her hold the gold case and showed her how to open the little clasp so she could take the compass out and get a good look at it. Then he made her give it back to him. He told her he had to return it to the lady it belonged to, and Emily understood. Now, Travis, don’t look at me like that. That lawman saved your life and Emily’s too, because she never would have seen the O’Tooles sneaking up on the two of you in the dark. They would have nabbed her for sure, and you know what would have happened then. Ryan got there in the nick of time.”
The thought of Emily being in such danger scared the hell out of him. It also infuriated him. If she had only taken the time to tell him what she planned to do, he never would have taken her up there in the first place and she wouldn’t have ended up in such a godawful position.
“That woman doesn’t have the sense God gave her.”
“I guess it’s up to you to find her some, then.”
He ignored her remark. “Hell, I can’t shoot Ryan.”
Millie opened the door before commenting on his outrageous remark. “Of course you can’t kill him. Will it make you feel any better to know that Emily shot at him? She thought he was one of the O’Tooles. Ryan told me he sure was surprised.”
“I’m not surprised. She shoots at every man she meets,” he exaggerated.
Millie let out a loud sigh. “You’re a stubborn man, Travis Clayborne. Are you going to go down to Pritchard or not?”
He didn’t like being prodded one bit. “I’m buck naked and on my way to shut the door, Millie.”
She let out a screech and went running down the hallway. He slammed the door behind her.
Travis was in a foul mood by the time he finished washing and dressing. He cut himself shaving because he wasn’t paying any attention to what he was doing. He was too busy thinking about Emily.
He made up his mind on his way down to the kitchen. By God, he was going to go to Pritchard so he could tell the ungrateful woman exactly how he felt. He would get a proper good-bye out of her too.
And that was all he was willing to admit.
Ten
They were the talk of the town. People started gathering in the middle of the afternoon, and within an hour, the Pritchard hotel was packed to capacity. The overflow spilled out into the street, and more lined the walkway on the other side.
Traffic came to a standstill, shops closed early, and chores were all but forgotten. This was a momentous occasion, after all, and no one wanted to miss it.
The clock inside the lobby began to chime the hour, and at six o’clock on the dot on Saturday evening, One-Eyed Jack Hanrahan came sashaying into the hotel, looking just about as fine as a man could look.
Money started changing hands immediately. Some of the men in town had bet Jack wouldn’t show up; others had been just as certain he would. Olsen, the proprietor of the establishment, didn’t believe in gambling, but he still managed to make a small fortune for himself and his staff because he’d been clever enough to charge admission to enter the dining room. He had fancy placement cards made too, and anyone who wanted to sit close to Jack Hanrahan and Emily Finnegan while they dined had to pay dearly for the privilege. In the event Miss Finnegan didn’t keep her promise—and what woman in her right mind would?—the proprietor had a sign propped up on the counter to alert everyone that there wouldn’t be any talk about refunds.
Olsen didn’t feel at all guilty about fleecing his friends and neighbors, for one simple but important reason: history was in the making that day, and all because Jack had finally taken a bath.
Folks had bet on that too, so there was a fair amount of grumbling from the losers when the shout came echoing down the street at precisely five o’clock that Jack Hanrahan had just been seen entering the bathhouse.
The sight of the mountain man, now all squeaky clean and gussied up, was enough to take the crowd’s breath away and was surely worth every penny they’d paid. Why, Jack looked as pretty as you please dressed in a starched white shirt, pale blue tie without a stain anywhere, and black twill trousers with a nice straight crease down each pant leg, exactly where it was supposed to be. His shoes were new and shiny; his hair was all slicked down, and he carried a black suit jacket over his arm, just like a dapper gentleman would on a warm day.
The crowd began to cheer as they watched Jack make quite a production of putting his coat on and adjusting his brand-new eye patch, but one mean look from him was all it took to slam the door shut on that nonsense.
The man had a flair, all right. He also had a temper as big as the territory. Olsen nervously waited behind the counter next to his “No Refunds” sign while Jack easily threaded his way through the crowd. He would have gotten to the proprietor sooner, but he paused twice to glare at offenders in the crowd who dared to get too close to him. Folks were squeezed up so tight against one another, they could barely breathe let
alone move, yet like the Red Sea, they miraculously parted to give him room. No one dared touch him because that just might make him mad, and only God knew what he would do then.
Olsen was shaking from head to toe. He didn’t want to be around when Jack found out Miss Finnegan had changed her mind—if indeed she had—and so he made one of the servants go upstairs with him to announce her escort’s arrival. Olsen didn’t plan on coming back down. He’d send the servant with the bad news while he sought out a safe hiding place.
With the thought of survival uppermost in his mind, he motioned to a staff member, told Jack in a stammer he would be pleased to go and fetch Miss Finnegan, and then hurried around the counter.
The boy he’d recently hired met him at the bottom of the staircase, and just as the two of them were about to start up, they spotted Miss Emily at the landing.
Money would have changed hands again if the men could have stopped gawking at the beautiful woman long enough to get the bills out of their pockets. Because of the size of the crowd, the noise should have been deafening. It wasn’t though. In fact, no one made a sound. They all stared in wonder, astonishment . . . and relief at the lovely lady above them.
She was stunning. Dressed for a formal ball, she wore a full-length shimmering gold gown with a modestly revealing neckline meant to entice men and placate women, capped sleeves, and a fitted bodice that showed off her figure to perfection. The skirt was full and fell in soft folds around her golden slippers, and when she moved toward the top step, the fabric sparkled and glittered in the candlelight.
Travis watched her from the entrance to the alcove behind the counter. While the crowd would probably never forget what she wore, he was far more enamored by the warmth that came into her eyes when she found Jack in the sea of faces below her and smiled at him.
Travis moved back into the dark before she turned toward him. He was there only to make certain there wasn’t any trouble, and unless it was absolutely necessary, he wasn’t going to interfere. The evening belonged to Jack Hanrahan, but tomorrow belonged to him.