by Ami Snow
The rider came thundering out of a side street right in the direction of the sheriff. Chico saw him just in time. He had a handkerchief pulled over his face and his hat slouched down to cover his eyes. He was headed out of the sun where the sheriff wouldn’t be able to see him in time. The whole incident had been carefully planned. Chico pondered over how many people were involved when he pulled out his revolver.
Both the rider and Chico fired at the same time. Chico’s bullet struck the rider between the eyes and the rider’s shot hit the sheriff in the left arm. Chico could see the blood flow from her bicep as the rider flew off the back of the horse. The crowd turned from the accident and ran to the source of the gunshots.
As Chico worked to stop the bleeding, several people went to the dead rider and turned him over. They looked at the body and shook their heads.
“Who would want to hurt the sheriff?” somebody finally said.
“Does anyone know who he is?” the sheriff yelled through the pain of her wound.
No one had ever seen the rider before. He was a complete stranger. They all walked away. Someone said the undertaker should be called.
Chico looked in the direction of the saloon as he helped the sheriff back to her office. The town council was glaring at him from the under the eaves with pure hatred. The bartender was smiling from one of the second floor windows.
Chico managed to get the sheriff back to her house. He put her on her horse, after locking the office and walked her to the edge of town where the house her parents had lived in for many years was located. He had enough training from the wars on taking care of wounds and knew how to clean one out and dress it. While the sheriff swore, he tied her arm down the kitchen table and dug out the bullet. Next he poured enough whisky down her throat and over the wound to take care of the pain and infection. He ripped up her shirt and used it to keep the bleeding under control. She fought him every step of the way, but Chico had more strength than he let on. At one point she reared back to strike him while he cut the bullet out and Chico grabbed her fist, putting it down slowly.
A few townspeople came by and checked on her. By then Chico had put her to bed and let everyone see she was in good shape. He informed them the office would be closed for the next few days. When one older lady asked what to do if there was any trouble in town, he told her to talk to the mayor.
The town council was absent through the sheriff’s recovery. Chico watched over her through the night, making sure she would be fine. By the next morning the sheriff was moving around and her arm was healing. Chico didn’t tell her he knew of a few herbs to generate quick recovery. A few more things he’d learned over the years while traveling. Two days later the sheriff was looking at the arm and commenting how quickly the wound had closed.
Chico was looking at the sky that evening. In a few days it would be the full moon and he had to make plans.
The next day Chico told the sheriff she should allow him to clean her up. The sheriff had been wearing a night gown since he brought her home and not her usually riding clothes. Chico finally got her to agree when he told her it would help speed up the healing. He didn’t tell her that she was almost healed already.
Chico filled he bath tub with hot water he boiled in a washtub over a fire behind the sheriff’s house. He told her when it was ready and went to a different part of the house to allow her to get into the tub. She might be the sheriff but she was still modest.
He came into the kitchen where the tub had been arranged after allowing her a few minutes to get comfortable. Chico carried with him a bowl, washes rag, towels and a bar of lye soap he had found in the cupboard.
The sheriff was still wearing her night gown in the tub.
“How am I going to wash you if you are clothed?” he asked.
“You want to see me without my clothes?” she demanded.
“I really don’t see any other way to clean you.”
She pulled off the nightgown, now wet and tossed it at him. Chico grabbed it and put it on the kitchen table to dry. Then he returned to the sheriff.
Chico rolled up his shirt sleeves, noticing how she tried to hide herself by covering her breasts. He made his best effort not to smile and began soaping up the rag with water from the bowel. Getting on his knees to her level, Chico began to slowly wash her back. She needed it after being out sick from the bullet wound. Feeling her relax he worked on her neck and arms, being careful to avoid the area where the bullet had entered. It was almost healed, but no reason to push his luck.
She stood up in the tub and let him clean each leg, and then he worked on her feet. She sat down and held each one up, letting him work it as best as he could. He even washed her long hair. By the end, she was very relaxed. Chico put a towel around her as she stood up again and led her to the bedroom. He had put clean sheets on the bed for her and, after he had dried her off, let the sheriff lay down.
She pulled the sheet over her body and looked up at Chico.
“Are you feeling better, sheriff?” he asked her.
“I am feeling lonely, deputy,” she responded. “Now why don’t you get your clothes off and make the sheriff happy?”
Chico nearly tripped over his boots getting them off. He’d prepared for this possibility by getting a bath earlier in the day while she was asleep. The sheriff propped herself up on her good arm while Chico pulled off his pants and slid under the sheets with her.
He began rubbing her back and waited for the sheriff to move his hands over her breasts. Taking care to avoid her wounded area, he pulled her mouth to his and began kissing the sheriff all over her face. She reached down with her good arm and grabbed him.
“I see this gun is loaded,” she giggled.
He stayed on his side and maneuvered the sheriff so he could enter her from the back. She was soaking wet when he thrust inside her and heard her let out a cry of joy as he went in deep. She was a big woman with a lot to love. Chico wished she’d kept her boots on, but it wasn’t practical. He’d also wanted to be under her when the time came to make love, but the bullet wound made it impossible. He growled as his bear side manifested itself in his rough lovemaking.
The sheriff loved it. She begged for him not to stop and he could feel the oncoming rush of her climax. When it hit she gushed all over him. Chico was surprised; he hadn’t had a woman do that to him in a long time. He finished soon after and pulled out, moving his head to the side of hers. They laid together in silence for a long time.
“I was afraid you’d be a virgin, sheriff,” he told her. She wasn’t.
‘Had my share of loving back east,” she told him. “And quit calling me ‘sheriff’. Any man who has been inside me can use my name.”
‘I’ve wanted to be with you the first moment I saw you, Sheriff Mary Jane,” he called her. “I’m going to have to leave soon, but I want to come back to you next month.”
She put her arm around Chico and kissed him.
“All you cowboys are alike,” she said. “Ride your cowgirl and move on to the next one.”
“I’m not like that.”
She snorted. And Chico remembered it was time to prove it.
“The town council wants you dead,” he told her.
“What?” she said, turning to him.
And he told her everything. About them conspiring to get rid of her. Telling him how they were going to handle things. And how the rider had to be part of the plot.
“But why?” she said moving him to her chest, “Why would they? Unless they think I’ve found a way to prove they were involved in my father’s death.”
“The bank president. I think he’s some kind of former outlaw. If he is the other members of the town council may also be crooks.” He told her about finding the poster.
“That would figure,” she said while hugging him, “an entire town council made of former outlaws. And it would explain the bank’s deposits being higher than they should be.”
“Correct,” Chico said, “Wetzer doesn’t want it known he
has too much money in the bank. People will start to question how he came by it. And then they’ll start putting things together.”
“Don’t know what to do,” she sighed. “The whole town seems in their pocket. It’s just you and me. Oh, honey, you’ll need to stop that or we won’t get any sleep.”
They did it a few more times before dozing off. As he drifted into the land of night, Chico had a plan.
“So these are supposed to be the Brownington gang?” the sheriff asked Chico as she looked through the spy glass at the group of men camped on the trail into town.
“It’s what we’re meant to think,” Chico corrected her. “Why don’t you have a look at them closer?”
The sheriff adjusted the spy glass and had another look.
“I see some hard men who have been riding the trail all…hey! Those are badges they’re wearing!”
“Right. They’re Texas Rangers. We were supposed to think they were outlaws.”
“But why?”
“So the bank manager and his buddies can leave town with the all the gold he stole over the years that is stashed in his bank vault. With you out of the way, they’d have me believe the rangers were a gang trying to rob the bank instead of lawmen getting back his stolen loot.”
“Those bastards,” she growled. “The same reason they had my father killed.”
“Why Sheriff Mary Jane,” Chico exclaimed, “such words coming out of your mouth!”
They were over the ridge looking at the party which had camped out on the road into town. The sheriff had her horse, but Chico was traveling on foot as usual.
They embraced each other and kissed. He was glad no one was around to see them. What he had to do was hard enough without having the sheriff to be reminded daily of her lover who had skipped town.
“I have to go now,” he whispered into her ear. “I’ll be back in a few months’ time, but I don’t expect you to wait for me.”
She pushed him away.
“Just like every other man,” she said, turning away so he couldn’t see her tears.
“I know this is hard for you,” Chico said, “but you are the only one who can do what needs to be done. The crooks who are trying to leave town with their stolen money will be ready to go. I’ve checked. They started loading up the minute I shot the assassin they hired. By now they’ll be ready to leave. I can’t go stop them. You’ll have to go down and tell the rangers what is going on.”
She still wouldn’t turn around and look at him.
Chico went up to her and tried to put his arms around her from behind. She knocked them away.
“Mary Jane,” he said, “you may not believe this right now and I wouldn’t hold it against you if you didn’t.”
“I love you,” he whispered into her ear. He could feel her starting to cry.
“You have to be strong for us both. I’m going to hold those thieves off on the other side of town. Don’t ask me how, but I will. You have to come up the rear with the rangers.”
Chico kissed her on the cheek and walked away into the bush. He could hear her trying to stop the tears as he left. He hated himself, but there was no time to explain what would happen when the moon went up in a few hours.
When the sheriff and the rangers collared the fleeing town council the next day, they were amazed at how little resistance they put up. The rangers had expected a full blown gun battle with the gang, but the outlaws were actually glad to see them show up. When the sheriff and rangers came over the hill they found the wagons used for hauling the gold in a circle with the former town council inside it, guns ready. They tossed out the guns the moment the law arrived and begged for mercy.
“Thank God you are here!” the former mayor cried out. “I thought we were dead for sure!”
The sheriff looked at them with puzzlement.
“Why are you still here?” she asked. “I was certain you’d be all the way to Reno by now.”
“The bear!” cried the former bank president. “It’s out there! It came at us last night! You’ve got to help us, nothing can stop the bear!”
“Bear?” one of the rangers said. “What bear? I don’t see any bear around.”
“He’s out there!” screamed the former store owner. “He wouldn’t let us go last night. I emptied my entire pistol into him point blank! You’ve got to stop him!”
No bear was ever found by the rangers, although they did see some scratches on trees indicating something very large had been near the wagons. The town council was hauled off to the territorial prison where they spent the next ten years raving about a supernatural bear.
The sheriff returned to town where she served the honest citizens the rest of her life, although she never married. However, it was rumored she entertained a gentleman caller once a month who had been her deputy.
THE E
Gold Digger In Stealth
BDSM ROMANCE
By: Amanda Bolton
Gold Digger In Stealth
Chapter One –
Sandra Vaughn picked up the bowl of ramen, slurping up a forkful of limp noodles and bland, lukewarm broth, tasting vaguely of shrimp. She made a face, setting the cracked bowl on the table, turning towards the numerous open windows on her laptop, all a variety of some obscure social forum. After about two weeks of insufferable job hunting, she was on the verge of exhausting all her other options, turning to the plethora of ambiguously titled, sometimes frightening advertisements, a new one surfacing every half hour.
Sandra plucked a pearl copper strand of hair from her eyes, tucking it neatly under one of the countless bobby pins holding up the lace-braided bun nestled on her head. She hovered the cursor over the link of a post with no applicants, despite garnering thousands of views. She hesitated, twisting her lips skeptically, smashing the button of her mouse. She leaned towards the screen, her nose wrinkling, her expression growing progressively repulsed, mouthing the bold-faced words silently to herself in disbelief.
“No, no, no,” muttered Sandra, ramming the faulty backspace button on her keyboard as she frantically tried to exit the page, “Not that desperate, thank you.”
Sandra reached for the bowl of ramen, her elbows knocking off the bundle of schoolbooks and loose-leaf sheets stacked up on the edge of her desk, grunting in irritation. She nudged the books towards the foot of her bed, resolving to deal with the mess later. She continued to scroll down the simplistic forum, her eyes dimming as her expectations began to wither. She pinched the bridge of her nose, sighing, opening up a new tab to an advertisement seeking voluptuous women as “escorts”. She left the tab unattended and available as she browsed for other posts.
Sandra cocked an eyebrow as an unusually ordinary, inexplicit headline caught her attention. She clicked the link, her forehead wrinkling at the concise post. It read:
“Seeking part-time nanny for 10-year-old girl, no experience required, must be good with kids, must be patient. Must have flexible hours. No cooking or cleaning required – keeping the child company will be your only responsibility. Please include short description about yourself and photograph if interested.”
Sandra heaved a thwarting sigh. The “job” seemed profoundly out of place in the suspicious forum, and the anonymous poster's seeming lack of concern for their child's prospective caretaker triggered a ringing of alarm bells, the impending social worker inside her emerging. On the other hand, she yearned for a home-cooked meal – or simply, a taste of fresh leafy greens, or the savory, juicy flavor of a genuine hunk of meat. For several months now, she had been surviving on canned vegetables, processed cheese and frozen meals, fueling the lapse of her deteriorating taste buds.
Sandra shrugged off her dissonant thoughts, prattling away on the keyboard as she formulated a quick reply. She hit “Send” and proceeded back to the main page. She exhaled through her nose, the page refusing to load, and fiddled with her internet settings. She muttered under her breath petulantly, “Come on, 3B, I need your wi-fi, don't do this to me...”
�
��Crap,” grumbled Sandra, conceding. She slammed her laptop shut, stashing her beaten, whirring laptop into her backpack, the once vibrant paisley print faded with age. She whirled her backpack over her shoulder and headed out the front door.
Sandra walked into the public library, approaching the front desk, the familiar face of the slender man with a dark-Cesar cut, prompting a wide, affectionate grin on her jewel-red, rouged lips. She capered towards the young man, rapping her knuckles against the hickory wood of the desk.
“Keep it down, Vaughn,” said the man, not looking up from the unfolded newspaper across the desk, the ink of the intricate tiger tattoo on his arm flexing as he flipped the page.
“Hi Louie! What's with the newspaper? Ever heard of the internet?”
Louie glanced up from his paper, raising a thick, steeply arched brow, “So I like to keep it traditional, is that a crime?”
“No – speaking of the internet, my damn neighbor must've changed his wi-fi password – I can't get through –”
“Now that's a crime,” said Louie, his dimples indenting, “Ay, you know we're closing for the –”
“Pretty please,” Sandra's voice was smoky, her head tilted, “I really need to get this job search –”
“Fine,” Louie agreed grudgingly, shaking his head, “You have twenty minutes.”
“And that's why you're my absolute favorite –”
“Yeah, yeah,” muttered Louie, waving her away flippantly, “Nineteen minutes and thirty seconds.”
Sandra pulled up the nearest chair, plunking down on the lumpy, fraying cushion, and drew the laptop out of her backpack. She cringed, the obnoxious billboard topper trumpeting out of her jeans pocket. She reached for her phone and muted the ringtone, cupping her hand next to her mouth as she called out to Louie, “That's mine, sorry!”