Brides of Idaho
Page 16
He reached the open and studied his surroundings. She didn’t move, knowing she was invisible among the trees. He removed his hat and brushed back a mop of dark blond hair. She took the opportunity to assess him further. From what she could determine at this distance, she guessed he was close to her age. She’d seen every sort of man go through the Bonners Ferry Stopping House. Every shape and size, so she eyed this one up with a practiced look. He wore a yoked western shirt, such as she’d seen on bow-legged cowboys passing through. He looked solid. Muscular. Like a man who worked for a living rather than push a pen across paper. Probably a man seeking gold. But then why was he in her clearing? Shouldn’t he be headed for the ferry and the gold fields to the north?
He jammed his hat back on his head, cradled the rifle in his arms, and returned to pacing out the clearing.
She again climbed the hill and made wolf calls, grinning at the way the man jerked toward the sound. She moved away. Should the man decide to fire blindly toward the source, she didn’t intend to be within range. A few minutes later she leaned against a tree to observe the clearing.
A movement at the tent caught her attention, and her mouth fell open. Someone was inside. And it wasn’t the man she’d tried to scare off. She sought his figure just to make sure, but he’d disappeared. She rubbed her eyes and stared. Had he moved into the tent so quickly she’d missed it? Impossible.
The person in the tent inched out far enough for Mandy to see it was a woman. Or a girl, who clutched a poke bonnet to her cheek and hunched her shoulders forward. Someone ought to warn her about bad posture. The girl—or woman, if she be that old—seemed afraid. At least, that was how Mandy read her furtive movements as she jerked little peeks about her then retreated into her rolled forward shoulders.
Mandy hadn’t had something so interesting to watch for a long time. She sat back again to observe.
“You stay out of sight while I take care of this,” twenty-year-old Trace Owens told his sister. It was no wolf harassing him. At least not the four-legged kind. He knew plenty of the two-legged variety. Could his treacherous associates have followed him here? He’d seen no sign of them in weeks. But whoever it was would soon discover Trace had no patience left for people bothering them. He’d run so far he felt like a foreigner in his own country. Seemed this distant corner of America was not involved with the civil war. He hoped it was true.
He cast a glance over his shoulder to the clearing. This little spot—a pleasant distance from the nearest town of Bonners Ferry—suited him just fine, and he wouldn’t be harassed away by some mischief-making person.
It would take more than a fake wolf to drive him onward. But he prayed to God they’d outrun the dogging threat of troublemakers. Not that he prayed much anymore. Didn’t seem to be any use in it. Except for Cora’s sake.
He’d listened to the wolf call as the person circled the camp. Knew whoever did it would move away, figuring Trace would go toward the sound. He went the opposite direction, moving silently among the trees, pausing often to listen for any rustle to indicate movement.
His opponent was good—he’d give him that. But after a bit he was rewarded with the sound of a little gasp. He wondered what caused it but didn’t let curiosity distract him. He focused on the sound and edged closer.
There he was. Squatted down, looking toward the clearing. Trace wondered what held his attention so completely but didn’t shift his concentration as he narrowed the distance between them.
He was close enough now to spring, and he did, bowling the spy over and pressing his slight frame to the ground. Their hats fell off, and he looked into the face of—
A woman! In man’s trousers!
A woman with a thick, untidy braid of dark brown hair and dark brown eyes that widened in surprise then narrowed, filling with anger and purpose.
He realized his peril just in time and clamped her hands to the ground beside her head. He kept her body weighed down so she couldn’t kick or hit or…
He jerked back as she reared her head, intending to do damage to Trace’s face. Did she realize it would hurt her as much as him?
She bared her teeth and flung about, trying to get a mouthful of flesh.
He leaned back as far as possible while still restraining her. “Why are you spying on me? Pretending to be a wild animal?” He snorted. “Guess it isn’t much of a pretense. You are a little wild animal.”
That certainly did nothing toward calming her. She kicked and reared and flung her head some more.
He tightened his hold. “Answer the question. Who are you, and what do you want?”
Lifting her head, she gave him a look that practically peeled the skin from his face. “Get off me.”
He considered his options. If he let her go, she’d either run away or attack him. He intended to find out why she was spying on him before he let her escape. But he had no desire to be the target of her feet and fists and teeth and goodness knows what else if he released her. Likely a knife and certainly a gun, though he saw her rifle had been kicked aside in the scuffle.
She followed the direction of his gaze, but the distant rifle did nothing to mellow her. “Let me go.” After a few minutes fighting to escape him, she grew still. “I have never been treated this way by a man. And I will exact justice.”
“I didn’t know you were a woman.” Still he didn’t move, knowing once freed she posed a risk to his safety.
“Well, I am. And now you know.”
Yes, now he knew. That didn’t make her any less dangerous. But he couldn’t stay where he was. It was indecent. He clamped both her wrists in one hand and leaped to his feet. Just as he guessed, she kicked and twisted and fought. But he held on. Not until she told him why she spied on them would he let her go. He repeated his questions.
“I could ask the same of you.” She spat the words out in between jerks and twists.
“Fine. I’m—” Did he want his name known? Not that it wasn’t a good name. Why, his father had been a hero in the Mexican-American War, which was the cause of all their trouble. But he’d lost enough. He wasn’t going to lose his name, too. “I’m Trace Owens.”
“What are you doing here?”
“You mean besides trying to calm you down?” He panted from the effort of restraining her.
“Sure picked a strange way of doing it.” She swung her foot and connected with his knee.
He grunted. At least she wore moccasins, not hard boots. He might survive a kick or two.
“I aim to build me a house and live here.” Fighting with her had deepened his consideration into determination.
“Yeah.” She twisted full circle, forcing his hands to burn a ring around her wrists. “You own the land? Got a deed to it?”
“Nope. Figure building a house makes it mine.” He’d see about filing on the land after he got settled. Didn’t seem to be any rush to go into town for the task. The longer he kept his presence a secret, the better he’d feel.
The kick she aimed at him was meant to do serious damage. He managed to jump aside and still hold her wrists.
“You can’t have the land. It’s mine.”
He hadn’t considered someone might own the property. “You got a deed?”
“No. Don’t need one.”
“Neither do I.” He jerked her wrists upward, forcing her to stand on tiptoes, effectively making it impossible for her to kick or bite. He realized she was almost too tall for him to be able to do so. Tall and tough. Bold and beautiful. “What’s your name?”
“I ain’t telling.”
“Expect I could go to town and ask. Maybe tell everyone about this little incident.”
She looked about ready to spit. “It’s Mandy Hamilton. Not that it’s any of your business.”
“Suppose not. But seems we both figure we got a claim to the same piece of land.” He lowered her slightly, as much to ease his arms as hers, and leaned in closer, hoping she wouldn’t break his nose with a head bunt. “Seems the one who builds a house first
is the rightful owner, and that will be me.”
He was ready for her explosion, but even so it was all he could do to hold her at arm’s length. He’d long ago started to sweat from the effort. Beads of moisture dripped from his forehead. He bent to wipe his face on his sleeve.
She took advantage of the movement to jerk back hard enough to make him stagger forward, close enough for her to bring her knee into his middle. He groaned but held on. Would she buy his declaration that building a house established a claim? Or would she only pretend to and head off to town to file on the land?
“Mister, that’s my land. I saw it first, and I aim to keep it. You won’t find it easy to build a house there. I’ll see to it.”
He straightened, forced her to face him. “Lady, I’m claiming that land. See, I already live there.” He twisted to glance at his tent and the horses tethered a distance away. “It’s mine.” Cora peered from the tent flap, watching the tussle. He couldn’t see her face but knew she’d be frightened. They’d both hoped they could find seclusion here. This feisty woman could make that dream an impossibility. Maybe he could bargain with her. “What would it take to persuade you to leave us alone?”
Another look that made him fear for his safety. “What would it take to persuade you to get off my land?”
So that’s the way she meant to be? So be it. She wasn’t the first challenge he’d faced nor likely would she be the last.
He tossed her arms free.
She rubbed her wrists and favored him with a dark scowl.
“Have it your way.” He jammed his fists to his hips. “Turn this into a fight, but I won’t be driven off. Seems to me whoever is living here and building a house would be declared the official owner.” He didn’t know if the law would support him in that claim, but it seemed reasonable.
“Fine. You want a fight, mister, you’ve got a fight. But I intend to fight fair.” The look on her face made him wonder what she meant. “First one to build a house and live in it gets the land. Agreed?” She stuck out her hand.
He drew back, expecting her to engage in another tussle.
She shoved her hand closer. “You willing to shake on it?”
“Agreed.” He was ready for the way she squeezed his hand and squeezed back equally hard.
She jerked free and strode away, chin in the air.
He stared for a moment then chuckled. With her baggy trousers and overly big shirt it was no wonder he’d thought her a man at first glance. But she was most certainly a woman. And he didn’t have to wrestle her to the ground to know it. She had a face of unusual beauty.
She moved with stealth and disappeared into the woods like a shy deer.
He snorted. Mandy Hamilton was no shy deer. More like the wolves she imitated.
How much risk did she pose? Could he trust her to keep their presence quiet? Not likely. He did not intend to trust anyone for anything from now on.
First one to build a house owned the land, she said. Who could say if she meant it or only meant to trick him? But if he had a house built, he would have a reason to dispute anyone filing on the land.
He jogged down the hill to his campsite.
Cora stepped into the sunshine. “Who was that?”
“Nobody. You’ll be okay. But I got to hurry and start a house.”
“So we’re staying here?” She glanced about as if taking real stock of her surroundings.
“It’s a fine place. We’ll be safe here.”
She sighed. “Already one person has found us. How soon until more come to stare?” She pulled her bonnet closer to her cheek.
He hesitated, caught between the urgency of getting trees chopped down and trimmed for a house and the sad note in his sixteen-year-old sister’s voice. Cora’s need won out. He went to her side. “Cora, baby sister, you are still a beautiful girl.” With a great deal of self-control, he stilled the anger souring his insides. The treachery of people he’d once trusted brought them to this place and made his sister endure her disfigurement.
She pushed her bonnet to her shoulders and faced him full on. “So long as you don’t look too closely.”
He’d learned not to flinch at the sight of the scars on the side of her face, but it never failed to sear his insides. He touched her shoulder. “You’re lucky to be alive.” He’d do all in his power to protect her from prying eyes. But how was he to keep Miss Hamilton away?
Emotions worked across Cora’s expression—anger, sorrow, denial, and finally, resignation. “I suppose some would think so.” The flatness of her tone denied the truth of her words.
No need to agree or disagree on the subject. He knew she didn’t count herself lucky. Often enough she’d said she wished she’d died in the fire along with their parents. No amount of reassurance on his part changed her mind. He seemed the only one happy that she’d lived.
“I just wish people would leave us alone.”
He hated the harsh tone of her voice and hoped changing the subject would lighten her mood. “The house I’m going to build will be small to begin with, but it will be warm and dry and better than sleeping on the ground under dank canvas.”
She sighed. “I suppose so.”
“Do you want to come with me into the woods? I’m going to start cutting down trees.”
She looked wistful, and for a moment he thought she might agree. Then she shook her head. “I’ll stay here.”
“You’ll be okay by yourself?”
“You won’t go far, will you?”
He thought of what he’d seen in his earlier scouting trips. Seemed there might be enough suitable trees within shouting distance to start with. “You’ll be able to hear me working.”
“Then I’ll sit here and read.”
He hated to leave her. Anytime she said she’d read he figured she mostly stared into space, but he had to get a house started if he meant to beat Miss Hamilton. “I’ll be back before dark. If you need me, just come or call out.” He grabbed his ax and headed for the woods.
Mandy fumed all the way back to Bonners Ferry then pulled up hard. If she steamed into the stopping house, Joanna would start asking all sorts of questions. Joanna could get very nosy. Four years her senior, Joanna had been the mother figure for both Glory and herself since their ma died eight years ago. Joanna had only been fourteen at the time, and she’d done a good job of taking care of them. But she took her responsibilities very seriously. And heaven forbid she would encounter her other sister. Ever since Glory had fallen in love with the preacher man, Levi, why, Glory had been too high-and-mighty for her own good. As if she had figured out the answer to all life’s problems just because she’d succumbed to love.
A couple of times, Mandy had challenged her to an Indian wrestle, but Glory only laughed and said, “Poor Mandy.”
Mandy ground about and headed up the hill away from her place. She needed to think and plan. That miserable cur of a man thought he could claim her land, did he? Well, she’d show him he didn’t stand a chance against her.
A part of her brain mocked. Yup, you showed him good who was boss, didn’t you? He had you sprawled helplessly on the ground. Then practically hung you from his hands.
She admitted with some reluctance that it took a mighty big man to lift her to her tiptoes. Mandy Hamilton was tall and had more muscle per inch of body than half the men she’d met, and she’d met plenty. Her insides burned with humiliation at the way the man had roughhoused her. She forced that insult aside to contemplate the urgency of building a house. She plunked to the ground to consider the quandary the man had forced upon her.
No time for a real house, even though her dreams included a tidy little dwelling with at least two bedrooms, a kitchen and a front room, and a stoop big enough to hold buckets, shovels, and a supply of wood.
She smiled. A stoop would serve as a cabin for now. No one said it had to be fancy. Just a place to live. That’s all she needed to gain ownership of the land. Of course, she could walk down to the lawyer’s office and fill out a clai
m, but it didn’t sound like half as much fun as beating the man at a challenge.
A frown drew her mouth down. She needed to beat him to salve her pride.
A little later she sashayed into the stopping house with several dressed grouse for tomorrow’s meal.
Joanna glanced up. “I was beginning to think you got yourself lost.”
Mandy chuckled. “When was the last time I got lost?”
Joanna grinned. “So long ago I can’t remember. Glory seems to have disappeared though.”
The sisters looked at each other and sighed.
“No doubt helping Levi put up his mission house,” Mandy said unnecessarily. Both knew where she was and why.
“Says they won’t marry until the place is finished.” Joanna giggled. “Seems she’s in a big hurry to get hitched.”
They both had a good laugh and then sobered.
“It won’t be the same without her,” Mandy said.
Joanna hugged Mandy then broke away. “We still have each other.”
Mandy developed a sudden interest in the array of pies on the table. What would Joanna do if Mandy built a house and moved into it? But it wasn’t as if she planned to stay there day and night. She’d still provide food for the stopping house and come every day to help. “You need anything done?”
“You could haul out the ashes, fill the wood box, and sweep the lean-to floor before people start arriving.”
As she did the chores, Mandy planned her house.
Chapter 2
Mandy hurried through her morning chores at the stopping house then called, “I’ll be back later.”
Joanna waved her away. Nothing unusual about Mandy’s announcement. Almost every day she went hunting, keeping the place supplied with fresh meat. But today she swung her rifle over her shoulder and detoured by the woodshed to pick up the ax. On second thought… She took a few steps away and then backtracked…. She would take along a hammer and nails, too.