Wilda's Outlaw

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by Velda Brotherton


  Vexed, Calder rose. It was time he got out of this himself. The war was a long time over and he wasn’t helping anybody, least of all himself. Besides, he didn’t even make a good outlaw. Still, he couldn’t seem to let up on Baron, like he needed to prod him till he exploded. Give him a good excuse to knock him on his butt. He settled for reaming him out.

  “We got plenty of folks on our side who still ain’t forgot what that war done to them, but that’ll change right fast you go to getting too rough. You scared those folks bad, plus told ’em my name.”

  “Keep harping on it. Was just a slip. But no one noticed. They was too busy looking at our guns. Hell, half the country knows us anyway. And as for scaring folks, that’s what we’re supposed to do. Look what going easy on folks has got us. We ain’t breaking even, let alone helping out the folks who’re hurting from that danged war. We gotta do something bigger…or get out of the outlaw business. We’d do better diggin’ for gold where there ain’t none.”

  The older man was right, but Calder doubted either of them were cut out for robbing some bank where the stakes were too high. Baron wasn’t exactly bright as a two-bit piece, and as for himself, he didn’t want to be put in a position to have to kill someone. Deke, well, hell. Who knew what he would do? It was the quiet ones a fellow had to watch out for.

  He stared over Baron’s shoulder. “Wading through all those dead men at Palmito convinced me I don’t take to killing, and surely not to dying. Hell, even killing Yankees puts a sour taste in my mouth, though I admit there’s plenty of ’em needs killing.”

  “You ain’t got to kill anyone. Just act like you might. I wasn’t going to hurt no one, just scare ’em a tad.”

  “They didn’t know that. That poor old woman fainted dead away. Suppose she’d died or something?”

  Baron shrugged, taking the criticism calmly. “She didn’t, so what’s the big fuss? I’m telling you, we need to look around, find us a bigger target. They’s riches a plenty in that English settlement. They say even royalty is living there, and they must have money, the way they’re hiring everyone in sight to build the town. Bound to be a bank. We could bust it open, get us some real cash.”

  Calder rubbed a hand over his stubbled chin, lowered himself onto a step. “I don’t know, so close to Fort Hays, they’d likely have the army after us right off. Hitting banks is different from robbing a few folks on a train or stagecoach.” Time he shut up. Baron might be right. Go where the real money was and stop holding up folks with little to spare anyway. Still, a bank full of people. The clerk probably kept a pistol close at hand.

  “Someone could get killed or bad hurt if everything didn’t go right,” he said under his breath, giving in a little.

  Baron blew out a breath. “So, we’ll check it out. Hang around town a few days, see what’s what. Find out how it works. I’m telling you, this could work. In and out, easy as can be. And you know Widow Johnson and her young’uns need help in the worst way, after Jim got hisself killed.”

  How like Baron to throw Rachel’s circumstances at him. Not even as old as him, she had three little tads when her husband was gunned down. Once tough as a range raised filly, she looked more fragile every day. She was slowly losing the battle to keep things together on their homestead. If she had some money she could go back to St. Louis, be with her folks, raise those pretty young’uns of hers.

  Her sadness reminded him of his own mama the last time he’d seen her. Standing in the lane, hand raised in a goodbye wave as long as he could see her. He’d never forget the tears in her sad violet eyes, watching her last son ride off to war in the footsteps of his big brothers. Both of them killed by Yankees before either reached the age of twenty-one.

  After the war, he’d finally checked out of the hospital carrying Yankee lead in one thigh, and ridden back to find his beloved home burned to the ground and his dear mama carried off by the pox. A man goes off to war and returns to find his mama dead and buried. Not the way it was supposed to be. For almost a year after that he couldn’t contain the rage, the madness that once in a while washed over him like black smoke. And when it was over, the putrid bitterness expelled, what was left felt hollow, meaningless. Life nothing but a bitter joke, and he lived it as if it were, all the while set on making someone pay for all the horrors visited on his homeland. It seemed all he could do was rob folks who had absolutely nothing to do with any of the world’s meanness. One thing was for dang sure, he was no Jesse James or even kin to him. All he’d wanted was to steal a little money now and then from them that could spare it. Not hurt anyone. Try to do some good, one family at a time.

  Driven by a sudden and familiar rage against life’s indifference to the suffering of innocents like Rachel and her brood, Maw and the boys, he scattered the paltry pieces of jewelry laid out before him.

  This wasn’t a good idea, but dammit he didn’t know what else to do. “Okay, you’re right. We’ll hit the bank, but we’re going to do it proper. Have a plan. I don’t want anyone getting hurt, you understand me?”

  “Aw, hell. What do you think we oughta do, carry a rolling pin to a gunfight? I don’t think it would convince those folks to turn over their money, but hey, no one would get more than a lump on their head. I say, it’s either do it right…or I’m riding on.”

  “You’ll do just that if you hurt someone, by God,” Calder said. “Though I’d hate like hell to see you go, seein’ as I owe you my life.”

  “Don’t you look back at that. I did what any man would, given the circumstances. You done give me all you owe me.”

  Once again on his feet, Calder raised his voice. “What have I give you? A chance to get yourself shot for a thief? We go in there to rob a bank, and I’ll give you that chance for sure. I don’t owe you death for saving my skin at Palmito.”

  “Well, hell.” Baron grinned like he knew he’d won. “I reckon I could rob the bank on my own. But you’d still feel guilty, wouldn’t you? That’s your way. You wasn’t responsible for that war, and you sure as hell ain’t responsible for every blamed thing that happens in this world because of it.”

  Saying so didn’t stop how Calder felt. The big man had hauled him up out of a bloody ditch, carried him for miles, across the Rio Grande and back to Palmito’s Ranch. The damned Yankees finally succeeded in defeating them there. They’d give it up, packed it in. The last Rebs to do so. He’d dragged himself home. Thanks to Baron he’d lived through the war, but with very little to show for it. And little hope things would get better. Still, he owed the man something and he sat back down.

  Again, his gaze wandered beyond Baron. “Okay, you’re right and I know it. Most of that money in Victoria City comes from rich foreigners anyway, and they’re just about as bad as Yankees, so let’s do it. But let’s do it right. They’ll be suspicious of three strangers. I hear they don’t welcome outsiders except those ready to do their dirty work. We need to become servants to the dandies. I’ll ride on into town, get me a job of some kind, keep an eye out. Figure the best way to hit the bank without—”

  “Anyone getting hurt,” Baron finished for him. He shook his head, dust puffing from his unkempt hair. “What if someone recognizes you?”

  He rubbed his dark beard. “Well, let’s make some changes so no one does. I don’t think anyone knows my face anyway, but just in case.”

  An hour later, with the help of Baron, he’d chopped his long hair short and shaved off the week-old stubble.

  Baron backed off and eyed him critically, squinching one eye shut. “Well, you do look different, all right, but you’re gonna need some town clothes if you expect to get a job. What do you think you’ll try for?”

  “How about bank clerk?” Calder asked with a grin.

  “Naw, I don’t think so.” Baron eyed him like he’d taken leave of his senses.

  “Just funning you. I thought maybe I could work at the livery, or one of the stores. I hear some of those uppity English folks are hiring men to take care of animals, till the soil. I guess th
ey want to live like they were still in England. Don’t reckon I’d make a good farmer, but there’s no reason to be particular. This ain’t exactly a career move.”

  “Aw, I don’t know. Ain’t moving up from petty theft to bank robbery a career move of a kind?”

  Calder’s laughter joined that of the huge man. It felt good to have something to laugh about, but deep down he still worried that maybe this wasn’t exactly the right thing to do. It was a little late for that, though. What was it they said? In for a penny, in for a pound?

  With a wrinkled brow, Baron studied Calder. “Them britches of yours is getting plumb threadbare. Reckon you could wear old Jim Johnson’s things? He was about your size and might have had a Sunday-go-to-meeting outfit his misses would loan you.”

  Calder dusted the worn Levi’s and nodded. “I’ll ride over soon as it gets dark and ask her.”

  “You best be careful, now. That young widow’s been sidling glances at you for a spell. She’s been alone long enough to be thinking in terms of another man.”

  “Don’t be ridiculous. Miz Rachel ain’t thinking of nothing like that. She loved her Jim, still does.”

  Baron hooted. “Show’s what you know about women. Some of the best pokes I ever had was with grieving widows. Besides, women need a man for more than sex.”

  “Well, she needn’t be looking to me for any such thing.”

  “All the same, you’d better watch out. All cleaned up and shiny, you put on her dead husband’s duds, she’s likely to pounce right on you.”

  “She can just pounce away, won’t do her any good.”

  A vision of the young woman on the train skittered through his mind. How come she kept pestering him, he had no notion. The way she’d stood up to Baron, sky blue eyes flashing like a wild cat’s. That golden red hair catching the sun so it looked like a halo; talking in her peculiar way, all got up in enough clothes to cover four frontier women. Now her, he might welcome a pouncing from. He forced such nonsense right out of his head before his other parts got involved.

  Not so easy to drive from his mind, though, the fright in the eyes of those good people on the train. He never really wanted to instill that kind of fear, especially in women. That gutsy little girl and her attractive friend, they had stood up to him and Baron, and that made him feel pride for them. That would stand them in good stead out here where life was so hard on the gentler sex.

  He shrugged off any more thought of the foreign woman. Not the kind who’d ever look at him twice, anyway.

  “If I need me some of that,” he said aloud, “I’ll settle for a dove. I don’t fancy a proper woman’s glances, not where I’m going.”

  Baron studied him for a long moment, probably not guessing that he spoke of the lady on the train and not Mrs. Johnson. “And where might that be?”

  “Hell, friend. Right straight to hell.”

  “Funny,” Baron murmured. “Thought we’d already been there.”

  The remark caught Calder up short. His friend was right, but that didn’t mean it couldn’t happen again, seeing as he was already well on his way down the long, dark road to damnation.

  Chapter Three

  Lord Prescott did not meet them at the depot, but sent his man, Simmons, who loaded Mr. and Mrs. Chesshire, Rowena, Tyra and Wilda into a carriage, then ordered their trunks and valises placed in a freight wagon which would follow along on the last leg of their journey to Fairhaven.

  With the carriage ready to leave, Wilda and the others bade goodbye to their traveling companions—those who would build in town would take up temporary residence in the Manor in Victoria, a place built by Grant for those who emigrated. The large hotel rose from the empty plains, the new town spread around it like a bustling skirt.

  Too weary to voice her anger at Prescott’s absence, she grumbled a bit about men of little consideration, then settled into the lushly appointed conveyance.

  Marguerite put voice to all their feelings. “My word, this Kansas is hot and windy. If I have to climb in and out of one more vehicle, I shall surely perish.”

  Rowena agreed. “I am not certain which was the most uncomfortable, the ship or that dreadful barge.”

  “Definitely the barge,” Wilda said. “My behind ached the entire time.”

  “My dear Wilda, I do wish you wouldn’t use such language.”

  Tyra giggled, whispered to her cousin, “She does not know all the words I’ve heard you use.”

  Wilda put a finger over her lips, then they both laughed. Having Tyra along on the trip had saved her more than once from going mad with boredom.

  Speaking of boredom, the monotonous plains appeared just that. Boring. That they were perfectly flat was deceptive. When one started across them the land rose then fell in a gentle facsimile of the sea voyage. A constant wind tore at her hair and clothing, spit gritty dust in her eyes, and did nothing to cool her. Poor Mrs. Chesshire appeared on the verge of fainting while Mr. Chesshire did his best to soothe her.

  Wilda squirmed and pulled at her heavy clothing. What a miserable place this was. Laced in the tight corset, layers of petticoats and bulky crinoline, and weighed down by the traveling toilette, she just might swoon too. Settling into memories of the outlaw Calder brought about the desire for a different type of swooning altogether.

  After what seemed ages, Simmons drew up the team. Wearily, she raised her head enough to peer outside.

  Why had they stopped here? Nothing for miles but a treeless prairie, dotted with patches of golden sunflowers cavorting in the brisk wind.

  “It’s really quite lovely,” Rowena said.

  “Everything’s lovely to you,” Wilda grumbled.

  “Don’t be so grim. Look on the bright side. You will marry soon and I’m sure you and Blair…uh…well, I mean Lord Prescott will make a perfectly suitable husband.”

  “Then why don’t you marry him?”

  Rowena sighed, but didn’t reply. Now she was the one who appeared sad. But Wilda didn’t say anything. It was no secret that Rowena had been attracted to Prescott. As far as she was concerned, her sister could have him.

  Simmons rose from the buggy seat and pointed downward. “Fairhaven is just down there.”

  The carriage sat on a crest that fell gently away before them. An ornamental iron and stone gateway blocked a drive that coiled downward through a sea of grass to the imposing mass of a huge gray stone house. One of those stately homes of which the upper class Victorian English were so proud. Massive chimneys and corner turrets jagged upward from the roofline. Enormous windows stared like rows of blank eyes. Bright afternoon sunlight reflected blue and gold prisms from octagonal leaded glass framed on either side of a set of double wooden doorways.

  Tyra squealed with delight and even the reserved Rowena half rose from her seat.

  “What a beautiful home. Reminds me of Devonshire… Well, except for the wind.”

  “And the everlasting nothingness.” But Rowena was right about Fairhaven. Wilda’s breath caught in her throat. So this was the home of Lord Blair Prescott, and soon to be hers as well. It was indeed impressive. Prescott had magically transported a smaller version of his magnificent family home in England to this primitive place. How he had done so much in the fourteen months since his arrival here puzzled her. It seemed an impossible task. Yet it was said that wealth went a long way in this uncivilized land.

  Simmons grunted back into his place on the seat, slapped the horses flanks with leather reins, and they began the final lap of their journey into this exciting new life.

  Speechless, Wilda grabbed her sister’s hand and squeezed. The enchanted vision of the great stone house drove some of the apprehension about her impending marriage from her mind. Whether she liked it or not, this was to be her home, she the lady of the manor. For a long moment after they halted in the courtyard she could only sit and stare. Everyone climbed out, leaving her alone in the carriage. The double doors of the manse remained firmly closed.

  Where was Lord Prescott? Sighi
ng, she gathered her heavy skirts and scrambled down to further study her surroundings.

  The Chesshires stood apart from the others, obviously entranced by the unexpected castle in the middle of the prairie. In partial payment for chaperoning the three Duncan girls from England, the couple had been invited to remain as guests at Fairhaven until their home and shop in Victoria were completed. Had it not been for Marguerite Chesshire, Wilda, Rowena and Tyra would never have met Lord Prescott and begun such an exciting adventure.

  As for the marriage, anxiety at the idea of greeting her future husband overpowered Wilda. She could only hope and pray that her memory of his brooding disposition was only a product of her own apprehensions built during the difficult, lengthy trip. Squelching her fears, she studied the windows in hopes of a glimpse of the man. He must be curious about their arrival, and would certainly soon appear to greet them. But he did not show himself, not even as a shadow lurking behind the curtains.

  Simmons and the freight wagon driver were joined by another man, who had come from the direction of a partially completed stone barn to unload their belongings. Still no one opened the large wooden doors and bade them enter.

  Rowena tugged at Wilda’s sleeve. “Where do you suppose he is? I can’t see him anywhere. Oh, isn’t this a marvelous place?”

  “You said that before. Why is he treating us like servants, leaving us standing about out here? The least he could do is be here to greet us.”

  The heat of her temper plus that of the brutal afternoon sun added to Wilda’s discomfort. Under the constrictions of her corset, her heart was squeezed by a huge, hard fist until it could scarcely beat and her breath came in short gasps. The wind whipped her long skirts in an effort to topple her off her feet. Lord, she was bone tired, lightheaded and incredibly weary. And that interminable white-hot mass that bleached the blue from the sky. Did it always shine thus?

  “One would think we could get in out of this heat,” Marguerite mumbled, then flushed. Being here under such circumstances ruled out much complaining.

 

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