Dorothy Garlock - [Wabash River]
Page 1
RIVER OF TOMORROW. Copyright © 1988 by Dorothy Garlock. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
For information address Warner Books, Hachette Book Group, 237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017.
A Time Warner Company
ISBN: 978-0-7595-2284-8
A mass market edition of this book was published in 1988 by Warner Books.
The “Warner Books” name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.
First eBook edition: May 2001
Visit our Web site at www.HachetteBookGroup.com
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Dorothy Garlock
POPULAR LIBRARY
An Imprint of Warner Books, Inc.
A Time Warner Company
Daniel’s Arms Went Around Her . . .
His hand slid across Mercy’s back beneath her hair and he wrapped her in his arms. He gathered her to him as gently, carefully, as if she were the most fragile thing in the world.
In a daze of joy Mercy clung to him. She wondered if he loved her as a woman or if he was fond of her because she was his foster Sister. Did she only imagine she felt his lips nuzzling her ear? In the warmth of his embrace, she longed to whisper that the love she felt for him was the all-consuming love of a woman for her man. She wanted to tell him to please take her as his mate, to join his body with hers, to plant seeds of his children in her womb. What would he say? Would he be shocked? Disgusted by her boldness?
Her words came in a quivering voice. “I can’t imagine life without you . . .”
Critics love Dorothy Garlock’s Wabash Trilogy:
BOOK I–LONESOME RIVER and BOOK II—DREAM RIVER
“A sprawling, gutsy saga . . . the Wabash trilogy promises to continue a career of shining triumphs.”
—Ann’s World, Hearst Cablevision
“Vivid and real . . . there is joy, laughter, sadness, and tears in these pages . . . a gripping, endearing, and exciting read that is full of surprises and written in Garlock’s own magical style.”
—Affaire de Coeur
“Again and again in compelling love stories, Dorothy Garlock writes of unforgettable characters who tamed the frontier.”
—Romantic Times
Also by
Dorothy Garlock
Annie Lash
Restless Wind
Wayward Wind
Wild Sweet Wilderness
Wind of Promise
Lonesome River
Dream River
To special people—
Candace Camp,
Pete Hopcus,
and Stacy—
with special love.
CHAPTER ONE
Mercy cast an uneasy glance over her shoulder. It was silly, she knew, to be so jumpy about going home to an empty house, but the two men who had loitered across the road from the school for a good part of the afternoon bothered her. When at first she had glanced out the window and seen them there, she hadn’t thought much about them. Then later, in the middle of the afternoon, she noticed they had moved to the edge of the woods across from the school and had built a fire. Were they camping there? It was far too early to build a supper fire. The men were still sitting by the fire when the school day ended and Mercy dismissed the children, but when she left the school to walk the mile home, they were gone.
Travelers constantly passed through Quill’s Station on their way to or from Vincennes, the city that had been established by the French almost a hundred years ago in 1732. Quill’s Station, on the banks of the Wabash, sat astride the direct route to the city. The village of more than one hundred people, surrounded by rich timber and grassland, stretched along the river road.
With her shawl hugged to her, Mercy walked briskly down the well-packed dirt road. She called a greeting to Mike Hartman when he came out onto the porch of the store, owned by Mike and Mercy’s father, with several coils of rope over his shoulder. She nodded to the father of one of her students who was passing in a two-wheeled cart.
As she passed Granny Halpen’s rooming house, she waved to the elderly woman, who sat in her rocking chair on the porch, a quilt across her knees to ward off the chill, a snuff stick in the corner of her mouth. Granny knew everyone and everything that went on in Quill’s Station. Farrway Quill had once said that the village had no need for a newspaper when it had Granny.
The houses in the town, no more than two dozen, were hewn timber set upright in the ground and chinked with stone and mortar. Except for the Quill house, none was more than one story high. All had porches on at least two sides, some on three. Surrounding each was a garden and fruit trees. Most of the houses were evenly spaced on long, narrow tracts of land and were set close to the road.
The Quill house, the largest and by far the grandest house in town, was on the bend of the road at the far end of town. As Mercy walked up the path from the road to the white, two-storied house with its massive stone chimneys, she thought how empty and desolate it seemed without lamplight shining from its windows. A sudden yearning to see Mary Elizabeth and Zack running to meet her, and her mother waiting for her in the doorway, sliced through Mercy so acutely that tears filled her eyes.
Inside the house, she lit the lamps to disperse the gloom. It looked different somehow—big, lonely. The fire in the fireplace had been banked. All Mercy had to do was rake aside the ashes and add kindling from the wood box, then a larger piece of wood. She did this now, squatting, holding her skirts up over her knees to keep them from being soiled. Soon the cheery blaze was sending warmth into the room. She removed her shawl and hung it over the back of the chair.
Darkness had brought a lively wind from the northwest. Mercy listened to it scurrying around the corner of the house, worrying a limb of the walnut tree and causing it to rub against the roof, making a scratching sound she easily identified. Now the brisk March wind was beginning to find its way down the chimney of the huge cobblestoned fireplace, teasing the flames, flattening them so that sparks came out of the burning wood, then dancing back up the chimney.
Curled up in the big chair where Papa Farr usually sat in the evenings, Mercy watched the flames and wondered what her life would have been like if he had not found her in the cellar of a burned-out homestead down in Kentucky and brought her here. She remembered someone saying that Farrway Quill had a habit of gathering up orphans. On the same trip he had found Liberty and her family stranded on the river road, and Daniel Phelps, the only survivor of a train of settlers who had been ambushed by river pirates. He had fetched them home, married Liberty, and together they had become a family. Daniel and Mercy had been as much a part of the family as Farr and Liberty’s own children, Zack and Mary Elizabeth. Mercy liked to think that her real parents would have been people just like Farr and Liberty Quill.
* * *
“I’ll be all right, Mamma,” Mercy had said only that morning when Lib
erty and the children were preparing to leave Quill’s Station to join Farrway, who was serving as a congressman in Vandalia, the capital of Illinois. He had been chosen in the fall election to represent his district, and he wanted his family with him.
“Eleanor and Tennessee will be back from Vincennes in a couple of days, and Tennessee will stay with you until school is out. Then you’re to come on to Vandalia,” Liberty had told Mercy as she gave her a parting hug.
Tennessee Hoffman, the daughter of the French postmaster of Davidsonville in Arkansas Territory had been brought to Quill’s Station by Gavin McCourtney and his wife, Eleanor, when they came to buy the sawmill from Farrway Quill. The childless couple were very fond of the French-and-Indian girl who was a few years older than Mercy.
Although Mercy was half a head taller than the woman who had raised her, Liberty and she could be taken for real mother and daughter. Both were blond and blue-eyed. They were not tall, but they were slender and graceful, and each had a beautiful mouth, whether laughing, talking, or in repose. They were totally feminine women, fragile to look upon, but with wills of iron.
“Did Daniel say he would take me?” Mercy had asked.
“He said that he would make sure you had a reliable escort. I’ll not worry about you one bit as long as Daniel is here to look after you. He always has, you know.”
“Too much!” Mercy had retorted spiritedly, because she was afraid she would cry. “He finds something wrong with every man who comes courting me and reports it to Papa. If he doesn’t let up, I’ll soon be an old maid.”
“An old maid at nineteen?” Liberty had scoffed. “It’s 1830, dear. Girls don’t marry as young as they did in my day. And besides, I don’t think you’ve really liked any of the men who have come calling.”
“I haven’t,” Mercy admitted with a shy smile. “But, Mamma, I told you what Daniel did at the Humphrey barn dance. He hit Walt Cash because his hand slipped down to my bottom while we were dancing. Walt meant no harm. He had been drinking. Daniel should control his temper.”
“His temper? He said Walt was acting improperly.”
“Walt is only a boy of eighteen, even if he is big as an ox, and Daniel is a twenty-five-year-old man. Since he built his own house, he hardly ever talks to me. He just stands around, silent as a tree stump, then he orders me to do this or do that.”
Liberty laughed. “He’s been doing that since he was a boy. Now he has all that wheat land west of us, and with Farr being busy in Vandalia, he has the responsibility of the farm and the mill, not to mention our most valuable asset—you.”
“Oh, damn, Mamma! I’m just being cranky. I’ll miss you!”
“Don’t swear, dear. I’ll miss you too!”
* * *
Above the ticking of the mantel clock, Mercy heard another noise. It was not the tree scraping on the roof or the creaking of timbers. It came from outside the door. She sat quietly, her ears alerted anxiously for a repetition of the sound. Daniel was going to stop by on his way home, but it was too early for him. He would be busy at the mill for another hour. Old Jeems would have done the outside chores and gone back to his cabin in the woods hours ago. The freed Negro hated to be out after dark.
The sound came again, a barely audible scratching at the door. Mercy came to her feet and reached for the pistol that lay on the mantel. She stood holding her breath, her eyes fastened on the door.
The sound was repeated, followed by a throaty “Meoow!”
It sounded like a cat. The only cat that had been in the house was Mary Elizabeth’s cat, Blackbird, and he had disappeared months ago.
Mercy’s mind went wild. Robbers had learned from the Indians to imitate a turkey or some other fowl to decoy a victim. She had never heard of one imitating a cat. Yet was it a cat on the other side of the door, or someone who knew she was here alone, using a trick to get her to open the door? She had to know. Her feet felt like lead. This is stupid, she thought, and willed her legs to move. Why in tarnation was she so jumpy? Was it because she had never before been alone in the house at night?
By the time she reached the door, her fingers were sweating on the pistol. Silently she lifted the door bar and lowered it into the holder. There was no sound. She could hear her heartbeat vibrate into the wood where she pressed her ear. Another “Me-oow” came from the other side of the thick panel. As she cautiously eased the door open an inch, a loud purring began. She pulled the door open wider and looked down. Out of the darkness came the eerie glint of eyes. Relief made her feel foolishly weak.
“Blackbird!” Mercy swung the door back. “Blackbird, where in the world have you been all this time?”
The cat seemed larger than she remembered. She could see that even in the shadows where he paused, taking his time about entering. He purred, moved, tilted his head to look at her, sweeping the floor with his majestic tail.
“Are you coming in or not?” Mercy asked with a laugh. “Oh, I wish you had come yesterday. Mary Elizabeth would have been so glad to see you. She cried, you know, when you couldn’t be found.”
The huge animal finally moved across the threshold, and Mercy closed the door. He walked to the hearth, seated himself, and stared up at her with his slanting, yellow eyes, then lifted a paw and flicked it daintily with a pink tongue. He was as black as night, tall and rangy, with ears ragged from many battles. When he had been little more than a kitten, Mary Elizabeth had caught him with a small blackbird in his mouth. She had named him Blackbird to remind him of the dastardly deed.
“Me-oow,” he said, and began washing his face in earnest.
“I suppose you’re hungry.”
The cat stopped licking and looked at her.
Mercy placed the pistol on the mantel and went to the kitchen, knowing the big tom followed her. She put a biscuit in a wooden trencher and spooned meat drippings over it, set it on the floor, and looked at the cat. He looked back at her, made his way to it leisurely, smelled it, then began to eat daintily.
“Don’t think I’m bribing you to get you to stay,” Mercy said sternly. “You’ll work for your keep, or else you’ll—”
The loud, determined rap on the door cut off her threat to the cat. The knocking came again before she could take a breath. Who would knock like that? Not Daniel. He would open the door and call out her name. Open the door! She remembered she had neglected to drop the bar in place when she let in the cat.
The heavy oak door shook from the force of the pounding as Mercy hurried from the kitchen. She had almost reached the door when it was flung open with such force that it bounced back against the wall. The cold wind swept past her to the hearth, sending a shower of sparks up the chimney. Two men stood before her, blurred against the darkness. Her first thought was that they meant to harm her; otherwise they would have waited for her to come to the door. Her second thought was the pistol on the mantel. She ran toward it but was caught from behind by arms that pulled her tightly up against a man’s chest.
She heard the door slam shut.
“We ain’t goin’ ta hurt ya none, if’n ya behave. We want ta look at ya, is all.” The man spoke close to her ear, then turned her around and pushed her up against the wall.
Mercy could smell their unwashed bodies before her eyes focused so that she could see them. They wore round-brimmed, peaked leather hats pulled down over shaggy, straw-colored hair, that contrasted sharply with the black beards on their faces. Over homespun shirts that were dirty and ragged, with sleeves much too short for their long arms, they wore sleeveless vests of cowhide. Powder horns and shot bags hung from their shoulders by leather straps. The younger man, the one with the short fuzzy beard, held both the muskets. As Mercy’s Frightened eyes met his, his wide mouth twisted into a grin, showing large square teeth.
“By granny, Lenny! She’s sightly. I do be swearin’ it.”
“Who . . . are . . . you?” Mercy’s voice came out heavily, and she spaced the words because she was breathless with fright.
“She’s purty a
s a button.”
Mercy’s eyes moved from one man to the other. “You’d better get out of here. My brother will be here any minute. He’ll shoot you—”
“She got the mole, Len. I’ll be dogfetched if’n we ain’t done gone ’n’ found ’er.”
The man called Len said nothing. His eyes narrowed as he thrust his face close to Mercy’s, scanning her every feature from the soft blond hair held in a loose knot at the back of her neck to the delicate oval of her face, her wide-spaced, sky-blue eyes beneath curved brows, and her generous mouth. He pinched her chin with rough fingers and turned her face to the light, so that he could see the small mole among the thick fringe of gold-tipped lashes on her lower eyelid.
Mercy jerked her chin from his grasp. Fear pounded over her, making her tongue thick in her mouth and her stomach feel like a slab of rock.
“Get out of here!” she choked. “Daniel will tear you apart if he catches you here!”
“Hush yore blabberin’.” Lenny spoke sharply, the words coming through tobacco-stained lips.
“Ya ain’t ort to rile Len,” the second man told her. “He kin be meaner ’n a ruttin’ moose when he gets his dander up.” He looked about the room. “Lordy! Ain’t this a fancy place? Lookit them shiny floors ’n’ them glass lamps. Hit’s light as day in here, Lenny. I’d shore like Maw ta see it.” He sidled over to the kitchen doorway and looked in. “By jinks, damn! They got one a them cook stoves like we seen in the picture—”
“We ain’t here ta sightsee, Bernie. Let’s get on with what we come fer.”
Bernie stood in front of Mercy, the twisted grin distorting his face. He fingered a strand of her hair. She glared at him, refusing to jerk her head away.
“Yep, she’s purty as a speckled pup.”