Forget-Me-Not Bride

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Forget-Me-Not Bride Page 16

by Margaret Pemberton


  She followed Lilli into the gloomy confines of the hotel wondering what their Pa would have thought of Lucky Jack. In his own way their Pa had been a gambling man and so Lucky Jack’s reputation at the tables wouldn’t have disconcerted him too much. Even so, she couldn’t help thinking that their father would have preferred a brawny Celt as a prospective son-in-law, rather than a suave American.

  ‘Lilli! Lottie! We’re over here!’ Marietta called out, waving to signal just where she, Kate, Edie, Lettie and Susan, were sitting.

  Lilli wove her way between the crowded tables, Leo and Lottie close behind her.

  Kate was seated at the head of the table her high-necked, long-sleeved, ankle-length navy-blue dress giving her a matriachal air. ‘Where on earth have you been? she asked as Lilli sat down. ‘We thought you must have been one of the first to disembark. As it is you must have been one of the last.’

  ‘I came ashore with Miss Dufresne,’ Marietta said exuberantly before Lilli could reply to Kate. ‘And everything is settled. I’m going to work for her at the Gold Nugget and Mr Coolidge is going to square everything with Mr Nelson as far as money and the marriage-bureau is concerned. Lord! I can’t tell you how relieved I am!’

  ‘Is Kitty Dufresne in the hotel?’ Lilli asked, her stomach muscles tightening with nervous tension. ‘Is she here, in the dining-room?’

  ‘She’s seated at Mr Coolidge’s table,’ Lettie said, her voice expressionless, ‘over near the far window.’

  Lilli was too eager to see what Kitty Dufresne looked like in the flesh to trouble to be circumspect. She turned her head swiftly, looking with apprehensive curiosity in the direction Lettie had indicated. Lucky Jack was seated at a table for four. Two of his companions were the slick-suited men who had accompanied him off the Senator. His third companion was seated on his left, looking towards him, her back towards the rest of the dining-room. From the rear all that Lilli could see was a glorious pompadour of Titian-red hair crowned by a nonsense of a hat lavishly trimmed with exotic feathers. The hat was emerald and so was Kitty Dufresne’s exquisitely-fitted travelling costume. The bolero jacket was trimmed with extravagant curlicues of black astrakhan, as was the hem of the bell-shaped skirt.

  ‘Paris,’ she heard Kate say to Susan, ‘that outfit was definitely made in Paris, France, not in America.’

  Lilli’s stomach muscles were so taut she felt physically sick. Miss Nettlesham had said that Kitty Dufresne was Lucky Jack’s paramour and certainly from the partial view Lilli had of her, Kitty Dufresne looked the part.

  As if to oblige her in order that she could have a clearer view Kitty turned slightly, speaking to the man seated opposite her. With an elbow resting on the table, her chin propped by a suede-gloved hand, she was utterly at ease. In profile Lilli could see that Kitty’s eyelashes were long, her nose girlishly retroussé.

  Panic seized her. Had she been foolishly naive in clinging to the belief that Miss Nettlesham totally misunderstood the relationship between Kitty and Lucky Jack? Was Kitty far more to Lucky Jack than merely a business partner?

  From this new angle Lilli could see Kitty Dufresne’s figure in more detail. The elegant travelling-costume was not quite as nip-waisted as she had expected. In fact, it wasn’t nip-waisted at all. And though the retroussé nose was deliciously girlish, there was nothing girlish about the line of jaw and throat. Shock, followed by overwhelming relief, roared through her. What on earth had Miss Nettlesham been thinking of, spreading the rumour that Kitty was Lucky Jack’s paramour! She was far too old! Why, she was easily in her thirties!

  Suddenly, as if sensing she was being stared at, Kitty turned, looking directly across the crowded dining-room, her eyes, behind a saucy froth of veiling, meeting Lilli’s before Lilli had a chance of looking away.

  Fresh shock sizzled through Lilli. Though they had never been introduced, never even met, there was recognition in Kitty Dufresne’s eyes, recognition that could mean only one thing. Lucky Jack had spoken to Kitty about her.

  ‘And Mr Jenkinson has kindly agreed to accompany us to the rapids when we reach Whitehorse,’ Susan was saying when Lilli finally returned her attention to her own table. ‘He’s hoping there will be some rare species of butterfly in the area and …’

  ‘And does he know of your situation yet?’ Kate interrupted gently. ‘Does he know that when you reach Dawson you’ll be obliged to marry a Peabody Marriage Bureau client?’

  Susan shook her head, her large featured face flushing blotchily. ‘No … it isn’t a subject easy to bring up, is it? I mean, it makes it sound as if I’m desperate for a husband … any husband … and as if I’m no great prize.’ She gave a small, mirthless laugh. ‘And all that’s true, of course. Or at least, it was true.’ She plucked at her napkin with carefully buffed nails. ‘It’s no longer all true because I no longer want to marry just anyone. I want to marry Mr Jenkinson.’ She looked up from the napkin, looking around at them, despair in her eyes. ‘And I’m sure, if only there was time for our friendship to deepen in a proper manner, he would ask me to marry him. But there isn’t going to be time …’

  ‘Oh, Lord!’ Lettie said suddenly, her naturally pale face turning even paler as she looked beyond Susan to the entrance of the dining-room. ‘They’ve let him off the ship!’

  It was blatantly obvious she wasn’t referring to Mr Jenkinson.

  Only Lettie and Marietta were facing the dining-room door.

  ‘Damn!’ Marietta said forcefully through her teeth as everyone else turned to look, ‘Damn! damn! damn!’

  The brute who had terrified Edie and assaulted Lilli swaggered across the room to a table where his cronies were seated.

  ‘Well, we all know he couldn’t be kept in unofficial custody for ever,’ Kate said practically as Edie slid her hand nervously into Marietta’s.

  ‘The best thing to do is to ignore him,’ Lilli said crisply, aware that Lottie and Leo were also beginning to look apprehensive. ‘Did you speak to Kitty Dufresne about Edie, Marietta?’

  Marietta shook her head. ‘No … there wasn’t time. But I will do. And if she can be helpful, I think she will be.’

  Lilli thought Marietta was right in her judgement. When Kitty Dufresne’s eyes had met hers there had been no prurience or meanness in their sloe-black depths, only kindly curiosity. And if kindness was one of Kitty Dufresne’s virtues, there was every reason to hope she would extend that kindness towards Edie.

  ‘Your maiden in distress obviously knows my identity,’ Kitty said dryly to Jack. ‘And she’s far more striking looking than you ever indicated. Why on earth do Irish girls hold all the aces when it comes to night-black hair and magnolia-cream skin? Perhaps next time when we’re trawling for working girls we should trawl for them in Dublin or Cork.’

  Jack grinned and their two male companions cracked up with laughter. ‘With regard to what we were talking about earlier, I think Miss Stullen could manage The Eldorado very nicely,’ he said, his eyes holding Kitty’s. ‘We need someone respectable in there as we’re aiming for respectable custom …’

  ‘Then The Eldorado’s not a dance-hall or saloon?’ one of his companions asked, interrupting him.

  Jack shook his head. ‘It’s a hotel. And a damn good one too. The Reverend over there …’ he indicated the Reverend Mr Jenkinson. ‘He’s booked in at The Eldorado.’

  ‘I thought Reverends lived in parsonages.’

  Jack’s grinned widened. ‘They do. But the Reverend Mr Jenkinson has had the sense to realise that his new home will likely need quite a bit of work doing on it after weathering a Yukon winter.’

  If Ringan could have eaten lunch alone he would have done so. No such luxury was possible, however, with almost the entire passenger list of the Senator eager to pitch into moosemeat, macaroni and cheese, hash, baked beans, pickled beets, blueberry pie and canned milk.

  For himself, he passed on the pickled beets and wondered if he would ever be able to develop a taste for moosemeat.

  ‘You could pit
ch in with us, Scottie,’ the grizzled-haired prospector sitting on his left-hand side said generously. ‘Rumour has it though that the strikes around Dawson are well nigh played-out and that Nome’s the place to be.’

  ‘And if that’s the case,’ the young man on his right-hand side said, scooping baked beans up on his fork, ‘We’ll be heading on out there just as soon as we’re able.’

  Ringan made an indeterminate sound in his throat.

  Interpreting it as assent, the grizzled-haired man said, ‘If we all grub-stake an equal amount we’ll all git along just fine.’

  ‘Och, aye,’ Ringan said, knowing some kind of response was necessary and not able to think of anything more adequate. Nome? With the men now flanking him? It would be almost as much of an imprisonment as prison had been. What on earth would he talk about with them? What sort of satisfaction would he find doing nothing but grub for gold?’

  As the conversation drifted on without him, he looked across the dining-room to where Lilli Stullen was seated, a shaft of light from a nearby window falling full on her. In its rays her smoke-black hair had a satin sheen. She was wearing blue. A misty-blue mandarin-necked blouse and a seven-gored skirt in a deeper tone of the same colour. The colour suited her, but then he hadn’t seen her in anything that didn’t suit her.

  He wondered why, if she was indulging in a love affair with Lucky Jack Coolidge, she wasn’t seated at Lucky Jack’s table. And he wondered as to the identity of the woman who was sitting with Lucky Jack, and as to her relationship with him. They certainly looked to be on the best of terms and though she was no longer in the first flush of youth she was as lushly beautiful as a full-blown rose.

  ‘There’s plenty of men with your type of past in the goldfields,’ his grizzled-haired companion was saying. ‘Skagway’s run by’em. Why, Soapy Smith would shoot a man as soon as look at him and he’s boss of Skagway! I remember when …’

  Ringan’s mouth tightened. If his jail-bird past was already such common knowledge what chance did he have of living it down and practising as a doctor again? And if he didn’t return to the profession he was trained for, the profession he had a vocation for, what the hell did life hold for him? How was he ever going to make it meaningful again?

  As if sensing his inner chaos, a small, sailor-hatted head turned in his direction. Immediately, as their eyes met, his spirits lifted. He shot her an answering grin and a wink. Little Lottie Stullen reminded him an awful lot of Pattie when Pattie had been her age and sometimes merely looking at her brought a lump into his throat. She was a grand wee lassie on every count and her elder sister could be justifiably proud of her.

  Lilli was proud of Lottie, but she was also often exasperated by her.

  ‘I’ve told you before, Lottie,’ she said as they boarded the narrow-gauged train that was to take them over the White Pass, ‘I don’t like you spending so much time in Mr Cameron’s company.’

  Lottie’s eyes, so blue they were almost navy, held hers in such a manner that Lilli felt ridiculously uncomfortable. ‘Mr Cameron saved Leo’s life,’ Lottie said steadily, her waist-length braids framing her face. ‘I think he’s magnificent and I’m proud to be his friend and no-one, not even you, is going to prevent me from being his friend.’

  Lilli’s discomfort increased. Lottie was shaming her and both of them knew it. ‘I’ve no objection to your being Mr Cameron’s friend,’ she said stiltedly, knowing she wasn’t speaking the absolute truth. ‘But I’d still prefer it if you would sit with me and Leo for the journey to Whitehorse.’

  ‘I don’t want to.’ Lottie’s voice was low and resolutely obstinate. ‘Mr Cameron doesn’t have friends like the rest of the prospectors do. He’s different from them, just as Pa was different from the ranch-hands he worked with. If I don’t sit with him, he’ll sit alone. And I don’t want him to sit alone and Pa wouldn’t have wanted him to sit alone either.’

  As Lilli’s jaw sagged Lottie shot her a look both pleading and defiant and then, interpreting Lilli’s dumbfounded silence as reluctant acquiescence, she turned and walked away to the rear of the train where she knew she would find her friend.

  Lilli opened her mouth to call her back and then closed it again. What could she possibly say to Lottie in explanation? She certainly wasn’t going to give her nightmares by telling her that Ringan Cameron had once been convicted of murder.

  Wryly it occurred to her as she settled Leo comfortably into a seat next to a window that such a disclosure might not give Lottie nightmares at all. Lottie would most likely dismiss such a revelation as being unbelievable, which it very nearly was. The shock she had felt when Lottie had spoken of Ringan Cameron and their Pa in the same breath was still reverberating through her. Lottie was unnervingly perceptive, but surely this time she was very, very wrong? If anyone resembled Pa it was Lucky Jack, with his adventurous spirit and love of gambling.

  Leo broke into her train of thought by saying, ‘Marietta and Edie are about to board. Will they know where we’re sitting?’

  Lilli bent down slightly to look through the window. Marietta was making what looked to be an almost royal procession through a sea of men, Edie protectively in her wake. Lilli grinned. It wouldn’t matter where Marietta was, sophisticated city or small town, male heads would turn. Here, in Skagway, her fox-red hair clashing sizzlingly with her shocking-pink shirtwaist and mulberry coloured skirt, she was almost causing a riot.

  She waved furiously to attract her attention and indicate whereabouts she and Leo were sitting. Marietta’s grin almost split her face as she waved back in acknowledgement.

  ‘Phew,’ Lettie said as she sat gratefully into the seat opposite Leo. ‘I thought we weren’t going to be able to all sit together. Where’s Lottie? Have I just stolen her seat?’

  Lilli turned away from the window and sat down next to Leo.

  ‘No, she’s gone off to chat with Mr Cameron. Where are Kate and Susan?’

  Lettie smoothed a stray wisp of hair back into her immaculate chignon. Ever since Kate had shown her how to make the best of herself and had given her a dress she could feel proud to wear she had taken infinite pains with her grooming. ‘Susan is being escorted aboard by her parson friend and Kate is being escorted aboard by Lord Lister.’

  ‘By who?’

  Lilli goggled at her. Lettie, for the first time since Lilli had met her, giggled.

  ‘Lord Lister. You must have noticed him aboard the Senator. He was the only man wearing English jodhpurs.’

  ‘And he’s a Lord?’

  Lettie nodded.

  ‘And he’s paying his attentions to Kate?’

  Lettie nodded again.

  Marietta breezed into the compartment, saying fizzily, ‘Lord knows why any of us girls bothered going to a marriage bureau! Susan looks all set to embark on life as a parson’s wife, Kate has collared a member of the British aristocracy and even Edie here has been indulging in a little flirtation.’

  ‘I haven’t’Edie protested, flushing rosily.

  ‘His name is Saskatchewan Stan,’ Marietta said, adding, to put Lilli and Lettie’s minds at rest, ‘and having met him I don’t think there’s any need to worry he’ll take advantage where he shouldn’t. In fact I’d go so far as to say he’s absolutely harmless.’

  ‘He carried my bag for me,’ Edie said with childish pleasure, her cheeks still apple-red. ‘He didn’t ask to carry Marietta’s. He asked to carry mine. And he didn’t frighten me. He was all roly-poly and he made me laugh.’

  ‘Then that leaves only Lilli and me without beaus,’ Lettie said, squeezing up a little to make room for Edie as she sat down.

  Marietta looked across at Lilli and raised her eyebrows. ‘I think it only leaves you, Lettie,’ she said, her voice thick with amusement ‘Lilli is inundated with beaus. The only thing is, I’m not sure which is the one she’s hoping will take her to the altar.’

  Lilli felt a little pulse begin to beat fast and light in her throat. There really was no reason why she should keep her re
lationship with Lucky Jack a secret any longer.

  ‘My beau is Lucky Jack Coolidge,’ she said blandly, enjoying the expression of incredulity on her friends’faces. ‘And when we get to Dawson he’s going to pay off Mr Nelson and marry me.’

  Chapter Ten

  ‘So when Pa died we went to live with Uncle Herbert and Aunt Hettie,’ Lottie said, standing with Ringan on the tiny open observation platform as the train inched its zig-zagging way up the glittering heights of the White Pass. ‘Only Uncle Herbert didn’t want Lilli living with him and I don’t really think he wanted me, either. The only one of us he wanted was Leo.’

  Ringan made the little noise in his throat that Lottie thought of as his ‘Scottish’noise.

  ‘And then Uncle Herbert said he was going to change Leo’s surname to his own and make-believe that Leo was his son. He told Lilli she was to leave the house and Lilli knew that once she did so he would never let her see us again. And so when she left the house she took us with her,’ Lottie finished simply.

  ‘Your sister’s a verra feisty young lady,’ Ringan said, wondering how any man, given a little family like the Stullens to care for, could have been so crass as to have earned their contempt instead of their affection.

  ‘We had to go quickly,’ Lottie continued, raising her face up to the afternoon sun and the dizzying summits of the mountains, ‘because Uncle Herbert had told Lilli she had to be out of the house that very day. Lilli went to every employment bureau in San Francisco but no-one would give her a job – or not a job that would pay her enough to keep us all. And so she became a Peabody bride.’

  Ringan nearly toppled off the observation platform in shock. ‘A bride? But I didna ken your sister was married. She doesna wear a ring …’

  ‘Oh, she’s not married yet. Peabody brides don’t marry until they reach Dawson. Then there’s a kind of auction and …’

 

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