Lily and the Major

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Lily and the Major Page 2

by Linda Lael Miller


  There was a twitch in the clerk’s left cheek, and his small eyes widened behind their spectacles. “You don’t have a husband?” he echoed. “But you can’t—you don’t just—”

  Lily had prepared for his argument, incoherently presented though it was. “Under the law, any able-bodied person of legal age may stake a claim to one-half section of land,” she said, praying no one would demand proof that she had reached her majority. In truth, she was not quite nineteen. “One has only to prove up on their three hundred and twenty acres within five years, by building a house and planting crops.”

  The clerk was now thrumming the fingers of both hands on the countertop. He was clearly agitated. He started to speak, but his words came out in such a garble that they were unintelligible. Lily reached out to pat one of his hands.

  “Be calm, now,” she said in a gentle but firm voice. “Just tell me your name, and we’ll work this all out amicably.”

  “Monroe,” he replied. “My name is Monroe Samuels.”

  She nodded, pleased, and extended one gloved hand. “And I’m Miss Lily Chalmers,” she responded sweetly. “Now, if we could just get down to business—I have another appointment very shortly.”

  Monroe took up the map Lily had laid on the countertop and unfolded it. His Adam’s apple jogged up his throat, then down again as he scanned the rough drawing of the land Lily had selected. He looked at her helplessly for a moment, then went to a shelf and took down an enormous book, which he opened with a flourish.

  Lily stood on tiptoe, trying to make out the words marching neatly across the pages in a slanted black scrawl, but she was too far away.

  “There is a five-dollar filing fee,” Monroe said after clearing his throat. He seemed to expect Lily to be daunted by this announcement.

  Again she opened her drawstring bag, this time taking out a five-dollar note. “1 have it right here,” she answered.

  Monroe came and snatched up the map again, carrying it back to compare it with whatever was written in the book. “It might already be taken, you know.”

  Lily held her breath. Her land couldn’t be taken—it just couldn’t. Right from the very beginning she’d known God meant it to be hers and hers alone. She closed her eyes for a moment, summoning up images of the silvery creek shining in the sun, of the deep green grass and gently flowing bottomland where she meant to plant her crops. She could almost smell the stand of pine and fir trees that lined the southern border of her claim.

  Monroe cleared his throat again, glanced at Lily’s money as if to make sure it n’t vanished, and dipped a pen to make a grudging notation in the book. “You need a husband to homestead,” he fussed. “You’re going to be dealing with Indians, and rattlesnakes, and outlaws—”

  “We had all those things in Nebraska,” Lily broke in politely, consulting her watch again. “And I survived. Now, if you’d just hurry …”

  Scowling, Monroe wrote up a receipt and a temporary deed. “The half-section next to yours is already claimed,” he warned. “Just make sure you’ve got your property line straight.”

  Lily scowled back. “I paced it off myself,” she said.

  Monroe did not look reassured. He snatched up the five dollars and shoved the deed and receipt at Lily. “Good luck, Miss Chalmers. You’ll need it.”

  If the ink had been dry, Lily would have pressed the temporary deed to her bosom in triumph. She smiled at the petulant clerk to let him know he hadn’t managed to discourage her, and she hurried out.

  A stiff breeze made the certificate crackle between her fingers as she stood on the sidewalk inspecting it. For the first time in her life Lily owned something solid and real. Once she’d built her house and put in her crops she would be completely independent; never again would she be the interloper, the unwelcome burden.

  She pursed her lips and blew on the deed like a child bending over a birthday cake and, when she was sure the ink was dry, rolled it neatly and tied it with a piece of string from her purse.

  Her step was brisk as she hurried toward the hotel, where a long day’s work awaited her.

  She entered through the back way, recoiling as a blast of heat from the kitchen stove struck her. Carefully, she put her handbag and the precious deed away on a pantry shelf.

  “There’s a lot of ’em today,” barked Charlie Mayfield, the cook, as he shouldered his way through the swinging door that led to the dining room, “and they’re fractious.”

  Lily reached for her checkered apron, tied the strings at the back of her neck and at her waist, and nodded. “They’re always troublesome,” she said with resignation. “They’re soldiers.”

  For Lily, those last two words said it all. She had no use whatsoever for men in uniform. They were invariably obnoxious, with no consideration for other people’s rights.

  Lily smoothed her hair once and set to work.

  Later, as she passed between the crowded tables, gripping an overloaded tray in both hands, one of the soldiers reached out and wrenched hard at her apron strings. Pulled off balance, she stumbled, and the tray clattered to the floor.

  Infuriated, the joy of her temporary deed forgotten for the moment, Lily whirled on her tormenter, a young infantryman with a broad grin, picked up the mug of foaming beer in front of him, and flung the contents into his face. The other troopers whooped and cheered with delight.

  A surge of heat moved up Lily’s neck to throb in her cheeks and along the rims of her ears. Soldiers never seemed to care what trouble they caused, just as risk as they had their good times.

  She knelt and began gathering up the dirty cups, plates, and silverware she’d dropped with the tray.

  The movements of her hands were quick and jerky, but she went still when she saw a pair of scuffed black boots come to a stop directly in front of her, and her temper swelled anew. These rascals had been harassing her with their exuberant mischief all morning, and she was through turning the other cheek.

  She rose slowly to her feet and sighed as she felt the pins in her once-tidy hair give way, sending the silver-gold tresses tumbling down over her shoulders. Crows of amusement rose all around her as she set her hands on her hips and raised her chin.

  The eyes that gazed down at her were just the color of maple sugar and shadowed by the brim of a dusty blue field hat banded in gold braid. A gloved hand reached up to remove the hat, revealing a thatch of golden-brown hair.

  “On behalf of the United States Army, ma’am,” a deep voice said with barely contained amusement, “I’d like to apologize for these men.”

  Lily reminded herself that the soldiers from nearby Fort Deveraux kept the hotel dining room in business, and that without them she wouldn’t have a job. Nevertheless, she was near the end of her patience. “They would seem to be boys,” she answered pointedly, “rather than men.”

  The barb brought a chorus of howls, whistles, and cries of mock despair.

  The man looking down at Lily—a major, judging by his insignia—grinned rather insolently, showing teeth as white as the keys on a new piano. “They’ve been on patrol for two weeks, ma’am,” he explained with elaborate cordiality, apparently choosing to ignore her comment on their collective bad manners.

  Something about the curve of his lips made Lily feel as though the room had done a half spin. She reached out to steady herself by gripping the back of a chair. “I fail to see how that gives them the right to behave like circus gorillas.”

  The major’s grin intensified, half blinding Lily. “Of course, you’re right,” he said. Every word that came out of his mouth was congenial. So why did she feel that he was making fun of her?

  Lily found herself looking at the button-down panel on the front of his shirt and wondering about the chest beneath it. Was it as broad and muscled as it appeared, covered in a downy mass of maple hair?

  With a toss of her head she shook off the unwelcome thought and knelt to finish gathering the crockery. She was surprised when the major squatted down to help, but she wouldn’t meet his e
yes.

  “What’s your name?” he asked.

  Lily flung the last of the silverware onto the tray with a clatter. “It’ll be mud if I don’t get back to the kitchen and pick up my orders,” she snapped.

  The major took the heavy tray and stood with a sort of rolling grace while Lily scrambled inelegantly back to her feet. Just as she reached out to take the tray back someone pinched her hard on the bottom, and everything cascaded back to the floor again.

  Lily cried out, spinning around in search of the culprit. “Who did that?” she demanded.

  The unshaven, unwashed faces around her fairly glowed with innocence. It was obvious that no one was going to admit to the crime.

  The major cleared his throat, and the troops, so rowdy only an instant before, immediately fell silent.

  “That’ll be enough,” he said with quiet authority. “The next man who bedevils this woman will spend his leave time in the stockade. Is that understood?”

  “Yes, sir,” the men answered in rousing unison. One picked up Lily’s tray and handed it to her, brimming with shattered plates and cups and dirty silverware.

  She turned in a whirl of calico and stormed away, remembering the man who’d come into her mother’s life years before and persuaded Kathleen to send Lily and her sisters west on the orphan train.

  Soldiers. They were all alike.

  In the cramped, sweltering kitchen she found Charlie in the expected state of annoyance. “These dinners are getting cold!” he complained, gesturing toward platefuls of fried chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy, and creamed corn.

  Hastily Lily smoothed back her hair and pinned it into a chignon for the second time that day. “I know,” she said, “and I’m sorry.”

  Charlie softened. He was an older man with thinning white hair and a crotchety manner, but he was basically kind. “I suppose the lads were pestering you a little. Serve them right if they had to eat their dinners cold,” he said, but all the while he was filling clean plates from the pots and kettles on the stove.

  Lily smiled at him and hurried out with the tray, keeping to the edge of the dining room in hopes of avoiding more trouble with the soldiers. But they were behaving themselves.

  Reaching the table beside the corner window, Lily was taken aback to find the major there, along with an older man wearing the uniform of a colonel. An elegantly dressed woman with iron-gray hair and a sweet expression sat beside the ranking officer, and she smiled as Lily set a plate before her.

  “You’re new in Tylerville, aren’t you?” the lady asked.

  Lily bit her lower lip and nodded. She had no time to chat, but she didn’t want to offend a customer. “Yes, ma’am,” she answered. “I’ve been here a month.”

  The woman extended a gloved hand. “Welcome,” she said. “My name is Gertrude Tibbet.”

  Lily glanced at the major, who was watching her with a look of humorous interest in his eyes, and swallowed. “I’m Lily,” she replied. “Lily Chalmers.”

  “This is Major Caleb Halliday, an old friend of ours,” Mrs. Tibbet went on cheerfully, indicating the man with the bold smile, “and beside me is my husband, Colonel John Tibbet.”

  Lily nodded politely at the colonel, a stout man with snow-white hair and a mustache to match. She ignored the major. Neither man stood, as they might have done under other circumstances.

  “Let poor girl get on with her work, Gertrude,” Colonel Tibbet protested, chewing.

  At that Mrs. Tibbet fell silent, and Lily turned and hurried away. She spent the rest of the day scurrying breathlessly from one table to another, filling coffee cups, carrying food, taking away dirty plates and silverware.

  By the time the dining room closed hours later Lily’s feet were throbbing, and she was so tired she could barely see. She spent another hour washing and drying dishes, then stumbled back to the storeroom beside the kitchen to fetch her bonnet and cloak. When she stepped out into the cool spring evening Major Halliday was waiting for her.

  He tilted his hat. “Evening, Miss Chalmers,” he said.

  Lily glowered at him. “What do you want?”

  The major smiled that insolent, melting smile of his. He had bathed, Lily noticed, and his uniform was fresh. He hesitated for a moment, then said, “I’d like to walk you home. It’s dark, after all, and a town full of soldiers is no place for a woman alone.”

  Lily squared her slender shoulders. “My rooming house is nearby,” she said in dismissal. “So I don’t need an escort, thank you.”

  It was as though she hadn’t spoken. Major Halliday fell into step beside her, settling his hat on his head with a practiced motion of one hand. “Where did you live before you came here?” he asked.

  Lily sighed. The man was over six feet tall, and he probably weighed twice what she did. There would be no getting rid of him if he didn’t want to go. “Nebraska,” she replied, quickening her pace.

  The major frowned. “That’s a long way off. Do you have family in Tylerville?”

  An old grief sounded inside Lily like a far-off bell as she thought of her lost sisters. Maybe, despite all her prayers and her letter-writing and her traveling from place to place, she’d never find them. She shook her head. “No family.”

  “Anywhere?” the major pressed.

  Lily glanced at him. “I have an adopted brother living in Spokane,” she answered. She wouldn’t tell him about Emma and Caroline; that would be like baring a freshly bandaged wound. “Why are you so curious about me, Major?”

  He smiled. “My name is Caleb,” he corrected, ignoring her question.

  “That’s more than I care to know,” Lily replied haughtily, and he laughed at that.

  “I suppose it is. May I call you Lily?”

  “No, you may not. I’m to be ‘Miss Chalmers,’ if you must address me at all.”

  He laughed again, and the sound was warm and richly masculine. “You’ve got all the warm congeniality of a porcupine, Miss Chalmers.”

  “Thank you.” Oddly, Lily found her thoughts straying back to his chest, of all things. He was a strong, well-built man, the kind who could put in a good day’s work behind a plow without falling asleep over his supper, but there was no reason to hope he Shever become a farmer. Obviously, given his rank, Caleb Halliday had been a soldier for a long time, and he meant to remain one.

  They had reached the rooming house, and Lily was both relieved and sorry. Stepping up onto the rough-board porch, she forced a smile. “Good night, Major,” she said.

  Just when she would have turned and run inside he caught hold of her hand. “Tell me why your brother let you come all this way by yourself.” The words had the tone of an order, however politely they were framed, and Lily tried, without success, to withdraw her fingers from his grip.

  “I am almost nineteen years old,” she responded briskly. “I didn’t ask Rupert’s permission.” Guiltily, she thought of how she’d left Spokane, where Rupert lived now, without telling her adopted brother good-bye or thanking him for his many kindnesses.

  Another slow, smoldering grin spread across the major’s face. “So you ran away,” he guessed with distressing accuracy.

  “No,” Lily lied. “In any case, this is none of your business.”

  “Isn’t it?” Major Halliday turned her hand in his and began stroking the tender flesh on the inside of her wrist with the pad of his thumb. The motion produced a series of disturbing sensations within Lily, not the least of which was a warm heaviness in her breasts and a soft ache in the depths of her femininity.

  The door of the rooming house opened, and Mrs. McAllister, bless her nosy soul, peered out. “Time to come in, Lily. Say good-night to your young man.”

  Lily glared at Caleb. “He’s not my young man,” she said firmly. The day she took up with a soldier would be the day irises bloomed in hell.

  Caleb’s expression was as cocky as ever. “Not yet,” he replied, in a voice so low that even the landlady’s sharp ears could not have caught it. “I’ll see you to
morrow, Lily.”

  Lily whirled in frustration and stomped into the house. It had been a perfectly horrible day, and she was glad it was over.

  After brewing a cup of tea in the kitchen she made her way up the back stairs to her room and sat down on the edge of her narrow, lumpy bed to remove her shoes. When they were off she stretched out with a sigh, pillows propped behind her back, and wriggled her cramped toes.

  In order to keep from thinking about Major Caleb Halliday she turned her mind to Rupert. She knew she should write to her brother and tell him she was all right, but if she let him know where she was, he would surely come and drag her back to Spokane.

  As much as Lily loved her brother, she couldn’t live the kind of life he’d mapped out for her. She didn’t want to teach school or sell coffee beans and yard goods at the general store. Or be forced to marry the first suitable man who asked her.

  She smiled up at the darkened ceiling, her hands behind her head. Her temporary deed was safely tucked away.

  Lily was going to be a farmer, once she’d saved the money to prove up on her homestead. This time next year she’d be planting fruit trees in her own sunny valley, with its fringe of timber. She’d set out a vgetable garden and start herself a flock of chickens, too.

  Lily’s smile faded. Before she could do any of that she had to have a cabin to live in. As determined as she was, she knew it would be impossible for her to cut down any of the huge Ponderosas that bordered her property, let alone drag them to the site she’d chosen and shape them into a house.

  She sighed, getting off the bed to put on her nightgown. She’d find a way to get that cabin built. Somehow, she’d find a way.

  Church bells awakened her with a persistent bong-bong-bong, and Lily tumbled out of bed muttering. She peeled off her nightgown and scrambled into drawers, a camisole, and a petticoat, then dragged her Sunday dress on over her head. She was going to be late again.

  Lily fumbled with the cloth-covered buttons of her blue muslin gown and hastily brushed her hair. She was pinning it into place when Elmira McAllister rapped at the door of her room and called out, “Lily? Have you overslept again?”

 

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