by Ruby Scott
“Hostage?” Alice asked, the word coming out of her lips a few octaves higher than it should have. William nodded once, tapping the barrel of the gun that was still clutched in his right hand against his cheek.
“You simply have to act as if you are scared for your life and I will hold this gun to your head until he gives me what I want.”
“And if that does not work?” Alice asked, trying to keep the fear from her voice. She wasn’t sure if she quite managed, but perhaps it was enough because William didn’t attempt to calm her down. She wanted to attack a second question: will you shoot me? However, she didn’t dare, for she wanted to believe that the answer would be no. She had no guarantee that he would provide her with that answer, however, and wanted to stay ignorant of the true answer as long as possible.
“It has to,” he said, a muscle in his jaw jumping.
Marvelous. He had no black up plan. “Why did you pick me?” Alice asked.
William shrugged, lowering the gun to his lap once more. “You weren’t too hard on the eyes and Robinson can never resist a pretty face.”
###
Alice turned away from him in an attempt to hide the blush that spread across her cheeks once again. No one had called her pretty before. With her curves that were enough for one and a half people, most tended to look over her. Damn her blood and its ability to rise to the surface of her cheeks so quickly and easily. She would make a fool of herself all throughout life, blushing the entire way.
“Very well,” she said a moment later when the blush had gone down enough for her to look him in the face once again. “I will go along with your plan. If I do end up dying, it will be better than the fate I am resigned to.”
“Die?” William asked, confusion clouding his countenance momentarily. “I will protect you to the death, darlin’, I give you my word. There is no need for you to fear for your life. The gun is for show, anyhow.” He clicked something on the contraption and showed her the inside. She wasn’t quite sure what it was she should be seeing, and glanced up at him blankly. “Empty,” he clarified after a moment. Ah, Alice thought. That was why Alice hadn’t known what to look for; it was what wasn’t there that was what was supposed to be capturing her attention.
Alice relaxed back into her seat. “Do they know that the train is being hijacked yet?” she asked, looking out the window once more. “The people you are after, I mean.”
“Not yet. The train will stop in the middle of the plain and I am sure that they will realize something is wrong. We are attempting to find out which car these men are in. They may be spread out as well, but I am looking for one and one alone.”
“Robinson,” Alice said. “I am assuming, at least.”
William gave her a wry smile. “You are quick, darlin’.”
“My name is Alice,” Alice admitted, halfway to get him to stop abusing the word that she would never be able to hear without thinking of his lopsided grin. The other part, she didn’t dare think about, not yet when she was looking into his eyes. Perhaps later, when she was alone with her own thoughts, she could consider it.
“And here I was certain it was ‘Let Go of My Wrist’,” William said, flashing her another quick smile before standing once again. He stowed the empty gun in his pocket once again and held out a hand that Alice regarded blankly for several moments. “Now that we are on a first name basis and know what we need to know about each other, do you trust me to get you over to the next car?”
Alice smiled slightly and reached forward, taking his hand. It was rough against her fingers, which she pampered each night with at least three different kinds of creams that each cost as much as her amethyst earrings. She didn’t mind the texture. She didn’t mind anything about this man, not that he was quite possibly an outlaw who had kidnapped her to use as a hostage, and not that he was risking her life. She didn’t even mind that he didn’t scare her. Surely she was meant to meet someone that she wasn’t scared of once in a lifetime?
What would she do when they got to the next train station? That would be her stop, and she would be destined to spend her life stewing in misery, married to a man that she most likely wouldn’t even be able to look in the eye. Her fate paled into further bleakness as she realized that these few moments that she had spent in William’s company that she absolutely detested the idea of being the perfect wife, the person she should have wanted to be.
William pulled her up and let her pass in front of him, not letting go of her hand as he led her to the end of the next car and pushing the door open. The wind instantly whipped Alice’s hair into her face. She tensed, remembering the fear that had nearly frozen her as she looked at the ground.
“Close your eyes,” William said, his voice close to her ear, oddly intimate, though they were both fully clothed and in the process of hijacking a train. She did as she was told, and his hands grasped around her middle once again, pressing her corset painfully against her ribs. She drew in a breath to ask him to loosen his grip, but then her feet were touching down again, and she opened her eyes to find that they were on the other side of that gap of death.
As William moved to open the door, he ducked out of the way of the glass and pulled Alice against him. She began to protest as her nose nearly collided with his cravat, impeccably tied and starched to a near standstill, even in the quickly moving air.
“Robinson is in that car,” he murmured in explanation. “I cannot wait until the train is stopped any longer. Do you trust me, darlin’?” he asked, tilting Alice’s chin up with one finger.
“Call me Alice,” she began to respond, but before she could utter a syllable, his lips were against hers. Alice’s lips softened in pure shock. She fought to get away, but his hand that had tilted her chin up had twined in the hair that sat at the base of her skull, keeping her lips pressed firmly to his. She relaxed a moment, rather liking the way his lips moved against hers, almost as rhythmic as a dance.
This man had stolen her first kiss as well, she realized in and amongst the sensations that she had never felt before. Pleasant sensations, she thought distantly, and then William pulled back, and she found the barrel of the gun pressed to her stomach. Despite the fact that she knew it was empty, and even though he had given his word that he would protect her, she couldn’t help the fear that zinged through her entire body.
It was no hardship to take in panicked breaths that bordered on screams as he opened the door and moved the gun to her head. The man who was supposedly Robinson had been a hulking man in Alice’s mind. In reality, he was more mouse than man, all greying dull brown hair and watery eyes that had a wicked gleam to them. Even his face was triangular, centered on the nose to make it look as if it flowed into that pointed snout. Alice instantly disliked him.
“Robinson,” William drawled, making it almost an insult rather than a name. The man froze, eyes flicking between the gun and William’s face. “Long time, no see.”
“Yes,” the man said in a quavering voice. How was he able to hold something against William? Alice could run one of her hips into him and have him fall over. It would be quite a beautiful display, watching his twitching hands scramble to attempt to find a way to stop himself from falling.
Instead, she whimpered as if she were truly afraid that she would be shot. The man’s gaze returned to hers. “What do you think you are doing on this train, Smith?”
“Taking back what is mine,” William said with conviction, pressing the barrel of the gun into Alice’s temple a bit harder. She didn’t have to completely have to fake the sound of pain, and he eased up just a bit. She could feel his fingers digging into the flesh along her side and closed her eyes.
“What you gave,” Robinson said, putting emphasis on the word, “is not here, and it never will be.” His voice quavered almost comically, as if he were the one with the gun trained on him instead of pressed against Alice’s head.
“I know for a fact it is, you filthy liar,” William spat, and Alice was glad that she was not the recipient of that
anger.
There was movement inside of the train car then, that caused Alice’s eyes to open once more. The commotion was the sound of the two closest compartment doors opening. Four men with guns that were probably quite loaded and useful poured out and into the cramped space.
Alice drew in a sharp breath and felt William’s fingers tighten around her waist momentarily before he let her go and stepped away—no, not away, slightly in front of her, as if to protect her from the bullets. He was keeping his word, even though he had said it with that joking smile.
Alice decided that she could love this man—if they could somehow get out of this situation.
“The only thing that you will surely receive here,” the mousey man said, voice still quavering dangerously close to a squeak, “is your death. It is a long time that you are put down, you mad dog.”
“I only ask that you give me my money and then I will leave, and spare the lives of you and your men,” William said, his voice just this side of panicked. He still held his composure and his sure posture, but when Alice glanced down at his fingers that were clenched around the empty and quite useless gun, they were shaking ever so slightly.
Alice closed her eyes once again. They would kill him. Would they kill her as well? Or would she be forced to continue on her ride to her future husband?
The idea seemed preposterous. She could no longer imagine getting off of the train at a dusty and half-rotted platform and meeting a man who was nearly old enough to call himself her father. She could only imagine William’s eyes, the feel of his lips against hers, and the way he had given her a series of first times for everything in the matter of a few minutes.
She wanted other firsts with him—and only him.
She couldn’t very well do that if he were dead. Alice stepped in front of him and planted her hands on her hips. She knew not what she was planning to say, but she opened her mouth and began speaking anyway. The four men with guns lowered them slightly, as if more hesitant to shoot her than William. Good, they very well should be. It was very ungentlemanly of them to be pointing those cursed things at her. “I do not know what it is that you have against William, but if you do not give it to him this instant I will use my high standing in the New York society to make sure that you are convicted of crimes that you have never even thought about and hanged for them. My father is a high-ranking officer in the army and will not hesitate to call in favors if I tell him that there are unlawful men running around the country with stolen money.” Alice had never told such an outlandish lie in her life, not even when she had to explain why all of the sweets had disappeared and had blamed it on mice that didn’t exist.
There was a hesitance in the mousy man’s gaze for half of a second, and then he grinned, displaying sharp little teeth. “Not if we kill you as well,” he said.
William made a noise suddenly, and all of the attention of the thugs and Robinson were on William once again.
“I appreciate it, darlin’, but looks like my ride has appeared,” he said, that customary smirk firmly placed on his lips once again. His eyes twinkled at Alice, and he opened the door and stepped outside.
Alice let out a small scream as he disappeared from the platform and quickly made her way over to the door before the other men could beat her to it. William was drawing a horse away from the side of the train. She stared at him, mouth agape for several moments.
When he looked back at her and extended a hand, she found that she hesitated for half of a second. Her life as a mail order bride to whomever she was supposed to meet in twenty miles flashed before her eyes as if she had already lived it, all of the unhappiness and strife. The bleak reality of it.
That hand reached through the hopelessness and offered her a way out. Without another thought of hesitating, of her trunk waiting two cars back and Gertrude sitting quietly with her glass of water waiting, Alice grasped William’s hand.
He had been her first many things, her first man who didn’t scare her, and the first man she had reached out to and touched of her own free will, her first kiss. She wanted endless firsts with this man in this exciting adventure that could be her life.
As William grinned back at her and she wrapped her arms around his middle, Alice returned his smile with equal vigor. This was the way life was supposed to be. It was meant to fill her to the brim, and she wanted only William to be the one who provided the life to fill her.
This man was her first, and he would most definitely be her last; her one and only.
THE END
© Copyright 2015 by April Jane - All rights reserved.
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