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Moonlight on Monterey Bay

Page 20

by Sally Goldenbaum

“You heard me,” the rancher replied. “You haven’t been worth your keep in years. Get the hell off this spread.”

  “Not without my pay,” Broom said. “I’m owed—”

  “You’re owed shit. You don’t follow my orders, you’re fired!” Sam advanced on Tamsin with a clenched fist. “I warned you to git off the Lazy S, woman.”

  She took a step backward. “I’m going.”

  Broom took a swing at Sam, and the rancher hit him hard in the face. The cowboy got in a weak punch to Sam’s chest, but the younger man’s return blow caught him full on the nose. Blood spurted as Broom went down on one knee. Sam followed up with a vicious kick to the midsection.

  Broom groaned and sank to the ground. “You bastard,” he managed. “I’ll get you for this,”

  Sam kicked him once more before glancing at the second cowhand and the man with the hammer. Swiftly, they moved toward Henry.

  Swearing, the judge retreated to his buggy. “You’ll regret this, Sam,” he warned. “I’ll be back, and we’ll settle this for once and all.”

  Tamsin touched Henry’s arm. “I’m on foot,” she said. “Could you at least give me a ride back to town?”

  He scowled at her. “Get back the same way you got here.” The judge slapped his lines over the horse’s rump and drove away without looking back.

  Sam gave Tamsin a shove. “Get moving,” he warned.

  She winced as she heard Dancer’s angry whinny from the barn. “I’m going,” she repeated. But I’ll be back, too, she vowed silently. You can count on it.

  Read on for an excerpt from Katie Rose’s

  A Case for Romance

  1

  The World’s Second Consulting Detective

  Colorado, April 1, 1894

  “Excuse my rudeness,” said Sherlock Holmes. “You broke the thread of my thoughts, but perhaps it is as well. So you actually were not able to see that that man was a sergeant of marines?”

  “No, indeed,” Dr. Watson said.

  “It was easier to know it than to explain why I know it. If you were asked to prove that two and two made four, you might find some difficulty, and yet you are quite sure of the fact. Even across the street I could see a great blue anchor tattooed on the back of the fellow’s hand. That smacked of the sea. He had a military carriage, however, and regulation side whiskers. There we have the marine. He was a man with some amount of self-importance and a certain air of command. You must have observed the way in which he held his head and swung his cane. A steady, respectable, middle-aged man, too, on the face of him—all facts which led me to believe that he had been a sergeant.”

  “Wonderful!” I ejaculated.

  “Commonplace,” said Holmes.

  Emily Potter closed the dog-eared copy of the Strand amid the rumbling of the stagecoach, and sank back into the seat with a smile of satisfaction. Along with Holmes, she, too, had figured out the mystery long before everyone else, but it was enjoyable just watching the story play itself out. Her reading glasses slid down her nose, and she pushed them back into place, ignoring the odd glances she received from the other stagecoach passengers. Besides herself, there were two women, a businessman, a cowboy who smelled suspiciously of whiskey, and a preacher. Although it couldn’t possibly matter, Emily noticed that the preacher was undeniably handsome, with piercing blue eyes and indecently long lashes. He seemed preoccupied with the landscape that whizzed by the coach window. Putting the book aside, she felt the familiar surge of disappointment that the tale was over.

  Emily sighed. She hated that her active mind no longer had anything to occupy it. Like her great-aunt Esther, who painted nudes and was admittedly the family eccentric, Emily simply marched to a different tune than most women. Give her a puzzle, a problem, the most intricate enigma or most obscure crime, and she was in her element. From her earliest memories, she had been obsessed with mysteries, devouring them like candy as she helped her mother in the millinery business. While other girls shopped, went to dances, called on each other and gossiped, Emily read every kind of mystery she could find. She knew all of Poe, memorized Doyle, despised Gaboriau, and adored Vidocq. When that wasn’t enough, she alarmed her mother by voraciously following the daily papers, marking the local murders in ink and poring over the details of each case. She often gave the police information about the crimes, even though they dismissed her help with fatherly smiles. Yet Emily never doubted that she would one day convince them of her methods and win their respect.

  But Emily had just turned sixteen when her mother died, and thereafter she had less free time to track the activities of the criminal element. The millinery shop was still successful, so Emily continued the business, propping her beloved books between hats and feeding her habit secondhand. The books almost sufficed, but were never really enough. She longed to be like Holmes, to awaken her counterpart in the middle of the night and whisper, “Come, Watson, come! The game is afoot!”

  A rustle came from the bag on the floor of the stagecoach, disturbing her thoughts. Reaching down, Emily’s glasses slid to the tip of her sharp nose as she scooped inside the bag to pull out a black-and-white cat. Dr. Watson mewed contentedly, although he was tangled up in laces and yarn, thread, and artificial cherries.

  “Silly cat.” Emily smiled fondly, disentangling the feline. Fascinated with the mess, the cat swiped at the dangling threads, ignoring his mistress’s attempts to remove them. Much of the millinery business was easily transportable, everything fitting neatly into her bag, but trimmings didn’t necessarily mix well with a cat. Yet Emily wouldn’t dream of going anywhere without her precious feline.

  Glancing up, she saw the preacher watching her again. He turned his face away, but not before a strange little flutter began inside of her. Emily frowned. This man of God had the strangest effect on her! Surely he was just as bored as everyone else, and only looking at her to pass the time. Satisfied with this logical explanation, she placed the now string-free kitten in her lap and forced her thoughts back to the reason for her trip.

  If anyone had told her a year ago that she would be making this journey out West, orphaned and un-chaperoned, she would have examined them with her magnifying lens in disbelief. But she couldn’t have known then that after her mother quietly passed away, she would feel a wretched loneliness. Nor could she have guessed that several years later, the death of her long-lost father would leave her with a house in Colorado with a mystery attached. Excitement coursed through her as she fished the attorney’s letter out of her bag. This was a good time to refresh herself of the facts. Shaking aside the millinery materials, she opened the missive and scanned it once more.

  It grieves me to inform you that your father has passed away. He has bequeathed all of his property and holdings to you, his daughter, in the hope of making reparation for his neglect of you in life.

  Emily’s nose wrinkled. She really hadn’t known her father. He’d left when she was very young, to make his fortune in the West. Unlike her mother, a romantic who’d always clung to the hope that he’d come back for her, Emily had been quite sure they would never see him again. So while his final parting stirred some small emotion inside her, it wasn’t nearly as heart wrenching as it might have been. She continued reading.

  He left you a property, a house on the outskirts of Denver. It is a handsome place, white clapboard with majestic columns, much like the old plantation homes. It has ten rooms, five fireplaces, and a parlor. The house is also fitted with indoor plumbing, something your father installed himself.

  However, I strongly suggest that you liquidate the estate. The West is no place for a woman on her own, especially a gentlewoman like yourself. I can put the house up for sale, although you won’t get one-tenth of what it’s worth. Shangri-La, as your father called it, is not an attractive property due to its reputation. In addition to its original purpose, which is unmentionable to decent folk, your father met his unfortunate end there, along with his female companion, Rosie. Rumors that the place is haunted abound, and no o
ne in town will go near the house. With your permission, then, I’ll list the property. Perhaps I can find an out-of-towner, who doesn’t know about the murders….

  But Emily had never granted that permission. Ewert Smith, the lawyer, was astonished when she wrote back stating that she intended to occupy the house. Emily refolded the letter and put it back in her valise. She couldn’t pass up this opportunity. She would investigate the crime, find out exactly how her father and his companion were killed, who had done the deed, and why. Even if she hadn’t known him as a daughter should, didn’t she owe him that much? A nervous tremor went through her as she thought of the danger involved since the murderer was still at large, but she dismissed it quickly. Holmes never let such considerations stop him. Looking down at her sleeve, she touched the place where the black band circled her arm beneath her coat, in memory of the great sleuth. Now that Sherlock Holmes’s creator had brought about the demise of the world’s first consulting detective, she was determined to become the second.

  The stagecoach lurched, and a wooden cherry zigzagged across the floor. Dr. Watson bounded after the errant decoration, skidding out of Emily’s reach, and the two women beside her squealed in shock and dismay. Emily murmured an apology and tried to capture the cat, but Watson, free at last, had no intention of returning to the carpetbag. The women withdrew as far as they could within the dim interior of the coach, but the tiny feline had already disappeared beneath the older woman’s skirts.

  “Excuse me, ma’am.” The preacher lifted his hat to her, and then seemingly as part of the same motion used it to scoop up the cat when he ventured out of his hiding place. Emily exhaled in relief although the overweight woman drew her lips tightly together as if tasting something sour, eyeing the kitten as if he were a rodent. Dr. Watson peeked out of the Stetson indignantly, but made no further protest. As Emily lifted him out of the hat, her hands briefly touched the preacher’s, and a warm tingle raced across her skin. She swallowed hard to regain her composure.

  “Thank you, sir. I’m so sorry, he’s usually very good.”

  The woman only snorted in her direction, then turned toward her young companion with a meaningful lift of her brows. The preacher, seeming to sense that trouble was brewing, intervened quickly. “I couldn’t help noticing your periodical. Are you a great reader?”

  Emily nodded. “Yes. It was a Sir Arthur Conan Doyle story.”

  “Ah. A mystery. So you’re an armchair sleuth.”

  “Exactly.” Emily waited for the disapproval such a confession usually brought, but to her surprise, he seemed genuinely interested. Encouraged, she continued. “I’ve read all of his stories. I thought The Speckled Band’ the best, but ‘A Scandal in Bohemia’ remains a close second.”

  “I agree. I enjoyed The Man with the Twisted Lip,’ but thought the action in ‘The Speckled Band’ much more appealing.” He extended his hand, his smile genuine. “I’m Reverend Thomas Hall. Please call me Thomas.”

  “Miss Emily Potter.” Emily took the offered hand, once again feeling the odd energy spark through her. Goodness, what was wrong with her! Forcing herself to remember her mission, she let her eyes travel over the preacher. Anyone could be a suspect in this case. She couldn’t forget that, no matter how upstanding he might appear to be. She studied the man without letting go of him, even bringing her magnifying glass out of her pocket and up to her eyes with her other hand to examine him from his chestnut hair to his worn boots.

  His eyes were truly magnificent. Startlingly blue, they seemed to return her gaze and look right through her, twinkling with amusement. Emily blinked—how easily she was distracted! She must get back to the work at hand He was tanned, unlike the priests she knew in Boston, but that wasn’t surprising for a traveling preacher. The stubble of a black beard was beginning to show, which didn’t hide his square-cut chin or firm mouth. His hands were rough, as if used to hard work, and his body was muscular, firm, and well proportioned. He clutched a worn prayer book, but it didn’t look natural in his hand. There was something … about his posture, a readiness that was unusual for a simple man of God Her glass paused as he withdrew his hand from hers. There was a black stain just inside his thumb. Puzzled, Emily brought her fingers up to her nose, as if to cover a yawn, and sniffed. A faint trace of manly cologne remained, along with something else….

  It was just as she thought. Gunpowder. He should be holding a pistol instead of a Bible.

  “Did I pass inspection?” The preacher, far from being angry, seemed to find the whole thing terribly funny. His smile was devilishly appealing as he surveyed her with obvious amusement. The other passengers, particularly the females, didn’t share his sense of humor and withdrew even farther from her.

  “One should approach everything with as scientific a view as possible,” Emily stated, undaunted. A very unusual preacher indeed. It was worth thinking about later. “Observations must be recorded, then verified with facts,” she continued. “I am simply a believer in modem methods. The study of criminology, although new, is fascinating.”

  “Is that so?” The preacher smiled.

  “Yes. Why Dave Mather, the notorious gunman, claimed to be a descendant of a Puritan clergyman, and he certainly looked like one. So did Ben Thompson and Pat Garrett, both of whom were outlaws before turning to law enforcement. You see, Mr. Hall, one can never trust appearances.” She turned her glass toward the women beside her and peered at them like a Cyclops.

  “I beg your pardon, miss! What do you think you’re doing?” The older woman puffed indignantly.

  “I’m examining your cuffs and boots,” Emily explained, as if surprised at the question. “My mother and I ran a millinery shop in Boston. There I applied Holmes’s theories of deduction. By examining our customers’ clothes, hands, and knees, I could tell whether they were rich or poor, if they drank or had gas laid in the house. I deduced that one of our customers was a married woman having an affair, and that a girl had an addiction to snuff.”

  The two women gasped, then tucked their boots self-consciously under their dresses, while the businessman glanced down at his linen cuffs.

  “The nerve of you, missy!” The older woman scolded. “I’ve never seen anything so rude! Why, young people today …” She sent her companion a pointed look, while the latter stared at Emily in disbelief.

  “For example,” Emily said, leaning forward in excitement to be able to talk about her work, “I observe that you are in mourning, but I deduce that you are not entirely sorry to have lost your late spouse. You have had some problems finding a husband for your daughter, and think that the West might provide an answer. Your husband left you with some money, but it won’t last forever, and you need to secure your means. Hence, this trip.” Emily sat back in her seat, satisfied.

  The younger woman gasped, and looked at Emily as if she were a witch. The older one’s face turned white and she stammered, “Someone must have told you this! I demand to know—”

  “It is all perfectly obvious.” Emily sighed, as if explaining something to a child. “You are still wearing widow’s weeds, which indicates that your loss was fairly recent, and probably a close relation. You are traveling without a husband, which suggests it is his loss that you are mourning. Yet you have been to a sunny clime lately, as indicated by the slight tint to your skin, which is not your natural complexion. I can see beneath the lace of your sleeve that you are normally very fair. This leads me to believe that you have traveled for pleasure, which one might not do if one were seriously agrieved.”

  “But … my search for a husband?” The younger woman questioned nervously.

  “There is a newspaper sticking out of your bag with the personal column marked. It has become common for western miners and cowboys to advertise for mail-order brides, and some of them are using the newspapers to do so. And you are not wearing a wedding ring. I deduced, given these facts, that you are interested in attracting a westerner for the purpose of marriage.”

  The two women sat aghast, the
ir mouths hanging open, as astonished as if Emily had begun to remove her clothes. Unaware of their consternation, Emily turned to the businessman, intending to subject him to her deductive reasoning. But at that moment the carriage jolted, sending her glass flying. The preacher caught it deftly—then seemed reluctant to return it, perhaps because the older woman had turned an interesting shade of purple. After a moment, he placed the glass in Emily’s outstretched hand, then indicated the bumpy road outside the window. “Maybe you should put it away. It will probably get broken with the way the coach is swaying.”

  “I suppose,” Emily responded. The motion did make it difficult to continue her observations. Reluctantly, she put the magnifying glass back inside her pocket for the time being.

  The ladies breathed a collective sigh of relief, and even the businessman appeared happier. The cowboy alone seemed unperturbed, continuing to sleep with his back against the seat. The tension in the coach remained palpable, however. The businessman spoke up conversationally, now that he wasn’t about to be dissected like an insect.

  “So, miss, are you planning to stay in Denver?”

  Emily nodded. “My father left me a property on the outskirts of town. It’s a nice house from what the attorney’s letter says. Shangri-La, it’s called.”

  “What?” The cowboy glanced up from under his Stetson, suddenly awake. “Did you say Shangri-La?”

  “Yes,” Emily answered, surprised at his interest. “It is described as a white-columned mansion, much like the old plantation houses. It even has indoor plumbing.” She gave them a superior smile. “That’s all the thing in Boston, you know.”

  The women looked puzzled, while the men glanced at each other, appalled. It must have been the mention of plumbing, Emily realized belatedly. Some people were sensitive to that kind of talk. The cowboy smirked and looked at Emily with new attention. The businessman cleared his throat. “That house is … not a place for a lady,” he finished lamely. “Surely someone has told you of the killings? And”—he lowered his voice—”the ghost?”

 

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