by Kit Morgan
Seth
Prairie Grooms, Book Three
By
Kit Morgan
ANGEL CREEK PRESS
Seth
(Prairie Grooms, Book Three)
by Kit Morgan
Copyright 2014 Kit Morgan
Find other titles by Kit Morgan Including:
The Prairie Bride Series:
His Prairie Princess (Prairie Brides, Book One)
Her Prairie Knight (Prairie Brides, Book Two)
His Prairie Duchess (Prairie Brides, Book Three)
Her Prairie Viking (Prairie Brides, Book Four)
His Prairie Sweetheart (Prairie Brides Book Five)
Her Prairie Outlaw (Prairie Brides Book Six)
Christmas in Clear Creek (Prairie Brides, Book Seven)
The Holiday Mail Order Bride Series:
The Christmas Mail Order Bride (Book One)
The New Year's Bride (Book Two)
His Forever Valentine (Book Three)
Her Irish Surrender (Book Four)
The Springtime Mail Order Bride (Book Five)
Love in Independence (Book Six)
Coming in September:
Love at Harvest Moon (Book Seven)
Prairie Grooms:
August (Prairie Grooms, Book One)
Ryder (Prairie Grooms, Book Two)
Seth (Prairie Grooms, Book Three)
Coming in August:
Chase (Prairie Grooms, Book Four)
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without permission in writing from the publisher.
All characters are fictional. Any resemblances to actual people are purely coincidental.
Cover design by Angel Creek Press, The Killion Group and Hotdamndesigns.com
For all those who have been misjudged, and lost a love because of it …
Table of contents
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
About the Author
Dear Reader,
If you’ve already read August, (Prairie Grooms, Book One), and Ryder (Prairie Grooms, Book Two), then you know that Tom Turner is telling these stories to the Weaver clan. They made their first appearance in His Forever Valentine (Holiday Mail Order Brides, Book Three) and had center stage in The Springtime Mail Order Bride (Holiday Mail Order Brides, Book Five). Tom himself, made his first appearance in the Prairie Brides Series.
In case you haven’t figured it out, all my books are interconnected. Characters from the Prairie Bride series show up in The Holiday Mail Order Brides Series, and characters from both series are now showing up in Prairie Grooms. There is an even bigger picture that binds them all together, and along the way you may find yourself asking; now why did Kit put that in there, and not go back to it? Hmmm … or, what’s going to happen to Thaddeus Slade? Why bring him up at all? Well, now, keep reading and find out! And keep track if you can … these stories are loaded with clues! All leading to that bigger picture …
Eventually I’ll give a list that tells in what order to read the books to get that bigger picture, and then one can look at these fun little western stories, and see something entirely new. Or, you can simply read and enjoy them as the sweet, western romances they are. The choice will be yours.
Now, let’s move on to our story. Tom Turner, still at the Weaver farm, doesn’t even take a break! He moves from Ryder’s story and goes right into Seth’s …
The Weaver farm, 1871
“That’s it?” cried Calvin. “You’re just gonna up and leave us hangin’?”
Tom smiled. Yep, he’d left them hangin’ all right, on-the-edge-of-their-seat kind of hangin’. To do so made for a better story, in his book.
“Well?” asked Benjamin, his eyes riveted on Tom.
Tom sat back. “I’m plumb tuckered out. Maybe we outta wait until mornin’ for me to finish.”
“NO!” Calvin and Benjamin cried at once. Even though in their early twenties, they still hadn’t learned the value of patience.
Tom chuckled in response. “What about you, Arlan?” he asked their older brother. “You up for one more?”
“Sure, why not. So long as we find out what happened to Ryder’s friend, Cutty.”
“Thackary Holmes,” his wife, Samijo, corrected.
“I like to think of him as Cutty,” Arlan told her. “I’d also like to see him brought to justice.”
“I’d like to see him redeemed,” said Samijo.
“Does he?” asked Arlan. “Does the dirty varmint get what’s coming to him?”
Tom shook his head. “For such nice folks, you sure are a bloodthirsty lot.”
Calvin and Benjamin laughed. “Out here, ya sometimes have to be,” said Calvin.
Tom sat up in his chair. “Well, I’ll tell ya, justice doesn’t always come the way we think it oughta. Okay, one more, then we call it a night. Now listen up …”
One
Clear Creek, Oregon, June 1861
“Seth!” Wilfred Dunnigan cried as he rushed into the hotel. “Come quick! It’s your brother! He’s in a bad way!”
Seth Jones looked up from behind the hotel’s front counter. A chill went up his spine and settled in his stomach, a cold lump that sent his mind spinning out of control. Shot? Stabbed? Speared? “In a bad way” at least meant he was still alive. Seth jumped up from his chair and, not bothering to go around the counter, leapt over it instead. Wilfred’s eyes widened at the physical feat, but he said nothing, and followed Seth out the hotel’s double doors.
“Where is he?” Seth asked as he hurried down the street.
“At Doc Waller’s house. His wife brought him into town.”
“When did they get here?”
“Almost two hours ago! I’ve been looking for ya ever since. Where ya been?”
“I went for a walk; I’ve got a lot to think about now that I’m getting married!” he said as he picked up the pace. “What happened?”
Wilfred struggled to keep up. “Rattler,” he huffed, almost out of breath.
Seth broke into a run, and left Wilfred to follow along as best he could. He ran straight for the house at the end of the street, and was about to run inside, when Doc Drake stopped him. “Whoa there! Slow down before you run somebody over. He’s fine.”
“What?” Seth asked as he caught his breath. He hadn’t even seen him standing on the porch. “What do you mean, ‘fine’? Did the snake bite him when they on their way to town?”
Doc Drake shook his head. “No, he got bit out at his place. But he’s going to be fine. He’s in there speaking with his wife. Let them have a moment before you see him, okay?”
Seth slumped against the porch rail. “Thank the Lord!”
Wilfred caught up and joined them, huffing and puffing. “Land sakes, boy! But you’re a fast one!”
Seth looked at him, gave him a smile, and took a few deep breaths of air. “What happened?”
Doc Drake gave him a grave look. “Seems your brother had some unwanted visitors out at his place. I’ll let him explain, but he thinks they’re the same cattle rustlers that have been giving the Cookes trouble.”
“How’d he get bit by a rattler?” Seth asked. “Ryder’s not that careless.”
“I think you’d better ask him.”
Wilfred patted Seth’s shoulder. “Don’t worry, son. Sheriff Hughes is putting toge
ther a posse. We’ll track em down.”
Seth nodded as his mind raced. Ryder would never let himself be caught unaware out on the prairie. He was too good a hunter, and, like himself, slept with one eye open most of the time. It became habit when one lived out in the wild, not to mention with the Indians. “What about Constance? Is she all right?”
“She’s the one done brought Ryder into town,” said Wilfred.
Seth smiled. “Well what do ya know? He really is turning her into a match for him. He said he would.”
“She’s got grit, that one,” added Wilfred.
The front door opened, and Eloise stepped out. “Oh!” she said with a start when she saw the men. Her eyes gravitated to Seth. “He’s in with my sister.”
Seth smiled. “I know. Would you care to wait with me, or is it time for you to be getting on home?”
“Colin hasn’t come for me yet. I was supposed to be at the Dunnigans’, working on my wedding dress.”
Seth nodded, suddenly tongue-tied, and stepped to her. They stared at each other until Wilfred cleared his throat. “Best come with me, Miss Sayer. I’ll have Seth send your sister over when he goes in to see Ryder. Give the two of you a chance to visit.”
“She might want to go straight to the hotel. She’s very tired, and …” she grimaced. “…dirty.”
Seth took in her expression and quickly put everything together. “She brought him to town injured. She must be wearing Ryder’s buckskins. I can’t imagine her hauling a wounded man all this way in a dress, trying to ride side-saddle.”
“You’re quite right,” Eloise confirmed. “She’s covered with dirt and smells like leather and horse.”
Seth glanced at Doc Drake. “Miss Sayer can take her sister to the hotel, get her settled, then go home. Did Constance need tending?”
Doc Drake shook his head. “No, she was fine. Just shook up.” He turned to Wilfred. “He’s got the right idea. Mrs. Jones should rest and have something to eat.”
Wilfred nodded. “Okay, me and the little missy here will take her down to the hotel and have Mrs. Upton fix her some supper. Colin oughta be along any time now.Tell him where we are, will ya?”
“I will,” said Doc Drake. He turned to Seth. “Let me go check on them, then you can come in.”
Seth gave him a curt nod, and went back to leaning against the porch rail. Eloise watched him, took a deep breath, and let her gaze wander across the street. “I shan’t ever get used to this.”
“Used to what?” he asked, his voice low.
She looked at him. “All this …” she closed her eyes, and he knew she was searching for the right words,“… upheaval.”
“Life can be hard out here; I’m sorry if you don’t find it to your liking.”
She looked at him, as her eyes glistened. Was she about to cry? His gut tightened with the thought. “It just that, ever since we arrived in your country, I’ve seen things a lady should never have to see.”
Seth came away from the rail. She was right. If she’d stayed in England and continued her life there, she wouldn’t come close to seeing the things she had during her short time in America. She and her sisters suffered enough on the journey here, let alone any of this.
He stepped to her, and took her hands in his. “You’ll survive; we both will. Besides, we’ll be living here in Clear Creek, in the nicest place in town. What can happen?”
Her eyes widened. “I should think any number of things, but … right now I dare not think of them.”
“Don’t,” he said, giving her hands a squeeze. “Don’t ever think of them. That’s my job.”
She gazed up at him, and he felt something, something he’d not felt before. What was it? Warmth spread through him, but it wasn’t something primal that told him to take her, that soon she would be his. No, this was something else. Something that went much deeper.
Doc Drake came back, and pulled him from his thoughts. “Okay, Seth, you can go in now.” He moved out of the way. Constance stood behind him, looking like death. She was indeed dirty, and smelled of leather and horse. Mostly horse.
“Constance?” Seth began. “You gonna be okay?”
She looked at him, nodded, and stepped into the arms of her sister. Eloise gave him one last look, then guided Constance off the porch to the street and, together with Wilfred started for the hotel. Seth watched them go, took a deep breath, and went into the house.
* * *
“Ryder,” Seth said as he sat in a chair next to the bed. “What happened?” Gone was the gentle tone he’d used with Eloise, the bumbling demeanor he put on for the townsfolk. Seth Jones was not the man everyone thought, and that’s how he liked it. It was how he and Ryder had survived all these years.
“Hey there, brother. How ya doin’?”
“Ryder, what happened?”
“Now don’t go gettin’ all riled up. You know what happens when you do. Them scoundrels are long gone, and there ain’t nothin’ either of us can do about it.”
“Who did this to you?”
Ryder swallowed. “I don’t rightly know who they were. But they put a rattler under my bed.”
Seth stood, his hands balled into fists.
“Promise me you won’t go after ‘em. Not without me.”
“You’re in no shape to track.”
“Not yet, I ain’t, but I will be. I want them as bad as you do.”
“No one hurts my family and gets away with it.”
“I know, but that’s not the only reason we need to work together on this and go get ‘em.”
“Looks to me like they tried to kill you; that’s reason enough for me.”
“They took Cutty with them.”
“What?! What do they want with that old coot?”
“I dunno, but they done dragged him off, left me to die from a snake bite, and took poor Constance out to the barn, tied her up, and left her.”
“They took Cutty, instead of your wife?”
“Yeah, I know; I can’t make no sense of it either.”
Seth sat again, and rubbed both hands through his short hair. He was dressed in a crisp white shirt, black vest, pants, and boots. He was clean cut, and well, just clean, period. Ryder on the other hand, often let his hair grow long, was just as often unshaven, at times dirty, and didn’t possess the same eloquence of speech Seth had mastered over the years. They were like night and day, but shared the same fierceness; a trait they each did their best to hide. They’d learned it during their time with the Indians, taken in as lads when their parents died coming west. As boys, they’d witnessed savagery, hatred, betrayal and lust, the likes of which no man, or boy, for that matter, ought to see. And all of it at the hands of white men who’d raided the peaceful Indians with whom Seth and Ryder lived.
Seth stared at his brother. “The snake bit you at your place? How long did it take you to get here?”
Ryder smiled. “Don’t ask me none of that; it’s a plumb miracle I’m alive. I owe my life to my wife and Doc Waller. That’s all I have to say on it. I’m more interested in finding out why those men took Cutty instead of Constance.”
“It is strange. Doc Drake told me they were getting a posse together. Think we should ride with them?”
“What about yer weddin’? Ain’t ya gettin’ married soon?”
“Not with this going on. We need to tend to it; you know that.”
“Yeah, I guess so; but it don’t seem right, you about to get married and all. But if you’re set on it, talk to the sheriff, find out when that posse’s leavin’. Let ‘em know we want to go with ‘em.”
“I will.” Seth stood, then bent to the bed and hugged his brother. “It’s a good thing you’re still alive; or I might have had to kill somebody.”
“Seth, hold your temper now. This ain’t the Calvary, and it ain’t doin’ what we used to do back in Texas. I want a normal life. We’re still young, and we’ve found ourselves a nice place to settle. Each of us has a family now. I don’t know about you, but I’m don
e trackin’ outlaws and huntin’ ‘em down. Two years of that was enough for me.”
Seth straightened. “It should have been enough for me, too, but this sets my blood to boiling.”
“Promise me somethin’,”
Seth sighed. “What?”
“If you get to go with the posse and I can’t, don’t kill ‘em. Bring ‘em in.”
“That’s a tall order, little brother.”
“I mean it, Seth. I want to know why they took Cutty. Poor coot’s probably dead by now, but I still want to know.”
Seth sighed again. “I’ll do my best.”
* * *
“There. If you need more hot water, just yell. I’ll bring it right in, honey.” Sally Upton set down now another empty bucket. She and Eloise worked together to fill one of the large tubs in the bathing room of the hotel. Constance stared at it with tired eyes, and began to undress.
“Thank you, Mrs. Upton,” said Eloise. “I’m sure Constance will feel better once she’s cleaned up.”
“Being clean is fine, but not if she’s gonna have to put on those smelly buckskins again.”
“Oh, my goodness!” Eloise said. “You’re quite right.” She paced to and fro as Constance moaned, and eased herself into the tub. “You wouldn’t happen to have anything she can wear? Just for tonight?”
Sally beamed. “Sure do, honey! But you might have to dig through the dress to find your sister in the morning! I’m a might bigger than she is!”
Eloise couldn’t help but smile. Sally Upton did, indeed, have a generous build, but also a generous heart to go along with it. She was mistress of the hotel, as much as Mr. Van Cleet was owner, and ran a tight ship. Seth had told her stories of Sally and her sisters, Edith and Marybeth, during their afternoon tea that afternoon. “Whatever you have will be fine. Anything’s better than those disgusting buckskins!”