Lucky Creek Lady
Page 1
Pampered, fun-loving Laurie Sinclair hates everything about the rough, ugly mining town of Lucky Creek, California. She only left Philadelphia because her wealthy father opened the Monarch Gold Mine—and because Brandon, the man she’d hoped to marry, sent her away. But when Brandon changes his mind, she’s ready to pack her bags—until her father is suddenly killed in a mine explosion, and her brother is badly injured . . .
As troubles mount for the Sinclairs, including a ruinous unexpected debt, they save themselves by selling half their mine ownership to Darcy McKenna, a friend of Laurie’s late father. Brusque and brooding, Darcy is the opposite of exuberant Laurie. Yet as Laurie stays on to help him in the office, Darcy soon finds himself smiling and happier, while Laurie finds her interests are changing. She might even be falling for Darcy. But her heart won’t truly be tested until Brandon shows up—and throws her life into chaos . . .
Visit us at www.kensingtonbooks.com
Books by Shirley Kennedy
Women of the West Series
Wagon Train Cinderella
Wagon Train Sisters
Gold Rush Bride
In Old California Series
River Queen Rose
Bay City Belle
Lucky Creek Lady
Lucky Creek Lady
In Old California Series
Shirley Kennedy
LYRICAL PRESS
Kensington Publishing Corp.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
Contents
Books by Shirley Kennedy
Lucky Creek Lady
Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Meet the Author
Bay City Belle
Chapter 1
River Queen Rose
Gold Rush Bride
Wagon Train Sisters
Wagon Train Cinderella
Copyright
To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.
LYRICAL PRESS BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2018 by Shirley Kennedy
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
All Kensington titles, imprints, and distributed lines are available at special quantity discounts for bulk purchases for sales promotion, premiums, fund-raising, educational, or institutional use.
Special book excerpts or customized printings can also be created to fit specific needs. For details, write or phone the office of the Kensington Sales Manager: Kensington Publishing Corp., 119 West 40th Street, New York, NY 10018. Attn. Sales Department. Phone: 1-800-221-2647.
Lyrical Press and Lyrical Press logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
First Electronic Edition: March 2019
eISBN-13: 978-1-5161-0440-6
eISBN-10: 1-5161-0440-4
First Print Edition: March 2019
ISBN-13: 978-1-5161-0443-7
ISBN-10: 1-5161-0443-9
Printed in the United States of America
Dedication
To my daughter, Dianne, whose patience, support, and understanding have made those long hours I spend at my computer much more enjoyable.
Acknowledgments
Living in a modern city like Las Vegas, Nevada, I wouldn’t have a clue as to what life was like during the California Gold Rush if it weren’t for the countless authors who’ve written about that fascinating period of time in our nation’s history. These are only a few of the books that sit on my shelves: The Rush, by Edward Dolnick; California Gold and the Highgraders, by F.D. Calhoon; Eldorado, by Dale L. Walker; Gold Mines of California, by Jack R. Wagner.
I use the Internet a lot, too. What a handy reference source! While writing Lucky Creek Lady, I was able to find that hotels had indoor plumbing in the 1850s; the California Stage Company acted as agents for the steamship lines; the use of tracheotomies in the US began around 1820; and much more.
So my many thanks go to those who contribute to the Internet, as well as those authors whose books helped me make Laurie and Darcy’s 1855 world as real as possible.
Chapter 1
Lucky Creek, California, 1855
“I’m going home!”
If Laurie Sinclair hadn’t been carrying her father’s lunch pail, she would have clapped her hands as she performed a happy little skip along the narrow road that led up to the Monarch Mine.
Her younger sister, Ada, who walked beside her, laughed at her enthusiasm. “I do believe you’re glad you’re leaving.”
“How did you guess?” Laurie couldn’t keep her buoyant mood to herself. Six months ago, she’d traveled clear across the country to join her family in the mining town of Lucky Creek, high in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. What a horrible decision! She so hated living in a place so primitive, so remote, so foreign to anything she’d ever known that from the day she arrived, all she could think of was getting back to her beloved Philadelphia. How wonderful that at last she could and was leaving tomorrow.
Ada sighed. “I’m going to miss you. How will I know what’s the latest fashion after you’re gone?”
“I’ll write often, I promise. I’ll miss you, too.” And I’ll also worry, Laurie reflected. She loved her family and would miss them tremendously. “We can blame it all on Father, can’t we?”
“Nothing would stop him.”
“All he wanted was to race to California and pick up all those gold nuggets lying on the streets before they were gone. Now look what’s happened.” Laurie would never forget that awful day back in 1850 when Sam Sinclair announced he was leaving for the gold rush. The whole family was dumbfounded. Why would he want to go? Unlike most men who headed west to make their fortune, he’d already made his. They lived in a mansion on Society Hill, the best neighborhood in Philadelphia, where all the rich people lived. The Sinclairs might not be among the very richest, but they were wealthy enough that they moved in all the best social circles. What could their father find in California that they didn’t already have?
“What a miracle he really did find gold,” Ada said.
“I wish he hadn’t. Then we’d all still be living in Philadelphia.”
“I never understood why you stayed behind when Father sent for us. All I could figure was you wanted to live with Aunt Florence. Wait. I’m out of breath.” Gasping for air, Ada stopped and bent over, hands on knees. “Such a steep climb. I’ve got to rest a minute.”
Laurie stopped gladly. She, too, hadn’t completely adjusted to the thin mountain air. “It wasn’t only Aunt Florence. You know what fun she is, but she’s not the real reason I stayed behind. The truth is, I wanted to
get away from Mother. I was twenty years old and tired of her bossing me around. I thought if I didn’t like living with Aunt Florence, I could join the family any time I wanted. Then I met Brandon Cooper. After that, you couldn’t have dragged me from Philadelphia.”
“Really?” Ada gazed at her accusingly. “You never told us. You had so many suitors, I could never keep them all straight. I remember what you wrote about Brandon, though. Rich, handsome, brilliant, and catches bugs.”
“Don’t say ‘bugs.’” How annoying that no one in the family could grasp Brandon’s brilliance, his distinguished reputation in the scientific world. “I’ve told you before, Brandon is a renowned entomologist. He’s gone on several expeditions throughout the world—the East Indian Archipelago, the Spice Islands. He’s acclaimed for finding a new species of orthoptera. That’s ‘grasshopper’ to you.” She’d fallen completely, madly in love with him, and he with her. He’d asked her to marry him but said she should keep it a secret till he got back from his next expedition.
Her family thought she was having a grand time living with Aunt Florence, but she was growing more and more miserable. There was always another expedition Brandon had to go on before they could marry. He was stringing her along, so after two years, Laurie finally told him she’d waited long enough. Either marry her or she’d leave for California to be with her family. She was sure he’d be so devastated at the thought of losing her that he’d finally set the date. That didn’t happen, so Laurie found herself in Lucky Creek, California. She glanced up at the snowcapped mountains surrounding them. “This must be the most lonely, most dismal place I could ever imagine.”
Ada sighed patiently. They’d been through this before. “But the smell of the pine trees—those gorgeous snow-peaked mountains. There are those who find it beautiful here.”
“You can have it.” That was thoughtless. Ada always saw the best in everything, and Laurie wouldn’t hurt her feelings for the world. “I take that back. Lucky Creek is an exciting town with plenty to offer.”
“No, it’s not. The truth is, I don’t find it beautiful here, and neither does Mother. We’re not blind to all the crime here. There’s lynchings and hangings and they hate foreigners.”
“I was trying to be nice, but I agree,” Laurie replied. Lucky Creek had a sheriff, but he was weak and subject to corruption, and justice seldom prevailed. And like all mining towns, prejudice against all foreigners ran amazingly high. Gold prospectors whose skin wasn’t white were often run off their claims, and worse.
“We’d move back to Philadelphia in a heartbeat if we could, but you know Father. He loves it here, so we’re stuck.” Ada eyed her accusingly. “I’m not likely to get a letter like you did.”
The letter from Brandon. Laurie had it almost memorized. He’d made a terrible mistake and wanted her back. He’d gone on enough expeditions. It was time to settle down. He missed her terribly, and would she please come home and be part of his life again. Of course, she would, the sooner the better. She hated disappointing her family but hastened to make arrangements for her return east. This was her last full day in Lucky Creek. Tomorrow she’d leave by stagecoach for San Francisco. From there, she’d take a steamship bound for New York, then on to Philadelphia. Not an easy journey. Weeks on the ship, full of boredom and idleness, would pass before she got there, but she would gladly endure whatever hardship she must, just to be in the arms of Brandon Cooper again.
“Did you and he ever…?” Ada blushed easily and now her cheeks were turning red.
“Did we ever what?”
“Nothing.” Her blush deepened.
“Good grief. Do you mean, did we ever make love?”
“Well, yes.”
“No one else must know, especially Mother.”
“Of course.”
“We did it a few times, three to be exact.”
Ada gasped and slapped a hand over her mouth. “You didn’t!”
“We did. Three times when Aunt Florence was out, and the servants gone. It was…very nice.” Actually, it hadn’t been all that nice, but that was only because she couldn’t relax and kept worrying someone would catch them. Of course, all that would change when they married, she was sure of it.
They’d caught their breath and started walking again. Finally arriving at the Monarch Gold Mine, Laurie again was struck by its ugliness. Long, wooden sluice boxes stood on rickety stilts over the muddy ground. They stretched from the nearby river to the mine entrance where grunting, grimy men with shovels scooped heaps of ore from iron carts into the sluice boxes. From there, gushing water washed separate pieces of ore down the boxes as they extended down the hill, all of it a muddy, unsightly mess.
The office—mine headquarters, as Father called it—consisted of nothing more than one ramshackle building with shingles missing from the roof. An unpainted barracks for the workers stood nearby. Worst of all, the entrance to the mine itself made Laurie’s skin crawl whenever she looked at that yawning black hole in the side of the mountain. Heavy beams lined the sides and top and rusty iron carts ran in and out on a narrow set of tracks. Who in their right mind would want to go down that dark, dangerous place? Mining accidents happened all the time. So far, the Monarch had been spared, but you never knew.
As they walked toward the office, Ada pointed toward a wagon parked in front. A sign on the side read ATLAS MINE. “Looks like Darcy McKenna’s here.”
“I hope not.”
“You don’t like him, do you?”
“Not especially.”
“Well, I do. I think he’s dark, tall, lean and, well, intriguing. There’s something mysterious about him. He never talks about himself or where he comes from.”
“I haven’t the least interest in where he’s from.” Laurie definitely didn’t care for the owner of the Atlas Mine. She wasn’t sure why. He was always polite enough. Maybe she disliked him because he always seemed so driven, as if running a profitable mine was all that mattered in his life. Or, she had to admit, maybe she disliked him because the few times she’d met him, and he looked at her with those piercing blue eyes, she had the feeling he didn’t like what he saw.
Ada pointed to another wagon, marked COYOTE MINE. “That’s Brock Dominick’s wagon. They must be having a meeting.”
Laurie had no desire to mingle with the mine owners. At least Darcy McKenna knew how to be polite, but Brock Dominick, a crude-mannered man with a powerful build, hadn’t the faintest notion how to act in a civilized manner, and didn’t seem to care. “We won’t stay long. Just long enough to give Father his lunch, and then we’ll leave.”
Inside the office, Laurie’s father and her brother, Hugh, appeared to be engaged in a serious discussion with the visiting mine owners. Darcy McKenna and his assistant, Tom Crain, were there, along with Brock Dominick and a few other owners. They stopped talking when Laurie and Ada walked in. “Hello, ladies,” Samuel Sinclair called. Laurie’s affable father had been having more than his share of problems lately, but he never let his worry show. “Ah, so you brought me my lunch. Seems I forgot again.”
“Did you really forget, Pa?” Laurie’s brother, Hugh, inquired, “or did you want an excuse to see more of Laurie before she leaves?”
“Never mind all that.” Samuel looked slightly sheepish as he took the lunch pail. “Thank you, daughter, and Ada, too. Want to stay a while? We were just finishing up. They’re claiming I’m a dangerous character.” He smiled at Darcy McKenna. “Aren’t you, my friend?”
Darcy didn’t smile back. “What I’m saying is, you’re taking a chance with all that gunpowder.”
“Damn right,” Brock Dominick agreed. “You’ll blow yourself to kingdom come if you’re not careful.”
“You let me worry about that. Did you know my little girl is leaving tomorrow?” Father cast a sad eye at Laurie. “Hate to see her go, but she’s hell-bent on getting back to some fellow in Philadelphia,
and I can’t stop her.”
Brock remained stone-faced and said nothing, which didn’t surprise Laurie. She expected nothing more from a man as coarse and unfeeling as the owner of the Coyote Mine.
“That’s too bad, Sam.” Darcy sounded genuinely sorry for his friend, but when he turned to her and inquired, “When are you leaving?” she knew he was only being polite and hadn’t the least interest in what she did. Briefly she told him her travel plans.
“Have a pleasant journey, Miss Sinclair.”
“Thank you, Mr. McKenna, I shall.” And she certainly would. How wonderful she could at last escape this miserable mining town with its gritty men like Brock Dominic and Darcy McKenna whose talk was all about mining, who cared little for the social graces. She addressed her father and brother. “I hope you can get home early tonight for my farewell dinner.”
“We might be a little late,” said Hugh. “Mr. McKenna just sold us some of his gunpowder, and we’re going to put it to good use. But you’d better not start without us. If you do, that precious boat ticket of yours might disappear.”
“You wouldn’t dare.” Laurie gave her slender, sandy-haired brother a playful swipe on the arm. At twenty-seven, he hadn’t got over playing the occasional practical joke. When she was little, sometimes he went too far with his joking and teasing, but she’d always tried to overcome her resentment. A hard worker, he’d become Father’s indispensable assistant at the mine.
“We’d best get back to our discussion,” Sam said to Laurie. “We’re trying to figure what to do with those pesky high-graders.”
Dominick’s face clouded with rage. “I say, kill ’em all. Shoot ’em like dogs.”
“Now, now, we don’t want to go to extremes, Brock,” Sam replied.
Laurie hadn’t been in town long before she heard about the thieves who stole the high-grade ore out of the sluice boxes, always in the dead of night when no one was around. Called high-graders, they were a big problem with all the mines.