Lipstick and Lead Series: The Complete Box Set With a Bonus Book
Page 12
As the sun continued its descent, cloaking the street in darkness, she knew it would soon be time to carry out their plan.
“Your weapon’s ready?” Meg asked one last time. She worried about Ruby and hated leaving her alone with the criminal they were chasing.
“Yes,” Ruby said. “And you’ll be there with me?”
“Until you give me the signal.”
“Remind me how much this guy’s worth?”
“Five hundred dollars.” This could be their last bounty if things worked out like Meg planned.
Ruby smiled and walked over to the window. “Papa would be so proud of us.”
Meg shook her head, knowing their Papa would have been furious at the chances they were taking. “Maybe secretly, but he’d tell us we should have taken jobs in town. He’d have been more concerned about our safety than how quickly we were paying off the farm.”
Ruby turned, her mouth twisted with displeasure. “No. I will never become a maid again. Never. This last year has been exciting, and criminals are too stupid to realize a pretty woman is going to pull a gun on them.”
Meg nodded. In the last year, Ruby had changed and matured. She’d gone from a love-crazed girl to being driven to catch as many low-life criminals as they could. She enjoyed the chase, the thrill. “Annabelle said we need six hundred dollars more, and the farm will be mortgage free.”
“Old man Bates will fall out of his chair when you pay off the note.”
Meg smiled. “Annabelle said he wasn’t too friendly when she took in the payment on the note this year. He had plans on repossessing the farm. Too bad.”
“I miss Annabelle,” Ruby said, with a wistful whine in her voice.
“Yeah, me too. But someone had to take care of the farm, and she’s good at the bookkeeping.”
Meg glanced out the window and watched as men entered the saloon, the doors swinging wide. Now was when her nerves had her stomach rolling, her heart racing, and fear choking her throat. What if something happened to Ruby? How could she live with herself?
“The drinking has begun,” Meg said quietly, listening to the music spilling out into the street from the local saloon.
“And will soon end for Simon Trudeau,” Ruby said laughing, her eyes shining with excitement.
There was no fear in her gaze, only excited anticipation. Only reckless adventure. And that worried Meg.
“The horses are saddled and ready to go. Give me your satchel, and I’ll secure it on your horse. I can’t go in with you, or they’ll make the connection between us.” Meg stared at her youngest sister, fear sitting like a pit in the bottom of her stomach. “You’re all set? Your weapons are ready?”
Ruby shrugged. “My knife is in my boot. My gun is in my holster.” She smiled. “And my charm is ready to ensnare this poor bastard.”
Meg was always stunned at how much Ruby enjoyed the chase. They used her as the bait, and then Meg would pull a gun on some poor unlucky bastard, and Ruby would tie him up. Every time before a catch, her blue eyes would sparkle and shine with excitement. She loved being a bounty hunter. She loved catching criminals, and most of all she loved playing her many roles.
They’d done everything from the distraught woman, pregnant wife, and now a saloon girl. Wherever the unlawful resided, they’d lay a trap and ensnare the wanted.
“Where’s your hat?” Ruby asked.
“Right here,” Meg said and picked up her black cowboy hat and pulled it down tight.
But for Meg it was just a job. A means to an end. A way to earn a decent living and pay for the farm. Once they had enough money, she would retire and never chase another criminal. But Ruby loved the chase, the entrapment, and the thrill of turning in the longrider.
Music echoed down the street, and Meg knew it was time. “Are you ready?”
Ruby smiled, her lips painted red, her cheeks tinted with the same color. “Let’s get this done, so we can go home for a while.”
“Let’s go.”
The two walked out of the hotel room together, but once they reached the street, Ruby walked to the saloon alone.
Meg gave her just enough time to get inside, and then she followed. Time to go to work.
Ruby strolled down the street toward the saloon, her head held high, a smile on her lips. In the last year, she was no longer the love-obsessed young woman who only wanted to find herself a husband. Now, she wanted anything, but a man, in her life. They were worthless dogs. She’d made it her mission to put as many of the loathsome jackeroos behind bars.
Where before she’d dreamed of hearts and flowers, now she dreamed of tricking outlaws into believing they could have her, only to capture them in her net and hogtie them before she and Meg carried them off to the law. She was ridding the world of evil bastards who preyed on women and children and killed innocents. And she loved her new life.
Pushing open the doors to the saloon, she stopped and glanced around. Men congregated at gaming tables, talking or just staring down into their drinks. Her gaze swept the room, looking over the clientele. Some men came for the women. Some men came for a drink, and some came to gamble. Most had women and children at home, who they should have been spending time with.
Some were there for the pleasures the saloon offered before they headed out of town, running from the law once again. Her stomach tightened, as her nerves tingled, when she spotted her prey at the bar, drinking, his head bent low, hat pushed forward over his forehead.
She sauntered over to the bar and took the stool next to Simon Trudeau.
“Hey, cowboy,” she said, her lips turned up into a smile, giving him her best come-and-get-it look.
With a flick of his finger, he pushed his black cowboy hat up on his head. Beautiful dark emerald eyes gazed at her like he was starving and she was cream pie. His eyes sauntered over her skimpily attired body, lingering on her breasts before his gaze returned to hers.
This fourflusher would be easy pickings as long as he continued to stare at her breasts.
“Like what you see?” she asked, unable to keep the sarcasm from her voice. A shiver of revulsion shimmied up her spine, the remembrance of that closet with Clay Mullins never far from her memory.
It was a miracle that bastard still lived and breathed.
“Nice,” he said, his eyes once again on her face and not her breasts.
“Looking for some company?” she asked.
“I don’t pay for women,” he said, looking away like he’d seen all he wanted to see, presenting more of a challenge. A challenge she loved. But she’d lay odds he liked sex.
“I don’t charge men,” she responded, her voice low and sultry. “I bet a big strong, handsome cowboy like you has women begging for attention.”
He smiled and reached out, skimming her face with his fingers. She had to force her body not to shiver and maintain her smile, while she let him touch her skin. The urge to vomit was strong, but she knew she couldn’t let him see her reaction.
“If you don’t charge, what’s a pretty girl like you doing here in the saloon?” he asked. “Surely there must be some man waiting for you at home.
She laughed. “If I had a man at home, why would I be here?”
“Exactly,” he said.
“Buy me a drink, and I’ll tell you about my wicked ways,” she promised.
He grinned. “You don’t look old enough to have a torrid past.”
“You don’t look old enough to bed a woman.”
He laughed.
“Bartender, two whiskeys,” he called out.
She had to build trust before she could get him out the door and into the alley, where Meg would be waiting, once she gave the signal. They had this little scenario down to an art, and most criminals were stupid enough to fall for their trick.
The bartender placed the drinks in front of them, and she lifted her glass and clinked it against his, the sound vibrating. “To strong men who like pretty girls.”
Oh, if he knew she was being sarcastic. That
she was using her sexuality against him and that before the night was over, his roving eyes and lustful nature would cost him his freedom.
She smiled and leaned close to him, giving him an up close and personal view of her cleavage. “I like whiskey, and men like to buy girls a drink if they show their bosom.”
Simon grinned a sexy smile that if she’d wanted a man, would have worked some charm on her, but instead, it only left her wary. He turned on the bar stool until she was in between his legs. “I’ll buy you as many drinks as you want, honey.”
“Then buy another round,” she told him and finished off her drink, setting the glass on the bar.
While he ordered the drinks, she gave Meg their signal. Ruby watched her sister slip out the front to go to their agreed meeting place. Laying her hand on his leg, she rubbed his thigh, knowing most men almost purred when she touched them. “My, oh my, you are certainly a big man. I wonder what the rest of you looks like?”
He grinned and clinked his drink glass against hers. “I’d be more than happy to show you, miss.”
“I just bet you would,” she said. This was the dangerous part. The part where she had to make certain he would follow her out to the alley, or she’d have lost her opportunity.
She downed her drink, the rough whiskey burning her throat. When he’d sat his drink down, she slid off her stool and kind of fell into his arms.
“Whoa there, sugar. I think the whiskey’s done gone to your brain,” he said, smiling at her like she was the prey, and he was a hunter, which was exactly what she wanted him to believe.
God, men were simple creatures, who a pretty woman could lead around with just a smile and the hint of a promise. A sexual promise and they would follow you blindly until they were suddenly trapped.
“Oh, no,” she slurred happily. “It’s gone straight to my legs.”
He laughed, placed his finger beneath her chin and tilted her face up to his. She watched as he lowered his mouth to hers. He tasted of whiskey and sin and things she didn’t want to experience with him. Revulsion swirled through her stomach, and she had to step back. “My, oh my, you certainly know how to get a girl all excited. I think I need some fresh air.”
“Maybe you need me to help you outside,” he said his smile wide, his eyes dark with passion.
“Oh, honey, I’d love for you to help me out the door. I might even let you show me what a big strong man you are.”
He grinned, and she knew he’d just taken the bait. She had him, and she stepped back out of his arms. No, she wasn’t drunk. Hell, she wasn’t even tipsy. The bartender here was known for watering the drinks down, but Simon didn’t need to know that. She wanted him to believe she was a poor, inebriated, foolish woman who he would soon be fornicating.
Only instead, he’d be tied up, trussed like a turkey, and turned over to the sheriff’s office, and they would be five hundred dollars richer.
As she walked toward the door, she noticed a man sitting in the corner, his hat pulled low over his forehead, his head down as she hurried through the saloon with Simon. Something about this cowboy seemed familiar, like she knew him, but she couldn’t stop and stare.
She pretended to sway on her feet, and Simon grabbed her by the arm. When they stepped outside, she leaned against him.
“Where to now, buttercup?” he asked.
Buttercup? Really? Inside she cringed and couldn’t wait to hogtie this bastard.
“Around the corner and down the alley,” she said, steering him in the direction that led to his capture.
When they reached the darkened alley, she pulled him into the shadows. He covered her lips with his own, kissing her, shoving his unwelcome tongue into her mouth. She moaned, not from passion, but from trying to halt the vomit she could feel rising in her throat.
Finally, he pulled back from the kiss. “Gosh, darn it, woman, I gotta have you.”
“And so you shall,” she said, glancing around the shadows looking for Meg. Where the hell was she? Ruby had their prey ready to abduct, and her sister was nowhere to be seen.
Simon pressed her against the building, and it was all she could do not to scream. This felt so familiar, and she had to resist the urge to fight. His hand grabbed her breast, and she swallowed the nausea she could feel rising inside her. Her fingers twitched with the need to grab her gun. Where the hell was Meg?
He fumbled with his pants, quickly releasing them. They fell to the ground, and he reached beneath her dress. Her scream rose inside her throat, choking her with the need to be released.
The sound of a gun clicking made Simon freeze.
“Remove your hands from my sister, hornswoggle, and slowly step back.”
Meg’s heart pounded in her chest like a runaway stallion. She hadn’t been able to find Ruby. Somehow the girl was in the second alley from the saloon and not the first one. She’d known she was running out of time, and she’d been unable to find her baby sister.
God, Ruby took chances and scared Meg at the way she seemed to enjoy chasing criminals. It was almost like she had to prove she was stronger.
“Damn it, Meg, you took your sweet time,” Ruby fussed.
“You weren’t at the agreed spot,” Meg replied, her hand gripping Simon’s shirt, the gun pressed against his forehead, her heart pounding, her breathing harsh. She’d run until she’d found Ruby. “One move, buster, and your brains will be splattered on that wall. You’re worth the same amount of money, dead or alive.”
His mouth had turned into a mean grimace. “I’ll kill you for this.”
“Get in line with all the others I’ve turned in,” Meg told him. “Get the rope, Ruby. It’s laying on the ground.”
Ruby picked it up. “Hold your hands out.”
He complied. “I will hunt you down. I will make you scream for mercy.”
“Hobble your lip. Your pride is just smartin because you got caught with your pants down,” Meg said.
Wrapping the rope around his arms, Ruby glanced down. “You know for such a big, strong man, your manly parts are shrinking.”
“Shut up,” he said. “You wanted it a moment ago.”
“No, you thought I wanted that pecker a minute ago. I wanted you all right, but not for a banging up against the wall. Like that’s where a woman wants to experience sexual pleasure.”
Ruby stood back and admired her rope work. “Not bad.”
The sound of a gun hammer clicking had Meg whirling around, dragging Simon by his shirt, putting his body in front of her own. Unease spiraled through her, gripping her heart in its hand and twisting the hardened organ. There stood none other than Sheriff Zach Gillepsie.
“Let him go, Meg,” Zach said, his gun pointed at them.
“Why, Sheriff Gillespie,” she drawled, “I haven’t seen you since that cold, dark night when I left you unshucked, and all tied up,” she said, faking cockiness she didn’t feel, but refusing to release her prisoner.
“I see you’re still tying people up.” He glanced down and laughed. “At least he’s only missing his pants.”
“Meg, what’s he talking about?” Ruby asked.
She ignored Ruby, not wanting to answer her sister at this moment.
Zach smiled like it was Christmas and Santa had just delivered him a present. “Drop your gun, Meg, and let him go.”
If she let go of her gun, she’d be vulnerable to Zach, and she’d already let him hurt her once. Why make herself vulnerable again?
“Why should I?” she asked, not wanting to let this bounty go. This last criminal would pay off the loan; she would be free to follow her dreams, rather than chase dangerous men.
“Because I’m the sheriff, and I told you to. Now do it.”
“But you’re not the sheriff in this town.”
“Doesn’t matter. Drop your gun.”
Meg hesitated, but he was the law, and she could get into all kinds of trouble for resisting a lawman. Not to mention he clearly still had a vendetta with her.
“Don’t do it,
Meg. I have a bad feeling about this,” Ruby warned, glancing between her and Zach. “He’s our prisoner.”
“Shut up, whore,” Simon said.
Ruby slapped him in the face. “I’m not a whore. You’re just upset because your pants are hanging around your ankles. And your pecker is now the size of a fishing worm.”
Simon tried to get to Ruby, and Meg held him tight, pressing her gun against his temple. “Stop.”
“Meg, I’m only going to tell you this once more. Drop your gun,” Zach warned.
Meg sighed. She couldn’t go against the law, even if she wanted to. “You better not double-cross me.”
“Or what?”
She stared at him as she laid her gun on the ground. Her tightly strung fingers were slow to release the weapon as her heart pounded inside her chest.
“Now, that’s my prisoner you have, and I’m taking him back with me.”
“I don’t think so,” she said. “We caught him, and we should get the bounty money.”
Zach ignored her. He still held his gun on her as he reached down and picked up her weapon. “Ruby, toss me your gun.”
“I don’t have a gun,” she said, her voice all sweet and innocent.
“Don’t make me reach up under your skirts and find it. I know you have one. All of you McKenzie girls carry guns, and I want yours right here with Meg’s.”
She growled and turned her back, while she pulled out her gun and tossed it to him.
“Thank you. Now, ladies, you’re just damn lucky you helped me today and I’m in such a good mood, or I’d be hauling both of you back to jail with Simon here. Stand back to back.”
“Why?” Meg asked, smiling at him because she knew it would get to him. Smiling because she wanted him to think that none of this bothered her, yet she was seething inside. “You’re not still mad about me tying you up, are you?”
He grinned. “How could I be mad and wanting revenge when you left me tied up and naked in the middle of Main Street?”