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Authors: Miranda the Warrior

Elaine Barbieri

AN AVON TRUE ROMANCE

Miranda
and the
Warrior

E
LAINE
B
ARBIERI

To my three young adults, Holly Settineri, Siobhan Fitzpatrick, and Michael Settineri, with much love

CHAPTER ONE

The American Frontier, 1871

Holding her mount to a steady pace, Miranda again scanned the sunswept distance behind her. She laughed triumphantly when she saw no sign of soldiers pursuing her across the wild terrain. She had done it again! With an innocent expression and a practiced flutter of long lashes, she had talked the guard at Fort Walters’s gate into believing her father had given her permission for a short outing. She’d soon reach the Calhoun ranch to keep her promise that she’d be there when her friend’s prize mare foaled.

Miranda’s smile broadened. The baggy male clothing and oversized hat that was her present riding attire aside, she had learned to use the curving proportions of womanhood to full advantage, when necessary. Private Will Blake hadn’t been immune to her appeal. As a matter of fact, he hadn’t seemed able to think past her … smile. She hoped he didn’t suffer for it when her father found out she was gone, but she had already decided that wasn’t her problem.

Miranda’s smile faltered. Her father’s overprotectiveness, however,
was
her problem. Never had that been demonstrated more clearly to her than when her father, Major Charles Thurston of the US Cavalry, had refused to allow her to travel to the Calhoun ranch because he wouldn’t “put her or her escort at risk on a whim.” She had suffered her father’s overprotectiveness most of her life—since her mother’s death when Miranda was born. At the age of eighteen, she had become adept at circumventing it when necessary, and this was one of those times.

Cheyenne raiding parties in the area
—Miranda scoffed. She had no doubt that the stories circulating were nothing more than the “Cheyenne fever” that had dispatched Fort Walters patrols out on countless false alarms during the past weeks. Besides, she could take care of herself. She had lived on the frontier all her life, and she—

Miranda’s thoughts halted cold at first sight of the riders coming into view in the distance. Seeing her at that same moment, the horsemen began racing toward her. They weren’t military. Nor were they civilians.

Miranda gasped, then dug her heels into her mount’s sides to spur him into a gallop.

The riders were Cheyenne!

Miranda awakened slowly to the steady rhythm of a horse underneath her. She opened her eyes to a world that
was somehow turned upside down, then groaned at the realization that she was bound hand and foot and thrown over a horse like a piece of old baggage.

Furious at being so treated, Miranda twisted around to look up at her captor. Her heart jumped to an erratic beating at the sight of the Indian’s fierce war paint—his face a mask of jagged color, with lightning bolts meticulously drawn on each cheek, and dark eyes outlined in startling red. She recalled with sudden clarity her mad race to escape the pursuing Cheyenne. She remembered her panic as the Indian ponies steadily closed the distance between them—then her moment of mindless terror when an Indian pony drew alongside her galloping horse. She remembered swinging out wildly with the rope on her saddle, striking her pursuer across his painted face.

The last thing she recalled was the rage that flashed in those dark eyes before everything went black.

Her captor looked down at her unexpectedly. He held her gaze for an extended moment and Miranda realized abruptly that the rage she had formerly seen in his eyes was gone. Clearly visible there instead was another equally startling emotion.

Scorn.

No, she would not tolerate this Cheyenne’s contempt! She was Miranda Thurston, daughter of Major Charles Thurston of the US Cavalry. She would erase the scorn from her captor’s eyes if it was the last thing she ever did.

Shadow Walker acknowledged the hoots of approval from the welcoming crowd that had gathered on the edge of the camp to observe his party’s return. Yet his mood was far from festive as he pulled his captive down from his horse and stood her up on shaky legs. He stared at her coldly. His face still throbbing from the lash of her rope, he remembered the wild chase that had ensued after he had sighted her. He recalled his surprise when he drew up alongside his quarry and saw that she was female—only to be stunned into fury when he was almost whipped from his horse by the unexpected swipe of her rope.

With satisfaction, Shadow Walker remembered that a quick grab had rendered the girl his captive—but that thought now gave him little comfort. With light hair hanging in tangled disarray across her dirt-covered face, her baggy male clothing filthy and torn, she was small and thin, little more than a child, an unimpressive captive worth far less than the great black mare she had ridden. She served poorly his need for vengeance against the military who held his father’s brother, Red Shirt, prisoner in a dark fort cell where he would never again see the sun.

Shadow Walker stared at his captive a moment longer. She was good for only one thing.

Cutting the bonds on her feet with quick efficiency, Shadow Walker pushed the girl forward. He saw the spark of defiance in her light eyes before she stumbled ahead of
him, dodging glancing blows from those she passed as they made their way across the camp.

Jerking the girl to a halt when they reached the lodge he sought, Shadow Walker noted the trembling she attempted to conceal, and scorn for her faltering bravery returned. His attention was drawn back to the lodge when the flap lifted and Rattling Blanket appeared in the opening. He spoke to the old squaw gently in their native tongue. He waited for the nod that signified Rattling Blanket’s acceptance, then walked away without a backward glance at the uncertain captive he had left behind him.

Major Charles Thurston looked at the soldier who stood at attention in front of his desk. His bearded face tightly composed, he addressed the young man sharply.

“What time did my daughter leave the fort?”

“Early this morning, sir.”

“She made no mention of her destination when she left?”

“She said she was going to ride out a little way—down to the stream by the bluff. She said you had given her permission to go out to pick some wildflowers there. She said she wouldn’t be gone long.”

“Wildflowers … and you believed her?”

“She seemed sincere, sir. I had no reason to doubt her.”

No reason to doubt her, of course, and not able to think past Miranda’s smile and potent charm.

Major Thurston struggled to control his rising temper. This was just like Miranda. She had come to his office that morning, taking for granted—as usual—that he would not hesitate to assign her an escort so she could visit the Calhoun ranch for some reason that he could not now remember. What he did recall was that his reaction had been a spontaneous refusal. He had been incredulous that she would even make such a request in light of recent Cheyenne war party activity reported in the area, and he had told her so.

The major unconsciously shook his head. He supposed he should have gotten a hint from Miranda’s angry response and the look of rebellion in her eyes when he had refused to relent. He had seen that look in her eyes countless times before. He should have known it would mean trouble.

Major Thurston glanced out the window at a brilliant sun that was well past the midpoint in the sky. Turning his anger on young Private Blake, he grated, “Why did you wait so long to report that my daughter hadn’t returned?”

“I was relieved from duty at the gate after she left, sir.” Private Blake’s throat worked convulsively as he continued, “When I returned to my post, I asked the guard about her. When he said she hadn’t returned, I reported it immediately.”

A knock on the door turned Major Thurston toward grim-faced Lieutenant Peter Hill, who entered upon his
response. The officer’s report was succinct.

“We couldn’t find Miss Thurston anywhere in the vicinity of the stream, Major.”

“You scouted the area carefully?” the major pressed.

“There were no fresh tracks—no sign that she went to the stream this morning.”

Major Thurston’s jaw tightened—because she didn’t go there.

Straightening up to his full, compact height, the major ordered, “Have a patrol saddled and ready to leave with me for the Calhoun ranch in fifteen minutes.”

“Yes, sir.”

Waiting until the door closed behind the two men, Major Thurston muttered angrily, “Miranda … this time you’ve gone too far.”

CHAPTER TWO

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