Read Here Comes the Bride Online

Authors: Laura Drewry

Tags: #Romance, #Historical, #Western, #Historical Romance, #Westerns

Here Comes the Bride (3 page)

“No. I don’t know a thing about cows.” She started to laugh then, a light twinkling that floated out through the night and right into Gabe’s heart. “But I’m a quick learner.”
“You’re not staying,” he said, still smiling.
“Yes, I am.”
“Don’t you think Bart’s going to have something to say about this when he gets here?”
“Bart?” she asked. “Is he coming home?”
“You tell me.”
“I’m sure I have no idea what your brother plans to do, Mr. Calloway. We didn’t exactly part on the best of terms.”
“Well, Miss Kinley, I’m sure if Bart is half the . . . man . . . I know him to be, he’ll be hot on your trail. He should be here within the week.”
“Hmmm.” She looked thoughtful, though not particularly distressed. “That could pose a bit of a problem.”
“Really?” Gabe couldn’t help but smile to himself.
“I must confess something to you, Mr. Calloway.” The apple fell into her lap with a thump, leaving her hands free to fidget. “With regard to your brother . . . the thing is . . . I’m afraid . . . well, the long and short of it is this—I belong to him.”
Gabe’s throat tightened even though he’d half been expecting this.
“You married my brother.”
“No, nothing like that.”
“Then what?” Why should he care—he had no hold on this woman.
“This is most embarrassing,” she said, talking into her lap. “Your brother, Bart . . .”
“Yes, I know who my brother is.”
“You needn’t be snippy,” she mumbled.
“What?”
“Nothing.”
“Then don’t mutter.”
Tess crossed her arms tightly against her chest, her pale pink lips pursed in a deep frown. She had more to say, that was certain, and watching her fight against the urge to say it was more than Gabe could take without laughing. He pushed back his smirk, crossed his own arms, and settled back in the chair.
“What about Bart?” he persisted. “Now that we both know who he is.”
Tess exhaled loudly before she spoke.
“Your brother Bart won me in a poker game.”
Chapter 3
Gabe nearly tumbled out of his chair. Did she really just say . . .
“Five card draw,” Tess continued, sounding very matter-of-fact about it. “He had four aces. That’s a good hand, isn’t it? It must be, because as soon as everyone saw it, they started groaning and throwing their cards on the table. I’ve never been one for cards really. My mother, God bless her, tried to teach me the games she played with her ladies’ club, but I could never figure them out. I just can’t sit still long enough. Do you play cards, Mr. Calloway? I suppose you must; it seems to be the thing men do, doesn’t it? Play cards and drink whiskey. Do you drink whiskey? I think it smells absolutely horrid. I just can’t imagine having to swallow something that smells so awful, but I guess . . .”
“He won you in a poker game?” Gabe’s head spun faster than her words. Bart had done a lot of strange things in his lifetime, but this was way beyond even him.
“Yes.” She took in a deep breath, smiled, and sat back against her chair.
“Would you care to explain that?”
“Actually, no,” she said. “If you are giving me the option, I’d rather not.”
Gabe smiled back with forced politeness. “You misunderstand me—I’m not giving you the option.”
“I was afraid of that.” Tess sighed. “Well, you see, the thing is I actually belonged to another man who was at the same table as Bart. And when he ran out of money, he was using whatever else he owned for collateral and I just happened to be one of those things. Me and a lovely silver pocket watch, I must admit, I believe he came by through illegal means. He did have a horse as well, a beautiful black gelding named Norman of all things, but he was adamant about holding on to the animal. I guess I should have been insulted he would give me up so easily and not his horse, but frankly I was so happy to be rid of him that I just didn’t care one bit.”
Gabe squeezed the bridge of his nose between his thumb and forefinger. How much more complicated could this possibly get?
“I’m almost afraid to ask,” he groaned, “but how is it you refused to marry a ‘perfectly fine’ wealthy man in Boston, yet you’d let yourself be owned like a slave by a man who apparently was
not
perfectly fine? President Lincoln did outlaw slavery some years back, didn’t he? Or was that whole war thing just a bad dream?”
“A nightmare is more like it, Mr. Calloway,” she said. “But you’re right, it does sound horrid, doesn’t it? It was such a simple idea at first and then everything just sort of fell apart. I’m not afraid to tell you, I thank the good Lord every day for your brother.”
“That makes one of us,” he grumbled.
“I’m sorry.” She smirked. “I didn’t hear you—were you mumbling something?”
“Never mind.” His grumble turned into a downright growl. “Let’s just get this over with.”
Tess shifted in her chair, her hands now fumbling with the half-eaten apple in her lap.
“All right then. As I told you, my father disowned me, and I was left on my own without anything, just what I managed to throw in the little carpetbag I have. I had no money, no skills to speak of with which to gain employment. My poor mother would have died much sooner if she’d thought for one moment one of her daughters actually had to work for a living. Her girls were raised to be ladies, and nice ladies did not perform menial tasks. We were raised to sip tea from bone china, play the piano, and have a taste for fashion. My goodness, Mother is probably spinning in her grave as we speak . . .”
“Miss Kinley!”
“Oh, yes, sorry. So what was I to do? I had my dream of moving west and working on a ranch with my husband, having children, that sort of thing, but I was in Boston. Have you been to Boston, Mr. Calloway? It’s in Massachusetts, you know.”
“Yes, I know.”
“It really is lovely. There’s theater and carriage rides through the park, people play croquet right out on their lawns. There are horse races and . . . I’m getting off the topic again, aren’t I?”
Gabe nodded wearily.
“I do apologize, it’s just when I get ner . . . never mind. As you can imagine, my options were very limited. In the time it would take me to find a job and save enough money to come out here on my own, I would be too old for marriage, let alone children, so I did the next best thing.”
“Which was?”
“I saw an advertisement in the newspaper that stated there were ranchers looking for wives and I answered it.”
“You didn’t.”
“I most certainly did,” she stated, straightening in her chair. “The advertisement said hardworking, honest men would pay quite handsomely for a good wife, and I will make a good wife—a very good wife—the only problem is apparently the money is supposed to go to the woman’s family. And that, as you can imagine, is where things began to go terribly wrong.”
“No, Miss Kinley,” Gabe sighed. “Things started going terribly wrong the minute you chose to defy your father.”
“I didn’t defy him!” she cried. “I simply did not agree with him! He was being stubborn and unreasonable and I could not allow him to marry me off to the first rich man to come along. Despite what people might think, I believe a woman is entitled to have a say in how her life will be lived. I didn’t want to spend my days drinking tea and playing silly games with brainless ninnies who have no opinions on anything going on in the world. I want more than that! I want . . .”
“The life out west. Yes, I know.” Gabe tried to wrap his brain around this crazy woman’s rationale and it just would not happen; but he’d come this far, he had to hear the rest of it.
“You see,” she continued, “I couldn’t very well let my family know what I was doing or they would have most certainly had me committed to an insane asylum. Father is on the hospital board, you see, so it would be an easy thing for him to do. Shameful, but easy nonetheless. Come to think of it, Uncle Benjamin might have taken me in. He’s more liberal minded than Father and his shortsighted rabble, but I doubt even he would understand my need to do this. At any rate, I had the man—the one I was to marry, I mean—forward all the correspondence to my dear friend Charlotte. She lives on the other side of the city, she does, but we have been friends since we were very little girls. She’s such a dear, she is. The oldest of five girls! Can you even imagine having five daughters? I’m very certain my father would have gone completely daft if there had been one more girl in our house. My sister and I were more than enough for him!”
“You don’t say.” Gabe’s hands moved to massage his throbbing temples.
“Sorry.” She clearly wasn’t. “My plan was a very simple one really. I would use the gentleman’s money to make my way out west, and once I met him, I would decide if I loved him or not. If I decided not, then I would simply return the money that was left and get a job until I could repay the rest.”
“You’re joking, right?”
“No.” She shook her head vehemently. “I believe it would have worked, too, except the man came to Boston to collect me personally. He said no man in his right mind would part with that kind of money with no guarantee a bride would show up. Even if he did have a written contract.”
“How much money are we talking about here?”
“Two hundred and seventy-five dollars.”
Gabe whistled. “Smart man.”
“Not smart enough, I’m afraid, but that’s simply making a long story longer. By God’s good graces, he agreed to hold off on the marriage until we made it west. By and by we made it to Butte where I was used as . . . collateral . . . in the poker game that passed me along to your brother Bart.”
She had done her best to tell him as many half-truths as possible, and Gabe knew it full well, but he wasn’t sure he could handle the whole truth in one fell swoop anyway, so he decided not to push his luck. There was one thing he couldn’t quite get a handle on though.
“So how is it if you’re worth almost three hundred dollars to my brother, he just up and let you walk away?” His face darkened like an August storm. “Or did he exact payment from you in some other way?”
“Oh, no, nothing like that!” Tess’s eyes skittered over his and then back down to her lap. “I just left. Well, to be perfectly honest, I didn’t just leave, I borrowed some of his winnings before I left—just to get me out here, you see, and then I was going to wire it all back to him.”
A huge smile spread across Gabe’s face. This story just kept getting better.
“You stole from my brother?”
“Well, I wouldn’t exactly call it stealing, Mr. Calloway.”
“Did you ask if you could take it?”
“N-no, I didn’t.”
“Did he offer it to you?”
“No.”
“Then that, Miss Kinley, is stealing. You’re a thief!”
“I most certainly am not! I fully intend to repay your brother—with interest—once I am able.”
Gabe chuckled. “You know what they say about good intentions.”
Tess was on her feet in an instant, her fists clenching and unclenching on her hips.
“Mr. Calloway, I assure you—”
“Now don’t go getting your knickers all in a bunch, I’m not going to turn you in. Fact is, nothing makes me happier than when someone does a turn to Bart he probably would’ve done to them if the opportunity presented itself. You were smart to get away when you had the chance.”
Tess sunk down into her chair, looking twice as weary than when she first arrived. Gabe watched her fingers twitch in her lap and her teeth chew on her bottom lip.
“How old are you, Miss Kinley?”
“Old enough to know that is not a question a gentleman asks a lady.”
He chuckled again, low in his throat. “I never claimed to be a gentleman, Miss Kinley, and you have yet to prove to me you are indeed a lady.”
“Why I . . .”
“You what?” he asked, enjoying all too much the way her neck flushed when she became angry. “All I’ve learned about you is your father should have taken you over his knee and prevented this whole mess from happening. But instead, you’ve bounced from one man to another to another until you landed here. You know nothing about me and yet here you are, sitting on my porch—only half dressed—and you claim to be a lady? I think the
real
ladies here in town would have a different opinion, don’t you?”
“But I’ve done nothing wrong,” she hurriedly explained. “I am a good, virtuous woman who . . .”
“Who happens to be a thief and who doesn’t mind sitting here, in make-do night clothes, with a man you’ve just met and not a chaperone in sight. Hell, the only other woman for miles is Rosa, and since she’s not even married to Miguel, she doesn’t count either!”
Tess gasped. “She told me he was her husband!”
That piece of news always seemed to cause a stir. “They’ve lived as man and wife for as long as I’ve known them, but they are not legally married.”
“Oh my!” Shocked at the revelation, Tess thought no less of either Rosa or Miguel. In fact, she actually admired them—it was such a daring thing to do.
They sat in the evening silence, both lost in their own thoughts, both sneaking glances at the other as if sizing each other up. It was very distracting to Tess having him sit so close to her. He did not frighten her in any way, even when he yelled like a maddened bear, but the smell of leather and sunshine that clung to him was more than she could possibly be expected to take and not lose her train of thought. It was no wonder she rambled on like a crazy woman.
Gabe’s mind couldn’t have been more muddled. She couldn’t stay here. He
would
send her back, but there was something about her. She pulled him in every time she batted those bewitching amber eyes at him, every time she went off on one of her tangents, every time she moved and the soft, sweet smell of honey lingered in her place.
“You know Bart will come looking for you.” He said it gently, but matter-of-factly.
“But he doesn’t know where I went, so why would he come here?” For the first time, she almost sounded worried.
“Because he’s a bounty hunter, Miss Kinley. It’s his business to find people. And besides, you’d be an easy one to track.”
“Why is that?”
“A single woman traveling across most of the territory by herself is a sight most folks take note of.”
Tess almost whimpered. “I never thought about that.”
“No matter,” he said. “You’ll be back on next week’s stage anyway, so he won’t find you here.”
“I won’t leave.”
“Yes, you will.”
“No, Mr. Calloway, I will not. I made it all the way out here, didn’t I? Don’t you think I deserve the chance to make a life out here?”
“I don’t honestly know what you deserve, but I do know this is no place for city girls. Sooner or later you’re going to realize that, too, so why don’t you save everyone a whole lot of trouble and go home? Marry that ‘perfectly fine rich man’ and live the life you were supposed to live.”
“No.”
Gabe stared straight at her. “No? Where do you intend to stay while you’re in Porter Creek? The hotel costs money.”
“I’ll stay here.”
“That’s impossible.”
“Why?”
“Because you’re a single woman and I’m a single man.”
“Yes, but you’re an honorable man. I am certain you would not act inappropriately.”
“How do you know?”
“Bart told me what a good man you are, how respected you are here in Porter Creek, how conscientious you are, how honorable and upright. . . .”
“Stop!” he cried through his laughter. “You are the worst liar I’ve ever met. Tell me what he really said.”
Tess cleared her throat. “Very well. I believe his exact words were high-minded, staunch, and pompous.”
“Now that sounds more like Bart. And out of that, you came up with honorable, upright, and what was the other one?”
“Conscientious.”
“Right. Conscientious.”
“Regardless,” she said, “Rosa would not allow anything untoward to happen.”

Other books

Break Me by Lissa Matthews
L. A. Candy by Lauren Conrad
Alien Disaster by May, Rob
Bound by Blood by Cynthia Eden
Breaking Point by Kristen Simmons
The Last Hellion by Loretta Chase


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024