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Authors: Carolyn Faulkner

The Sister and the Sinner

 

The Sister and the Sinner

By

Carolyn Faulkner

(c)2012 by Blushing Books(r) and Carolyn Faulkner

 

Copyright (c) 2012 by Blushing Books(r) and Carolyn Faulkner.

All rights reserved. No part of the book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Published by Blushing Books(r),

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Faulkner, Carolyn

The Sister and the Sinner

eBook ISBN: 978-1-60968-667-3

Cover Design: by Korey Mae Johnson

Illustrations Provided by: Big Stock Photo www.bigstock.com

 

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Chapter One

Outside of Deadwood, Dakota Territory

Late spring, 1882

She never saw him coming. One moment she was bent over, aggressively yanking yet another bunch of stubborn pigweed, when the rip of gunfire rent the air. Her breath left her in a gasp, and before she could draw in another to fill her lungs, something large and heavy tackled her to the ground. Her head struck a particularly hard clump of dirt, sun-baked to nearly the firmness of rock, and she yelped. A large, dirty hand clamped over her throat, restricting not only her ability to call for help, but to breathe at all. She blinked; her eyes widened with fear as she stared at her attacker.

His eyes were blue, startlingly so, as clear and bright as the late summer sky above him. His face was darkly tanned and grimy, his hair disheveled, and the ubiquitous hat that the men in Dakota Territory all seemed to wear, was missing.

"Where are the others?" he demanded, his husky voice pitched low enough that only she could hear.

She gulped, growing dizzy for lack of air, and felt cold steel press against her throat. The tip of the knife nicked her tender flesh. Still, fear drove her to try to respond, so she mouthed an answer for him.

With obvious reluctance, he eased up the pressure on her throat just enough so she could draw in a breath of air and then another, coughing from the pain that simple action caused. He hissed at her for silence, his lips so close to her ear that the stubble of whiskers caught in a wisp of hair that had pulled free from her white cambric veil. The Reverend Mother would surely scold her for that, if she were well enough.

"The others!" he growled.

How should she answer? If she told him there were dozens of nuns inside the crumbling convent, would he believe her? It certainly wouldn't intimidate him in the least, not this big bear of a man armed as he was against the Brides of Christ who had promised to turn the other cheek.

"There are no others," she said, not recognizing her own voice, before he ruthlessly cut her off. She prayed he couldn't somehow detect the small white lie. There weren't any other sisters, though. Just the Reverend Mother and she was of no threat to him whatsoever.

His expression darkened, and she would have bet seconds before that wasn't possible. Could he have known of the old woman's existence? It was doubtful, but just as she opened her mouth to confess her sin, the tip of the knife poked even further into her neck, and she suspected she would have a scar there for whatever remained of her life.

"Bullshit."

She flinched, as much from his angry tone as from the coarseness of his language.

"This is a convent, isn't it? Where are all the other nuns?"

There was not a quick or easy answer to his question, nor could she bring herself to place her beloved Mother Agnes in danger, yet how long would it be before Father Michael returned to hear her confession if she lied? She was ignorant of the world, having grown up in the convent.

She gazed at him stupidly, unaware that her expression, or the way her eyes glanced quickly toward Reverend Mother's bedroom window on the second floor, gave her away. Then he shifted, nearly cutting off her breath again as his bulk sandwiched her to the cold, hard ground. His broad shoulders blocked the noonday sun completely, casting her in his shadow. She was about to blurt her confession and beg for mercy, when a droplet of something warm and sticky fell on her face, drawing her attention to the large, dark stain on his upper left sleeve.

"You've been shot!" She couldn't keep the abject horror out of her tone.

"And I aim to avoid being shot again, if I can help it, Sister. Get up!" He shifted, suddenly lifting that terrific weight from her chest. She thought to take a moment to fill her lungs with great gulps of air, but he grabbed her wrists and yanked her to her feet. He didn't stand fully erect, but scooted in a half-crouch from brush to bush, to the garden gate made from sapling trunks lashed together, to the corner of the convent wall. His grip on her wrist was brutal. Tears filled her vision, causing her to stumble, which in turn elicited yet another curse from the outlaw - for outlaw he must surely be. Who else would be running for his life, bleeding and wounded, and attack a poor novice in a convent?

Her lips moved in silent prayer. "Hail Mary, Full of Grace, The Lord is with thee..."

"Hush," he barked, giving her arm a yank that nearly pulled it from the socket.

The prayer continued, but now not even her lips moved. God would hear her pleas. He might not save her from harm, but He would be with her at the hour of her death. Amen.

The outlaw pushed her up against the wall of the once bustling convent, his knife making a reappearance as though he thought he needed it to gain her assistance. "How many entrances and exits," he whispered hurriedly, his eyes darting about scanning the landscape in every direction.

"Just two," she whispered, pointing to the back door. "And the front door around the other side."

"Windows?"

"Of course," she said, more confused than scared at the moment. Who built a house without windows? But then, non-Catholics often had very strange ideas about Catholics.

"How many! How big! How defensible is this place?"

"There are many windows," she said stiffly. "And they are big enough to let in lots of sunlight. Convents are not built to be defended, for we are taught to love our enemies. Sir!"

That drew a chuckle from the outlaw. At least, she thought it might have been a chuckle. His face was filthy, and his lips were taut with what she had first thought was anger but now suspected might be the pain his wound caused him. But for a moment, the corners of his lips quirked upward and a deep rumble sounded in his chest. It was but a flash, and then it was gone.

"So you're not afraid of me?" he asked, pressing the full length of his body up against hers. Even through the thick wool of her black robe, she could feel the firmness of his thigh, the ridge of his belt buckle. His scent invaded her, an odd mix of sweat, soap, and something she couldn't define but would always think of as the scent of outlaw.

"You terrify me, sir. I may be ignorant, but I'm not stupid."

"And you live here all alone in this great big building all by yourself?"

His tone indicated that he didn't believe her. She lowered her eyes; embarrassment flushed her cheeks and made her stutter. "W-w-well..."

The knife pressed hard against her soft neck. His lips were right next to her ear again, the whiskers scratching her tender skin. "Tell me exactly how many and where they are!"

"Just Mother Superior, Sir."

"So you lied to me back there."

"Not exactly," she stammered, clenching her eyes shut at his angry scowl. "You didn't give me a chance to give you a complete report. There were twelve here much of the time, as I was growing up. Sister Mary Margaret, Sister Brigit, Sister Anne, Sister -."

"And where are they now?" he interrupted.

"I'm sure I don't know," she answered impatiently. "Several were transferred to another convent. Some went to California to minister to the needs there. We had an outbreak of influenza, which claimed the lives of Sisters Gertrude and Agatha. But it has been many months since we last had mail, that I couldn't tell you where they are right now."

"You're a saucy wench, for a nun," he grunted.

It was a lie of omission that she didn't correct him. She was only a novice; she had not yet taken the sacred vows that would forever bind her to the church. She wanted to - she knew in her heart that she was ready! But Mother Agnes disagreed, and no one argued with the Reverend Mother.

"Mother Superior. Where is she?"

"Oh, please don't hurt her! Take me instead. Do what you will with me, but please leave her alone! She's just a poor old woman, she's in very poor health!"

With a furtive glance at the tree line, he tugged her towards the back door. "Can't you just shut up and do what you're told?" he barked.

It was undoubtedly a rhetorical question, but it made a nervous giggle erupt from her throat. "No, sir. Mother Agnes often calls me her 'cross to bear'."

They made it up the back stairs unseen, apparently, since they heard no stray gunshots. He closed the door behind them.

"Where's the lock?"

"There isn't any."

He looked at her, utterly dumbfounded. "No locks?"

She shook her head. "We have no need to keep people in. The Sisters of Mercy are not cloistered, but minister to the needs of the community. We provided health care and education, before the drought came and most of the settlers moved away."

He had already begun to wander through the first floor during her explanation, his head swerving back and forth almost as violently as he was weaving, until his eyes fell on the big highboy that was one of the few nice pieces that remained downstairs.

"Help me," he said as he struggled shove it across the floorboards.

His tone of voice revealed just how reluctant he was to ask for her assistance, but he was obviously putting practicality before his masculine pride. She was small, and not very strong by comparison, but she'd been doing everything that needed to be done all by herself for nearly a year now. Her muscles were firm and hard, for a woman, and she wasn't above using her brain, either. She stopped him, then showed him the wheeled dolly she used to bring in the loads of firewood. Between the two of them and the dolly, the highboy was wedged in front of the door, locking her inside as well as keeping others out. Immediately, he insisted she help him barricade the front door as well. He was staggering by then, his sleeve dark with blood.

"Sit," she insisted, indicating a ladder back chair in the kitchen.

He scowled. It was obvious that he was unused to being given orders.

"You're making a mess all over the floor," she said. "No doubt you've dripped blood all the way from the garden, and left a trail wide enough a blind man could follow."

"What do you know about doctoring?" he grumbled.

"More than you, I expect. Now sit down and let me tend to your wound."

He sat. A look of relief cleared his face, making him appear almost handsome. But then the wariness returned, and with it, the knife. He clenched it in his right hand, blade out, threateningly. "Watch yourself," he said darkly.

Mary Francis poured hot water from the pot on the back of the stove into a basin. She gathered soap, bandages, laudanum and some herbs, placing everything on the table. Clumsily, she worked at the buttons on his shirt, for he made no effort to do it himself.

Sister Brigit had been the healer and herbalist. She knew which herbs healed infection or reduced fever. She knew how to sew up cuts, treat for congestion, and deliver babies. Mary Francis had spent many hours by her side, learning as much as she could, for Brigit had also been blessed with a calm and cheerful spirit, and an overabundance of patience that the other sisters had lacked. She missed her more than all the others together, except for the Reverend Mother, who had not left in body, but in mind.

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