
Millie and the Fugitive
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Liz Ireland
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18
Chapter 1
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Texas, 1880
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âItâll be slow going to Huntsville, boys, with me trussed up like last yearâs Christmas goose,â Sam Houston Winter said, lifting his shackled wrists as evidence of his hindered movement.
Toby Jenkins and Ed Herman, the two deputies riding to his left and to his right respectively, exchanged quick glances and chuckles. The two had loosened their demeanor since theyâd left Chariton and their boss, Sheriff Tom McMillan, behind a mile ago. Now Sam had to see whether he could convince the pair to loosen him.
âYou sure take it on the chin, Sam,â Toby said, shaking his head. âTwo years in the state prison ahead of you, and you still got a sense of humor.â
Ed laughed his wheezy laugh again in agreement with Toby. âCanât say Iâd be the same, ifân I was in your boots.â
âNo, sir,â Toby said. âThough I think I would have done the same as you, Sam, if my brother was about to be hanged as a murderer.â
âYou donât have a brother, Toby,â Ed argued. He had to lean forward a little to see his sparring partner across Samâs chest.
âNo, but ifân I did, and if they was gonna hang him, then Iâd do just what Sam did, and try to hide him.â
âSure you would. I would, too,â Ed said. âBut what I was just sayinâ was that I wouldnât be laughinâ when the judge threw me in the clink for aidinâ a criminal.â
âI know that, Ed,â Toby said with irritation. âWasnât you listening? I was only sayinâ Iâd do the same thing. Except for the sense-of-humor part,â he clarified. âLike you, I wouldnât have no sense of humor about it, neither, like Sam here has.â
âNo?â Ed asked, a wry smile on his tobacco stained lips. âMaybe thatâs âcause you never had one to begin with!â
The two threw back their heads in riotous, whooping laughter.
It was going to be an even longer ride than heâd imagined, Sam thought dismally. Yet the annoying duo steeled his determination to make a break for it.
âAnyway, itâs a shame we have to poke along like turtles on account of me,â Sam said, lifting his shoulders in a shrug after the two had tamped down their guffaws.
Edâs face was sober for a blessed moment. âSorry it has to be this way, Sam.â
âMe, too,â Toby said.
âStupid rules. Me and Toby both know you wouldnât swat a fly. You only did what you did â which wasnât much, reallyââcause Jesse was your brother.â
âSame as we would have done.â
Sam held his breath, dreading a repeat of their prior interchange, but the two seemed lost in thought. Serious thought, if the way Edâs yellowed teeth sawed on his lower lip was any indication.
âYou know, Toby,â Ed asked after a moment, âhow is it that Samâs all trussed up like so? Itâs not like he was a murderer.â
âBut heâs a prisoner, just the same.â
Ed nodded, as if he had forgotten this minor point. âThatâs right, Sam. You are a prisoner. Much as I hate to say it.â
âMe, too,â Toby agreed.
âYou sure play a hell of a game of poker, though,â Ed added as an afterthought.
Toby shook his head wistfully. During Samâs weeks in Charitonâs tiny jail, the three of them had whiled away many a tedious hour over a worn deck.
Sometimes theyâd even convinced Jesse to join in on a hand, but heâd never taken any pleasure in the game. Jesse was in mourning for Salina, his wife, the woman heâd been convicted of killing. For weeks, nothing had been able to keep him from brooding over his loss, not even his flight from the law, or his capture at Samâs farm, or the hurried, hopeless trial that followed.
Sheriff McMillan, fueled by resentment toward Jesse after heâd testified against the sheriffâs son in a trial a year earlier, had seized on just enough evidence to convict Jesse. And he hadnât been interested in any information that might contradict his desire to get his revenge, either. As for the rest of the town, most folks considered the crime so heinous, so shocking, they were eager for especially swift justice.
Sam frowned. Now Jesse was all alone in that cell, with no one to even attempt to take his mind off his troubles. He was sure Jesse didnât even care that he faced the gallows in two weeksâ time. Jesse didnât think he had much to live for, now that Salina was gone. But Sam wasnât giving up so easily. In his pocket he had possible evidence of another manâs guiltâscant evidence that Tom McMillan, who only wanted a man to hang, wasnât interested in pursuing.
Meanwhile, he waited patiently for Ed and Tobyâs reasoning to progress to the next step.
ââCourse, itâs not like Samâs a violent criminal, Ed,â Toby said. âHidinâ somebody isnât the same as killinâ somebody.â
Ed shook his head. âNope. Fact, itâs practically the exact opposite.â
âPractically,â Toby agreed. âSam here ainât never even said a word against anybody. Not that Iâve heard.â
âMe neither.â
âHe just done what anybody would have done.â
On this much, at least, the two seemed clear. Sam decided to give them a little mental shove. God knew, they needed it.
âWell, I suppose thatâs just the way with the law,â he said nonchalantly. âIf you start making exceptions...â
âWhere would it end?â Toby finished for him.
âWhy, sure.â Sam was silent a moment, then mused absently, âI wonder whether counterfeiters have to wear handcuffsâ
Toby and Ed suddenly looked at each other, their eyes wide and almost alarmed, as if the unexpected question had mentally flummoxed them.
âI donât know,â Toby said, his voice filled with wonder. âDo you know, Ed?â
âNo, I sure donât.â
âCounterfeiter. I ainât never run across one of those.â Toby bit his lip and squinted in thought as he stared across the horizon. It was morning still, and the sun was just now beginning to beat down upon them. âI bet they do.â
âBet so.â Ed frowned. âBut then again, maybe they donât.â
âFunny thing is,â Toby said, âSam here is even less dangerous than a counterfeiter, when you think about it.â
âHeâs not even a thief or anything like that.â
âHell no. Heâs just a brother-hider.â
âI mean, whoâs he hurt?â
âNobody I know of.â
The two looked at each other again, communicating silently over Samâs shoulders.
âAnd if somebody like a counterfeiter doesnât have to be tied up, then why should Sam?â
âYou got me stumped,â Ed declared.
âWhoa there, boys,â Sam said graciously, hoping the triumphant surge he felt didnât show in his face. They werenât even three miles out of town yet. This was too easy. âI donât want to get you in trouble with your boss man.â
âWith Sheriff Tom?â Ed asked incredulously.
âWhy, Tom trusts us!â Toby protested, as if the idea itself were plumb crazy.
âWould he have let us take you all the way to Huntsville by our lonesome if he didnât trust us to use our, you know...â
âDiscretion?â Sam prompted.
âSure, thatâs it,â Toby said. âWeâd just be using our discretion. Itâs not like you would try to escape.â
âYou certain of that?â Sam asked, darting his eyebrows up.
âHa! Thatâs a laugh!â Ed said with another wheezing chuckle. âHold up there, Toby, letâs let old poker face here out of these iron traps. Heâs right, itâll make for faster travelinâ.â
Easy, it was too easy, Sam thought, proffering his wrists with an admirable show of reluctance.
Toby tossed a large ring of keys over Samâs horse to Ed. âHere, take care of it, will you? Iâve got to water a bush.â
âAlready? Hell, itâs gonna be slow goinâ anyway, even without Sam cuffed.â Ed laughed heartily as Toby disappeared to the other side of a scrubby little elm.
After only minimal fumbling, the bonds fell away in a noisy clatter to Samâs saddle. Far too easy. Providence couldnât have sent him two more gullible jailers.
âNow we just have to wait for old leaky-drawers,â Ed mused, shifting in his saddle and looking off in the direction where Toby had disappeared. âI swear, the manâs as bad asââ
The sound of the cuffs hitting the back of Edâs head made a dull clump sound, and then the deputy slumped over and listed to the side, falling from his horse. Sam jumped down and eased the manâs way to the ground. He wasnât a violent man, normally; ordinarily he would have felt a sting of guilt for taking advantage of the two menâs kindness this way. But these werenât ordinary circumstances he was in. He grabbed the rifle off Edâs saddle and held it up toward the tree Toby just then appeared from behind.
âHey! Whatâs goinâ on here?â Toby demanded.
âEd had a fainting spell,â Sam said, keeping his voice raw and cool, his muscles tense. The time for friendly patter had passed. âDrop your gun, Toby.â
âSure thing, Sam,â the second deputy said, scooting forward obligingly with one hand stiffly in the air while the other pulled a derringer from its holster and lowered the gun to the earth. âHeck, you know I donât blame you none. Iâd do the same ifân I was you.â
âMaybe so,â Sam said, picking up Tobyâs derringer and tucking it into his belt. âI donât have time for making excuses. Now get over here and drag Ed back to that tree.â
âWhatever you say, Sam,â Toby said, grabbing Ed by the armpits and dragging him backward. His frightened eyes never left the barrel of Samâs rifle. Sam grabbed a coil of rope from Edâs saddle and joined Toby by the tree. âI hate to do this to you, friend....â
âYou ainât gonnaâ?â Toby winced and fell to his knees in supplication. âPlease, SamâIâve got a widowed mother.â
âYouâll see your mother again,â Sam assured the man, moments before his rifle butt came down on his head. Soon Mama Jenkins would be treating her boy for a nasty bump on the head.
Quickly Sam cuffed the two men together, then propped them up against the tree and bound them tightly to its trunk. He had enough rope for the job and then a good length left overâyet another sign that the Fates were with him this day.
Feeling magnanimous, he trotted back to the horses and retrieved a canteen of water from one of the saddles. He returned to the two men and propped the water between them.
He didnât want them to die â he just didnât want them to be found for at least a day or two. After a final whack on the head for each of them, he turned and drove two of the horses away, saving the gamest one for his own flight.
The black would have to ride hard in the days ahead. It was nearly four days to the south and west to Little Bend, the town where he had business. Dead-serious business. And Jesseâs date with the hangman in two weeks left him precious little time.
He mounted the black and kicked him into an easy lope, due west. In spite of the tension that ate at his insides, a wide smile broke out across his lips. At least he was off to a good start. Yes, sir. Things couldnât have gone much better if heâd planned it step by step.
Then he heard a noise. A horseâs whinny, high and shrill.
He sawed the reins of the black and brought him to a stop, turning in his saddle. The other two horses had galloped off in the opposite direction from where the sound had come from. Tense, alert, he surveyed the landscape around him. There wasnât much to it. Just a sloping, grass-covered hill, dotted with elms and other unremarkable trees. Except one...
His eyes caught sight of what heâd been looking for. On the other side of the tree stood a horse, a pretty little dappled gray mare. Raising his rifle with one arm, he rode slowly toward the tree where the horse was tethered. A pear tree. Its branches sagged with fruit.
Sam stopped. He didnât like this at all. A riderless horse practically within spitting distance of where heâd clunked two deputies over the head... Maybe his luck wasnât so good today after all.
âWhoâs there?â he asked, his finger tense on the trigger. Having come this far, he was ready to shoot his way out of trouble if he had to.
But as his eyes scanned the area once again, he noted something interesting. The mare was outfitted with a sidesaddle, polished to a high gloss. Sam had seen few of those ridiculous-looking things in his twenty-eight years. Yet the sight of it made him relax a little. It was only a woman.
He hoped she was alone.
Where the hell could she be?
Just then, his gaze alit on precisely what heâd been looking forâa dainty tan boot peeking out from beneath a limb of the pear tree. The woman was treed...but sheâd also been in a perfect position to witness him clobbering two deputies.
âAll right, lady. Come on out.â
A branch rustled nervously, sending a brown pear dropping to the hard ground below. But fruit was all that appeared.
âI know you heard me,â he said, riding forward a few more steps. He doubted the person who belonged to those kid-leather boots rode armed.
The closer he came, the more that tree shook, until, as Sam sat directly beneath a bright yellow dress covering a host of frilly starched white petticoats and a tantalizing peek of shapely, pantalet-clad legs, every branch on the tree was quivering. Looking up, he discovered a pair of the darkest, most frightened eyes heâd ever seen staring down at him. Sheâd heard him, all right. She just wished she hadnât.
âAll, right, little lady,â he said in the same gruff voice, âcome on down now.â
In a split second, even though her gaze never left his face, the young womanâs entire demeanor changed. A bright, fetching smile broke out across her rosy-red lips, even if the fear remained in her eyes as she hugged even more tightly to the tree trunk.
âWell, my goodness!â she cried, in an overly friendly tone that was betrayed only by a slight anxious crack in her voice. âI thought I heard someone!â
âRight,â Sam said, lacking the leisure to be amused by her little show of innocence. âYou might also have thought you saw a man tying two deputies to a tree.â
âDeputies?â she asked. âWhat deputies?â
âCome on, lady,â he said, raising the rifle another notch.
Her expression turned deadly earnest, and she shook her head fervently. âOh, no, I swear. I didnât see a thing. Myâmy lips are forever sealed.â
âIf you didnât see anything, what are they sealed against?â
âThatâs just it,â she insisted. âThey wonât be able to get a single solitary word out of me, Mr. â Iâm sorry, what is your name?â
âNot a chance,â he told her.
Desperation crossed her face. âYouâve got to believe me,â she pleaded. âI wouldnât tell a soul I saw anything, even if I did. Which I didnât. Ask anyone. Iâm honest to a fault. I never break my word. Never, never, never, neverâOoooh!â
He grabbed her booted foot and tugged. âAre you coming down, or am I going to have to drag you?â
âNo!â It took her a moment to regain her composure, not to mention her equilibrium, as her right foot struggled for balance on a narrow limb. âI mean, of course Iâll come down,â she said, trying the pleasant tactic again. âIâm most eager to make your acquaintance.â
âIâll bet.â
He leaned against the saddle horn for a moment as the young woman fussed and fidgeted, alternately shooting nervous glances at him and studying with some confusion her position in the tree. âMy goodness...â she mumbled absently. âI got up here so fast, I never considered how to get down....â
Sam sighed. He didnât have time for this. âDo you want some help?â
âNo, noâOooh!â
Before she could waste any more precious moments, Sam reached up with both hands, grabbed her about the knees and pulled firmly. It didnât take much effort. In a cascade of starched cotton and pears, the young woman landed across the saddle in front of him, her keen dark eyes rounded in shock. Both Sam and the girl sucked in surprised gulps of air in reaction to his bold maneuver.
She had to be the lightest woman heâd ever held in his armsânot that he made a habit of lifting females. As he looked into her pretty face close up for the first time, he felt a stab of disappointment. This was hardly time for a leisurely getting-acquainted chat with an attractive girl. Seeing the momentary curiosity in the young womanâs expression return quickly to fear as she stared back at him reminded him of his purpose.
âSorry, miss, Iâm in a hurry,â Sam drawled.
His words, even spoken as casually as they were, sent the young lady over the edge. Tears spilled down her pale cheeks, and she recoiled from him, grabbing behind her at the black mane of his horse. âPlease donât kill me,â she pleaded frantically as she attempted to squirm away.
âI wonât,â Sam said.
âPlease! I wonât say a wordâon my honor!â
âI donât believe you, but Iâm not going to kill you.â
She ran a hand through her tangled black hair, her gaze darting frantically across the horizon all the while, no doubt hoping for rescue. âMy daddy will pay you any amount of money for me, if youâll only let me live.â
âLady, havenât you listened to a word Iâve said?â Sam asked. âIâm not going to kill you.â
âWhat?â She stared at him dubiously.
âIâm not a murderer.â
âYes, you are!â she cried vehemently. âI sawââ
âYou saw what?â
Her voice was suddenly meek. âNothing.â But she didnât have to say a word for him to imagine exactly what sheâd seen, or what she thought sheâd seen.
Sam couldnât help it. He laughed bitterly. Had he really thought the Fates were with him? No such luck! He had a witness who had been close enough to watch him tie up two deputies and club them on the head, but too far away to notice that he hadnât killed them. Now he had to figure out what to do with her.
âDaddy can walk into the bank and take out thousands of dollars for you, just as soon as Iâm returned. Believe me, I wonât fail to mention how you rescued me from that tree.â
âMoneyâs not what Iâm after,â Sam replied.
âThen how about dry goods?â she asked hopefully. âMy father owns a store. Thereâs all sorts of things there you might want. Fabric, food, guns... Well, he naturally might not want to give you gunsââ
âQuiet!â He couldnât think, with her frantic babbling in his ear.
What could he do with her? Hitting two men on the head was one thing, but a woman... He had never hit a woman before. Besides, a woman was more delicate. He couldnât risk causing her serious harm, or, worse, accidentally killing her. That would make him a murderer. He looked down at the rope in his hands. Same if he tied her up. He didnât know when someone would find the two deputies. Could be today, could be a few days.
This woman was just a skinny little thing. Wiry. Despite her dark hair and eyes, she had pale skin that looked soft and pampered. He doubted sheâd last two hours out here if he gagged her and tied her up.
What in the Sam Hill was he going to do?
âWhy are you looking at me like that?â she blurted out fearfully. âIf you donât believe me about my father, just ask anyone. My nameâs Millieââ
âI donât want to know your name.â
âBut if youâd just listenââ
âShut up!â
Tension caused beads of sweat to gather at the back of his neck, and as he reached back to wipe them off, the girl named Millie drew back anxiously. He had her good and scared, all right.
Maybe that fear could work to his advantage. If he could just get her far enough away, where nobody had ever heard of Jesse Winter, maybe find a safe place to dump her... He needed to get moving.
He glanced at the gray mare. She looked like a game little horse, but he wasnât so certain about the silly gear she was decked out in. âCan you ride that thing?â he asked, nodding toward the side saddle.
âMrs. Darwimple!â she cried indignantly.
In his panic, Sam heard a womanâs name and feared the young woman had a companion. He pivoted anxiously in the saddle. âWho?â
Millie recoiled from the barrel of his gun as it swung around her way. âMrs. Darwimple is my horse,â she clarified, boldly shooing the barrel away from her person. âI donât like you calling her a âthing.ââ
âOh.â The tension gushed out of him in one breath as he looked again at the little mare. Mrs. Darwimple? What kind of nut named a horse something like that? He glanced back at the black-haired young lady. She was staring back, a slightly indignant, prissy purse to her rosy lips. For a crazy moment, he wondered what would happen if he kissed the pout right off of those lips of hers.
Maybe taking her wasnât such a good idea. Maybe...
He shook his head. He just didnât have time for maybes. âI donât care what her name is. Can you ride her?â
âCan I!â Millie bridled proudly in front of him. âDaddy says riding is the one thing I do exceptionally well,â she boasted. Just as quickly, an idea apparently struck her. âIf you want, I could ride into town for you and get whatever you need forââ
âForget it,â Sam said, cutting her off. âI hope youâre telling the truth, becauseââ
âI told you, Iâm very honest,â Millie said, annoyed.
âFine. Then get up on that horse.â He grabbed her by the arm, eased her down, and followed right after her.
âI can mount by myself.â
âGood for you,â Sam said, watching as she swung up to her preposterous perch. As soon as sheâd crooked her leg into position, he took the leftover rope and reached beneath her knee.
âWhat are you doing?â she cried in shocked outrage.
âTying you to the saddle and the saddle to me,â he answered, looping the rope around her knee and pulling it into a snug knot.
âBut thatâs dangerous!â She shot him an angry glare. âIf my daddy hears about thisââ
His eyebrows raised in disbelief. âListen, Princess. Two minutes ago you were telling me âdaddyâ was going to shower me in riches.â
The reminder failed to calm her. âMy daddy will see to it that youâre strung up from the highest gallows, you filthy murderer! And donât think he wonât. My daddy has influence!â
With a heavy sigh, Sam mounted his horse again, feeling less optimistic now that he was saddled with a mouthy woman. He would have to figure out a way to get rid of her, fast. There was so little time. Two weeks.
âKick that horse into a gallop and keep your lip buttoned,â he instructed her.
In answer, she jutted out her chin belligerently.
Fine. Sam spurred his own horse and watched in solemn amusement as the little princess was yanked into movement. Her starchy white ruffled pinafore and yellow skirt flipped into her face momentarily, until she sputtered and waved them away, tucking both underneath her firmly. She threw him a last angry glance before setting her jaw and concentrating finally on the landscape ahead of them.
Sam was at least grateful to note that she hadnât been lying about her riding skill. Which meant that if he couldnât travel light, he could at least travel fleetly. But then, he had to.
His brotherâs life depended on it.
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âWhen my father hears about this, youâll be done for.â
And her father would hear about it, once someone found the bonnet Millie had dropped as she and the desperado galloped away. Naturally, the man hadnât noticed it was missingâprobably hadnât even noticed its dangling chin ties looped around her saddle to begin with. It was her very best bonnet, too, festooned with grape clusters and even a little redbird. But men of this manâs ilk probably didnât pay any attention to hats unless they were the type measured by how much fluid could fit inside them.
Once her jaunty bonnet was found so near the deputies, Sheriff Tom McMillan was bound to put two and two together. If her bonnet was found. She had to keep up hope. âYouâll never get away with this,â she said menacingly.
The desperado rolled his eyes toward the star-drenched heavens. âShut up and eat.â
Shut up? Never in her life had anyone ordered Millicent Lively around so brutishly! Just why did he feel it necessary to be so rude, anyway? She was apparently going to spend her night tied to a tree. Wasnât that punishment enough?
This had to be the worst day of her whole entire life, Millie thought, giving in to her sulky mood. First she had had a dreadful argument with her father, who had forbidden her to break off her engagement. He thought she was getting a reputation for being fickle, and needed to settle down. Millie would admit, eleven fiancĂŠs was quite a number to have gone throughâbut that didnât mean she was wrong to not want to marry Lloyd Boyd, one of the clerks at her fatherâs bank. And not even a very good bank clerk, as sheâd reminded her father. Lloyd, daydreaming about more romantic jobs, was forever counting out the wrong change.
But he was also one of her oldest friends. The only reason sheâd agreed to be engaged to him was simply that the supply of men to affiance herself to was running very low. And it was terrible not to have a fiancĂŠ at this time of year, with Christmas coming. And her birthday was in December, too. But a girl just didnât marry a friend. That would be too boring! For a husband, a girl wanted someone different, mysterious....
She looked over at that outlaw and shivered. Maybe not too mysterious!
But at any rate, she certainly wouldnât marry anyone against her will. So sheâd decided to run away. Well, naturally, she wasnât really going to run away. Sheâd simply intended to stay out long enough for her father to begin to worry, then to repent his outrageous ultimatum, and then to feel so terribly guilty that he would never cross her wishes again. Three hours would have done it. He knew she never missed the noon meal.
And she was certain this would have all worked according to planâexcept that some ruffian would have to come along and kidnap her!
She couldnât be certain, but she was afraid this man was that wife-murderer whoâd just been sentenced to hang. There werenât too many murderers in Chariton, after all. Just her luck that she would be out when one of the few managed to escape!
Despair threatened to overwhelm her, but she held her head high. She couldnât give in. Couldnât let this barbarian see her fear. She looked upon him imperiously, turning up her nose at the cold biscuit that he held. âEat? Iâd rather die!â she said, never taking her eyes off him.
Not that she could forget what he looked like. Ever. His deeply tanned skin, dusty brown hair and gray eyes would haunt her forever now. As would the shock of landing in the desperadoâs fearfully powerful embrace when she tumbled out of that pear tree. The odd thing was, she would have found the man handsome, if it werenât for the fact that he was a murderer and a kidnapper and God only knew what else. He also had strong hands and an impressive buildâthe better to maim and abduct with, she supposed.
âIt seems to me that after going to all the trouble of taking a hostage,â she lectured primly, âyou could at least provide me with a hot meal.â
âSure,â the man drawled. âI guess I should build up a big snuggly fire to warm your dainty feet by, too.â
She tossed the black hair that she had braided after her captor finally stopped for the night. For a few hoursâ rest, he said. As if she could get any rest roped to a tree trunk, out in the chilly night air! âAs a matter of fact, I would appreciate a fire very much. And if my daddy ever learned that you had extended that kindness, I am certain he would ask the authorities to be lenient.â
âIâll bet,â he said flatly. âThe last thing I need is you sending smoke signals to daddy.â
âI wouldnât know the first thing about that,â she assured him, in a voice that let him know precisely how preposterous that idea was. âThe only Indian blood in my family is a distant cousin on my great-great-grand-motherâs ââ
âForget it,â he snapped, apparently not interested in her familyâs fascinating history. âFires attract attention.â
She folded her arms crossly. âYou should have at least let me bring along some of the pears I had collected.â
She thought she detected a hint of regret in those gray eyes of his over the crunchy pears theyâd left behind. Maybe she was just imagining it. âStop thinking about the hunger, and it wonât bother you so much,â he said.
âWell Iâve got to eat something!â she cried.
He laughed gently, his eyes glinting at her with wicked humor. As though he enjoyed her discomfort! But then, why wouldnât he? He was a vicious criminal.
âI thought youâd rather die than eat,â he said.
âOh, give me a piece of that horrible stuff,â she snapped, swiping a hunk from his hand. She took a bite of the dry, tasteless biscuit and winced as she chewed. And chewed. Finally, she gathered up the necessary resources to swallow. âHow terrible! Daddy probably ate better during the war!â
âDonât blame me, Princess. I got it off my law friends.â
âThe men you killed, you mean.â
âOnce and for all, I did not kill anybody.â
âHa! I witnessed the crime with my own eyes,â she said, not bothering to lie. âI saw that man begging for his life before you pummeled him.â
âYou saw wrong,â he said. âI didnât kill anybody. Think about it. If I were a murderer, why would I be wasting my time hauling you around?â
For a moment, Millie was stumped. But a common criminal couldnât fool a mind like hers for long. âThatâs simple,â she said proudly. âYou obviously know how valuable I am.â
His mouth fell open. âValuable!â
âOf course. I told you right away that my daddy would pay a high price for my return.â
âAnd Iâm supposed to believe that fairy story?â
âItâs the truth!â she yelped in frustration.
âWell, I donât believe it, any more than you believe Iâm not a murderer.â
Millie frowned. âBut I can prove Daddyâs an important person.â
The gray eyes glinted in challenge. âHow?â
It was so obvious! âTake me back to Chariton. If you ask anyone there, theyâll tell you.â
This suggestion was greeted with a full-throated cackle. âPrincess, youâve got to think of something better than that.â
âOr any town in these parts. My daddyâs well-known. Havenât you ever heard of Sam Houston?â
That name finally got his attention. The man sat up a little straighter. âHeard of him? Iâm named after him!â He frowned. âBut heâs dead. You canât be...â
Her lips lifted in a smug smile. She couldnât help it. It was about time the man started taking her seriously. âNo, Iâm not. But my daddy used to work for Mr. Houston, before the war.â
He tilted his head skeptically. âI thought you said your father was a storekeeper.â
âHe is. He owns a store, and a bank.â
The man frowned thoughtfully. âSo...thatâs how he can get his hands on all those armloads of dollars you keep promising me.â
âThatâs right. Daddy is quite wealthy.â She smiled in relief. Now that the man knew she was rich, her situation would surely improve. âSo now that you believe me, wonât you let me go? It would be better for you in the end. After all, theyâre bound to catch up with you.â
âDonât be so sure,â he said. She couldnât see his face too well in the darkness. Just enough to take note of the hard cast to his expression. Its intensity made her shiver. âDonât think Iâm swallowing every word you feed me, either.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause I know youâd say anything to free yourself.â
âYouâre a fine one to call me a liar, you ââ All at once, something about what heâd said seemed odd to her. Heâd said he was named after Sam Houston. But the man whoâd murdered his wife had been named Winter. Jesse Winter.
âYouâre not him,â she said.
He looked up from the ground. âWho?â
âThe murderer,â she said, adding quickly. âAt least, youâre not the one I thought you were. His name was Jesse Winter.â
âThatâs my brother. Iâm Sam Winter.â
The knowledge didnât comfort her. There was obviously a strain of exceptionally bad blood running in the Winter family, if they could create two such vicious characters in one generation. Her father hadnât allowed her anywhere near the courtroom during the Winter trial, but she suddenly remembered. âYou hid your brother, didnât you?â
âThatâs right.â
âThey were sending you to jail for that?â she asked.
He nodded curtly. âFor two years.â
That seemed a bit severe to Millie, but the law was the law. âIf everyone aided criminals,â she said, âweâd never be able to catch them.â
âWhat if some of these so-called criminals are actually innocent?â he asked challengingly.
âBut your brother was guilty. A jury convicted him.â
âYou think juries are always right, Miss...what did you say your name was?â
âLively,â she told him. âMillicent Lively.â
âDonât you think people are capable of making mistakes, Miss Lively? After all ââ His words were cut off, and for a moment, Millie wondered if perhaps he wasnât choking. He sat with his mouth open, the strangest expression on his face. âYour name is Lively?â
She nodded. âYes, thatâs what I said.â
âYour father...â Sam swallowed. âHeâs not Horace Lively, by any chance, is he? Colonel Horace P. Lively?â
Her face lit up. âThatâs Daddy!â
âOh, God.â The man swallowed slowly. âThis is fine. Just fine!â he said, his voice rising petulantly.
âI told you all along he was important.â
The manâs searing gray eyes glistened in the darkness, fastening on her with growing anger. âWhy didnât you just say it flat out? âMy father is Colonel Horace P. Lively.â I thought maybe he just owned a big store. You didnât tell me he was a man with a statewide reputation. A war hero!â
She smirked in satisfaction. âWell, now you know.â
He picked up a rock and tossed it into the darkness. The sound of it hitting a tree echoed back to them. âNow is too late,â Sam said. âIf Iâd known, I could have left you there. Even if you had a big mouth and would have blabbered lies all over the place and told the authorities where Iâd ridden off. At least I wouldnât be charged with kidnapping Old Lightfooted Livelyâs daughter!â
She rolled her eyes. âThatâs just what Iâve been telling you all along,â she insisted. âIf you only would have listened!â
He sighed in despair. Good, Millie thought. Let him worry for a while! âThis is a helluva fix Iâm in,â he muttered.
âWhy donât you let me go now?â she suggested. âYouâve seen me ride. You know I can get back to Chariton all right. And Iâll tell Daddy that you were a perfect gentleman and released me as soon as you knew who I was.â
âIâm in too deep now,â he said. âIâve got to think of a way to get rid of you.â
âYou mean ââ Instinctively, she touched her neck, as if the ominous words had choked the breath out of her.
âDonât worry,â he snapped. âBelieve it or not, Iâm more concerned about someone elseâs liberty than yours.â
âA murdererâs, you mean.â
âMy brother is innocent,â Sam said, his voice suddenly more menacing than sheâd ever heard it. âI wonât have you talk against him.â
She was silent for a moment, watching him. She could just make out his intent expression in the darkness. Finally, she gathered the courage to ask, âWhat are you going to do with me? Leave me here, tied up?â
âIâll have to think about it,â Sam said. âIâll have to decide in the morning.â
Millie frowned. Morning. She couldnât believe it would ever come. It seemed a lifetime of darkness away.
âGet some shut-eye,â Sam instructed her. He sat back down where heâd been, then stretched himself out to his full length across the ground. âMore than likely, tomorrow will be harder than today.â
Harder? After a day with no food or rest? Millie had no idea how she was supposed to sleep propped up and bound to an oak tree, but that didnât appear to concern Mr. Sam Winter. âThis is no bed of roses, you know,â she said tightly.
He looked over at her, frowning. He then stood, picked up one of the horse blankets and spread it across her feet and outstretched legs. âThatâll have to do, Princess. Sorry I couldnât provide better accommodations.â
Her lips turned down, and she watched with envy as he stretched out across the grass again. Oh, well. At least she was alive. For someone taken hostage by a cold-blooded killer, a man whoâd murdered two lawmen, that was quite a bit to be thankful for. But what would morning bring?
She sank against the rough bark and closed her eyes. She was tired. And sore! Good rider though she was, sheâd never ridden so vigorously for so long before. Sheâd never needed to â until Sam Winter pointed a gun at her.
Odd, she thought, yawning sleepily. He must be an awfully insightful criminal. âSam?â
There was a short pause before he answered her. âYeah?â
It was a deep voice. Soft, husky. Again, she would have liked it, had it belonged to another man. A nice man. âHow did you know my nickname?â
âHuh?â
âThe one my daddy calls me by,â she clarified, her voice tired and heavy.
âWhatâs that?â
âPrincess.â
His deep-throated chuckle was the only reply Millie received before she drifted off to sleep.
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