One Real Cowboy
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Synopsis
“With a cowboy like this, you can’t lose!” —Linda Lael Miller WILD HORSES COULDN’T DRAG HIM AWAY . . . For Cord Tanner it’s a straight business deal: get paid to be Beatrix Northroupe’s husband for a month so she can finally obtain the deed to her family’s stud farm, Prairie Rose. Once the money’s in his hand, he plans to get as far away from Revolt, Kansas, as a fast horse can take him. But then Cord can’t help but see there’s more to Trixie than English manners and a pair of clear blue eyes. For starters, she’s reckless, courageous, and one hell of a kisser . . . It took less than a month for Beatrix to realize being married to Cord Tanner would be more than she bargained for. It isn’t just his stubborn-as-a-mule attitude, or the smoldering way he looks at her. There’s something about Cord that makes it hard for a woman to keep her mind on business. Soon it becomes clear there are others interested in her family’s ranch as things begin to get downright dangerous. Fortunately she’s got a man by her side, even if it’s a matter of convenience. Cord Tanner may be a down-on-his-luck cowboy, but he’s also proving to be just what she needs . . . Praise for the novels of Janette Kenny “A classic western . . . Kenny delivers.” — RT Book Reviews on In a Cowboy’s Arms “A classic Western historical with a hero you’re gonna love.” —Jodi Thomas on Cowboy Come Home
Release date: October 9, 2013
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 352
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One Real Cowboy
Janette Kenny
Cord Tanner crossed the dust-choked street, the jingle bobs on his spurs clanging louder than a dinner bell inside his head. Waking up dead broke and sicker than a bull on green pasture had put him in a real sour mood. Until he figured out how deep a well he’d dug for himself, it wasn’t apt to sweeten none.
He hefted the saddle he was packing, gripped his rifle, and stepped into J. A. Zachary’s law office with a passel of regrets riding his shoulders. The four folks in the room gawked at him.
A glassy-eyed gentleman garbed in a black suit and gloves stood by the door and greeted Cord with a stiff nod. A matronly lady dressed in black sat on a settee by the front window. Cord spied a fringe of frizzy hair the color of carrots peeking out from under her black pot hat. He nodded to her.
The matron turned up her nose, as if she got a whiff of fresh shit on him. So much for being neighborly.
James Zachary presided over the room from behind his desk and didn’t appear any happier to see Cord either. After giving him a long, hard look, he snorted and pushed to his feet.
“Let me know when you’re ready, Miss Northroupe,” Zachary said to the other lady, who perched on one of the armless chairs angled before his desk. “I’ll be in the next room.”
“Thank you.” Her British accent surprised Cord.
As Zachary left, Cord shifted the saddle’s dead weight, which was wearing on his sore shoulder, and eyed Miss Northroupe. So this was the lady boss his old friend Ott had roped him into helping. He’d seen her before. But where?
In that faded mourning dress and ugly black bonnet topped with a godawful black feather, she reminded him of a little prairie chicken guarding her nest, feathers fluffed, chest puffed out, and head up. But a shadow of fear lurked in her wide eyes and he knew she was putting on a brave front.
Miss Northroupe had good reason to be skittish. Some cowpokes didn’t cotton much to working for a woman, especially a young one like she appeared to be.
Cord didn’t care one way or the other. A boss was a boss. He’d worked for good ones and more than his share of bad.
He inclined his head Miss Northroupe’s way. “Name’s Tanner. Ott Oakes said you had a job for me.”
“Indeed, I do.” Miss Northroupe favored him with a shaky smile. “I trust Mr. Oakes explained the details to you and stressed the position in question is a temporary one?”
She had him there. Truth be told, Cord recalled Ott saying his boss lady needed Cord’s help. Other than Ott mentioning a herd of horses, the rest of last night was a blur. Cord didn’t even remember agreeing to do the job, though Ott swore he had.
Zachary and Miss Northroupe appeared to be expecting Cord, so it must be true. He wished to hell he knew what he’d gotten himself into. Since he didn’t, he decided he’d best play along.
“Yes, ma’am, the temporary job you’re offering suits me just fine.” That was the God’s honest truth.
He’d hire on for a month at the most. By then, he’d have a horse and a helluva lot more than two bits in his pocket.
Then Cord aimed to put this town and its heap of bad memories in a cloud of dust behind him. Miss Northroupe could hire another cowpoke to ride herd over her outfit.
“Excellent.” Miss Northroupe motioned to the empty chair beside her. “Do leave your equipage by the door and be seated.”
He obliged her, then eased onto the chair. She smelled of lavender water and high hopes. Wisps of golden hair escaped her bonnet, curling this way and that around her face. Her blue eyes put him in mind of a clear prairie sky. Farm-girl freckles dusted her nubbin of a nose, and her mouth had the prettiest bow to it. Inviting lips, the kind a man hankered to taste.
She cleared her throat, and her mouth puckered up, like she’d eaten something sour. “Mr. Oakes has great trust in you. Though I usually agree with his character assessments, in this case, I shall reserve judgment until I’m convinced you will undertake this short-term task with dignity and respect.”
He didn’t blame her none for being wary of him. She had a ripe woman’s body and a sweet face that’d tempt a cowboy into settling down, something she clearly didn’t want from him.
“I’m just a rambling cowpoke with no notions of sticking around these parts. When the job’s done and I’m paid for my trouble, I’ll be on my way.”
Miss Northroupe frowned as she eyed him again. Her gaze wandered to his belt buckle, then ventured lower.
Cord tensed up. Usually, he didn’t mind a pretty woman looking him over. But Miss Northroupe had him feeling like a plug horse at auction instead of a young stud. He leaned forward and braced both arms on his knees.
Their eyes locked. She let out a whisper of a gasp and sat back, cheeks turning bright red. Cord reckoned she was embarrassed because he’d caught her staring at what a proper lady had no right to look at.
Maybe whoever she mourned had kept her away from the corrals and the wranglers. Poor little gal probably didn’t know the first thing about men and not much more about horses. If that was the case, he aimed to put her mind at ease on one score.
“Don’t mean to brag, but I’m real good with horses.” Cord leaned back and angled his buckle up. “I won this in Oklahoma last spring for being the best bronco buster.”
She sucked in a sharp breath. “Bronco busting, you say?”
“Yes, ma’am. Ott told me that you run horses on your outfit. I reckon breaking them will be one of my chores.”
Miss Northroupe pressed a lace-gloved hand to her bosom and went pale as milk, as if he’d said something downright vulgar. “I’m sure your award was justly deserved. However, it isn’t an attribute to someone who raises thoroughbreds. We don’t break our horses. My stableman trains them to be exemplary hunters.”
“You don’t say?” Though it riled him that she didn’t want the likes of him breaking her fine thoroughbreds, the notion of a woman running a stud farm spurred his curiosity.
“Indeed. I should have several hunters finished by now, but I’ve suffered the loss of my father and, ultimately, my ranch hands. Those remaining in my employ can’t attend to the various tasks at hand, which is why I’m forced to tread this path.”
The old gentleman by the door hunched his bony shoulders, cleared his throat, and stared holes in the floor. By the window, the matron folded her hands and mumbled to herself.
Cord shook his head. These highfalutin British folks were making a mighty big fuss over hiring a ranch hand. Didn’t they know that cowboys drifted like tumbleweeds from spread to spread?
“That is why, before we proceed any further,” Miss Northroupe said over the matron’s mutterings, “I must have your word of honor that you’ll obey all my orders without question.”
He bit back a laugh, wondering if her bossy ways had been what sent her former cowhands packing. “Short of breaking the law, I’ll do anything you ask of me.”
Miss Northroupe took a deep breath that strained the thin cloth covering her bosom and looked him square in the eyes. “Very well, Mr. Tanner. You now work for me.”
“You won’t regret hiring me, ma’am.”
“I sincerely hope you’re right.”
Miss Northroupe nodded to the old gent. He shuffled to the connecting door Zachary had left by and knocked on it twice.
“After you sign the contract which details your duties on the Prairie Rose,” Miss Northroupe said with the slightest quiver in her voice, “we’ll get on with finalizing our common bond.”
“Yes, ma’am.” Cord had worked for demanding bosses before but had never signed a contract.
As the old gent moseyed back to his post by the front door, Zachary stepped into the office. He placed a paper, pen, and inkstand on the desk before Cord, then stood by the bookcase.
Seeing as he’d worked every ranch job, Cord only gave the contract a quick scan. Nothing peculiar jumped out at him.
He dipped the nib in ink, ready to sign. “Just tell me what you want me to do and I’ll get right on it.”
“Very well. Your first task is to marry me this afternoon.”
Cord strangled the pen so hard he nearly snapped it in two. He shook his head and looked her over, certain his ears were playing tricks on him. “Come again, ma’am?”
Poker-faced, she said, “You will marry me this afternoon.”
“Like hell I will. I’m looking for a job. Not a wife.”
The matron commenced chattering like a squirrel, and the old gent set up a racket clearing his throat. Zachary coughed—like he was trying to hide a laugh—and turned his back on them.
The prim, proper, and clearly crazy Miss Northroupe sent Cord a patient smile. “Moments ago, I gave you a job. You promised to do whatever I asked of you, excluding breaking the law.”
Cord snatched up the contract and read every blasted word. It was there, all right. Tucked in amidst the list of dos and don’ts. Husband. Short-term marriage of convenience. For his services, she’d pay him and give him one of her fine horses.
The headache Cord had tried his best to ignore since he’d rolled out of the hay this morning reared, kicked, and bucked like an outlaw horse. Ott couldn’t have known his boss lady aimed to hobble Cord into marrying her. His old friend wouldn’t have pulled such a dirty, low-down trick on him.
But the old gent and matron knew what their boss lady had up her faded sleeves. Judging by their down-in-the-mouth expressions, they didn’t cotton to this idiotic idea any more than Cord did.
Same with James Zachary, who seemed mighty interested in gawking at a row of books on a shelf. Cord would bet good money the lawyer had drawn up this asinine contract, but the man had the sense to turn his back to them so as not to embarrass the lady when Cord tore her contract in two and walked out.
Cord was fixing to do that when he glanced her way. She was doing her best to hold back tears. His head commenced pounding. Hell, it was easier to rope the wind than deal with a crying woman.
“No offense, ma’am,” Cord began, intending to let her down easy like, “but I don’t want to get married.”
Miss Northroupe buried her gloved hands in her skirt. “Neither do I, but I must if I’m to retain my independence.”
That didn’t make a lick of sense. Cord ran a hand over his face and cursed the fact that his hand shook. “Pardon me for disagreeing, ma’am, but getting yourself hitched is a surefire way to lose your freedom.”
Miss Northroupe swallowed, and the high, stiff collar on her dress bobbed. “Not if we agree to abide by the terms of my contract. Really, Mr. Tanner, the only difference between this job and any other you’ve taken on is that I’m paying you to be my husband instead of my ranch hand.”
She had a point there. The fact he considered it for one second had him sweating buckets. “This is the craziest thing I’ve ever heard. We don’t even know each other.”
Miss Northroupe rolled her eyes. “Mr. Oakes vouched for your character, and he’s one of the most trustworthy men I know.”
“Then why the hell don’t you marry Ott?”
Violet storm clouds gathered in her eyes. “There’s no need for belligerence. As much as I admire and trust Mr. Oakes, he’s unsuitable.” She took some bosom-expanding breaths that had him squirming in more ways than one and favored him with a tight smile. “Do reconsider my offer, Mr. Tanner. You’d only be required to assume the role of my devoted husband for a month at the most, after which time you’ll be handsomely paid for your services.”
That damning word again. Cord gritted his teeth so hard his head pounded. He was a cowboy. Not a whore. But she wasn’t hiring him as a wrangler. No. She wanted a husband. Though the timing of this job couldn’t have suited him better, he damned sure wasn’t about to sell himself.
“My services ain’t for sale, ma’am.”
She dug her small, white teeth into her lower lip. “Is there nothing I can say or do to change your mind?”
“Nope.” Cord pushed to his feet, not about to let her lasso and drag him into her fool plan.
“Oh, dear.” The matron pressed her round face to the window. “Mr. Yancy has come to town.”
Miss Northroupe’s face turned whiter than a January blizzard. “He likely has business to conduct.”
Zachary moseyed over to the window and took a gander. “He tied his horse by your surrey. He’s walking down the boardwalk. Now he’s going into Lott’s Mercantile.” Zachary ambled back to his desk.
“Mr. Yancy is looking for you. I told you he would.” The matron wrung her hands and tossed a worried glance at Miss Northroupe. “He couldn’t know what you’ve planned, could he?”
“No, of course not.” But Miss Northroupe didn’t sound sure.
“This Yancy you’re talking about,” Cord said, unable to keep the hostility from his voice. “Would that be Gil Yancy?”
“Indeed, it is,” Miss Northroupe said. “Do you know him?”
Like a brother. Or so Cord had thought. Bitter memories of being double-crossed stampeded across his mind, but he cut them off and herded his thoughts back to the here and now.
“I know him. Reckon if you offer Gil what you did me, he’ll jump at the chance to be your temporary husband.”
Despite the heat building in the room, Miss Northroupe shivered. “Very true, but I can’t trust Mr. Yancy will abide by my wishes or the terms of the contract.”
“Then don’t ask him to marry you.”
“If it were only that simple.”
Miss Northroupe didn’t come out and say she looked on Gil as her last choice, but Cord knew by her defeated tone that’s what she meant. Knew, too, that she blamed him for turning her down.
Cord glanced at the contract again. He doubted Miss Northroupe would find a judge who’d honor it. Nope. Once she married, her husband could legally do any damned thing he wanted to do to her land, her stock, and her.
If she married Gil, Cord knew his longtime rival would bed the British lady before the ink dried on the marriage certificate. There’d be no getting rid of him after that.
Since Cord had no designs on the prim lady and no desire to remain in Revolt, he reckoned he was the perfect choice for the job. Temporary husband. Paid handsomely.
Tempting words to a down-on-his-luck cowboy with two choices left him: walk twenty miles to the next town packing his tack and everything he owned on his back, or ask for a job at the place he’d vowed he’d never set foot on again—Prescott Donnelly’s Flying D Ranch.
“All right, Miss Northroupe. You’ve got yourself a deal.” Cord grabbed the pen and plunged the tip in the ink.
“I promise you won’t regret your decision, Mr. Tanner.”
He already regretted it as he filled his lungs with air and dragged in her lavender scent. Damn! If she hadn’t looked scared as a rabbit when he turned her down, or if Gil Yancy hadn’t figured into this, he’d have been on his way to—Where? The Flying D for a handout?
Teeth clenched, Cord scrawled his name on the line. When this job was over, he’d have money in his pockets, a fine horse under him, and the chance to make something of himself. What more could a bastard like him expect from a respectable British lady?
He handed the pen to Zachary and watched as the lawyer added his name as witness to this leg-hobbling contract. As soon as he was done, Miss Northroupe reached for the paper.
Cord snatched it off the desk and held it above his head. “Whoa up, there. I want to know why you’re hell-bent on rushing into marriage with a stranger.”
Her gaze flicked from the contract to the door. “Couldn’t we discuss this after the ceremony?”
“Nope.”
She wrinkled her nose and mumbled something that sounded like a curse. “Very well. My grandfather refuses to grant me the title to the Prairie Rose unless I am wed.”
“Let me guess. You told him you was getting hitched.”
“It seemed a sound notion. However, Grandfather forbade it until he gave his approval, and I refused to obey. As we speak, he’s traveling from England to meet the man I defiantly married.”
Cord let out a long, low whistle and handed her the contract. “No wonder you had to hire yourself a husband mighty fast.”
“Temporary husband.” She spread the paper on the desk and neatly signed her name, then handed the contract to Zachary.
“You shouldn’t need this document to dissolve your union. But if you do, it’ll be in my safe.” Zachary shot Cord a warning look. “I suggest you follow this to the letter.”
Cord heard Zachary’s “or else” echo in his weary head as Zachary ambled off into the other room.
Miss Northroupe sat stiffly on the chair, her smile fading. “Have you any questions regarding your duties?”
“I reckon you expect me to act like your devoted husband.” Pure devilment prodded Cord to wink at her.
Her cheeks flushed apple red. “Our association will be strictly platonic. And I’ll abide no philandering.”
He’d expected as much. Though Miss Northroupe wasn’t about to sleep with the likes of him, she wouldn’t want him to find a willing woman in town either.
“You’ll take up residence in my papa’s room,” she said. “To the world, we shall portray a blissfully married couple.”
“Happy as two fleas on a fat hound,” Cord said.
The old gent and matron shared a chuckle. Eyes twinkling like stars, Miss Northroupe laughed. Despite his annoyance, Cord grinned. Maybe this wouldn’t be so bad after all.
He guessed her father’s death was what had put the spurs to this risky plan of hers. At least she had the gumption to fight for what she wanted. Cord admired and envied her for that.
“Well, Miss Northroupe. When do we get hitched?”
“Immediately. It’s imperative we formalize our bond today.” She glanced at his saddle, saddlebags, and rifle stacked by the door and frowned. “Would you care to retrieve your horse before we proceed to the church?”
Anger loped across his nerves. “Don’t have one anymore.”
“Oh. Why ever not?”
Last night’s meeting with Ott swirled in and out of his memory like smoke, but the end results remained branded on his mind. “Thanks to bootleg applejack and a pair of deuces, I lost my horse in a poker game.” He saw no need to tell her that he’d also lost every cent he’d been hoarding for a year.
Miss Northroupe sucked in enough air to flutter the window curtains. “For the duration of our marriage, you’ll refrain from gambling. Is that clear, Mr. Tanner?”
Cord nodded, more amused than chastised by her latest order. Certain ranch rules had a way of getting broken.
“I reckon you’re opposed to drinking, too,” Cord asked just to rile her a bit.
She hemmed and hawed. “I won’t tolerate drunkenness. However, a drink after a trying day can be quite pleasurable.”
That surprised him. He’d bet most women in this dry town would disagree with her. Hell, after what had happened to him last night at the Plainsmen’s Lodge, he wasn’t sure he shared her opinion.
“It’s Mr. Yancy again,” the matron said, staring out the window like a hawk eyeing prey. “He quit Lott’s Mercantile.”
“What’s he doing?” Miss Northroupe asked.
The matron pressed her nose to the glass. “Mr. Yancy made one of those vile cigarettes. Now he’s standing on the board-walk, looking about and puffing away. Some ruffian came along and stopped to chat with him. Oh, dear. The ruffian is pointing toward Mr. Zachary’s office.”
Miss Northroupe shot to her feet and gave her ugly skirt a shake. Even standing on a box, she wouldn’t be able to look over a swaybacked cow pony.
She tipped her head back and stared at him with a blend of curiosity and dread. “I suggest you deposit your equipage in my surrey, and then we’ll proceed to the church.”
Nervous energy shimmered off her like a mirage, niggling his own suspicions—and nudging awake his sense of compassion. He had the urge to pull her against him, tuck back the golden wisps that had escaped her bonnet, and tell her that she had nothing to fear. But touching her might scare the hell out of her. Besides, he wasn’t on a first-name basis with his future wife.
For some reason Cord refused to look at too closely, he aimed to change that right now. “Cord would do just fine.”
“I beg your pardon,” she asked.
“Seeing as we’re going to be husband and wife, you’d best start calling me by my first name from here on out.”
“Certainly not! It is presumptuous to address each other with common familiarity when we’re little more than strange—” She broke off and frowned at the wall, as if arguing with herself what to do now—treat him like her lover or the hired hand.
“Mr. Yancy is crossing the street,” the matron said.
A frisky glint two-stepped in Miss Northroupe’s eyes. “Very well, Cord. I give you leave to address me as Bea or Beatrix, my Christian name. Shall we go?”
“Yes, ma’am.” But as he slung his saddlebags over a shoulder, hoisted his saddle, and fetched his rifle, he decided those names didn’t fit a woman with the gumption to propose marriage to a stranger in order to gain title to her land.
The little lady took off out the door like a filly set loose to pasture after a long, hard winter in the corral. Cord chuckled and trailed his bride-to-be with the old folks pulling drag duty.
He stowed his gear in the surrey the old gent pointed out to him, then set off after Miss Northroupe. He wasn’t surprised to see Gil barreling toward her from the other direction. Cord swore and picked up his pace.
“You’re just the lady I’ve been looking for,” Gil said.
She hiked her chin up. “Have you? I can’t imagine why.”
“I’d like to call on you.” Gil was so intent on charming Miss Northroupe that he didn’t see Cord charging at him. “The Bar T Ranch is putting on a shindig this Saturday, like they did nigh on a year back. I’d be right pleased if you’d go with me.”
Cord had a mind to knock the big old smile off Gil’s lying mouth. But a brawl would set the tongues in town wagging. As it was, they’d gathered onlookers faster than flies to a dung heap.
“She can’t,” Cord said. “Ask somebody else.”
Gil shot him a go-to-hell scowl. “Sticking your nose in my business will likely get you busted in your kisser.”
“You threatening me?” Cord fisted his right hand.
“Just offering you a warning, partner.”
“Cease this bickering,” Miss Northroupe said.
“My apologies, Miz Northroupe.” Gil held his hat over his heart. “The dance would give us a chance to get to know one another better. Colonel Trenton is providing rooms for single ladies to stay the night and us men will bunk in the barn. It’ll be all proper like. We’d head on back to Revolt the next day.”
“I’m sure it’ll be a festive affair enjoyed by all as before, but I simply can’t accompany you,” she said.
Gil’s smile wavered. “If you’re worried about being alone with me and all, you could invite your housekeeper, here, to come along. Hell, bring your butler, too.”
Standing behind Cord, the old gent snorted and the matron harrumphed. Cord smiled. Though the old folks weren’t partial to Miss Northroupe hiring a husband, Cord had a hunch they preferred him over Gil Yancy.
“Like the lady said, she can’t go with you,” Cord said.
Gil’s polished charm tarnished faster than the silver conchos on Cord’s old saddle. “I’m warning you, partner. This ain’t none of your business.”
“Now there’s where you’re dead wrong.”
“How the hell do you figure that?” Gil asked.
“It’s real simple. If anybody takes the lady to that dance, it’ll be me.” Cord rested a hand on Miss Northroupe’s rounded shoulder. She sidled up to him, and he cursed the lightning bolt of pure lust that shot right to his crotch. “Her husband.”
“You’re lying.” Gil looked from Cord to her and back again. “Miz Northroupe wouldn’t marry a drifter like you.”
“Oh, but I would and soon shall.” She stood her ground, defiant as a bantam hen, reminding Cord again that her Christian name didn’t fit his wily bride-to-be.
“Hold up, here.” The veins in Gil’s neck bulged like ropes as he faced Cord. “You know damn well I saw her first.”
“You’re loco.” But now that he thought on it, he recalled Gil setting his sights on an English lady at the Bar T. Damn!
“This is my wedding day, Mr. Yancy. It’s proper to wish the bride well and congratulate the groom.”
Cord applied gentle pressure to her shoulder, applauding her spunk. And, if he was honest with himself, he was publicly staking his claim to the little lady Gil had aimed to marry.
“I reckon it is.” Gil chewed out his best wishes to them, though Cord knew the cowboy was lying through his clenched teeth.
“We best move on, Trixie,” Cord said. “Don’t want to keep the preacher waiting on us.”
She whirled to face Cord, but instead of giving him a tongue-lashing for blurting out a nickname that suited her, her eyes sparkled with amusement and what looked like a glimmer of approval. The tension girthing his guts tightened another notch. She stirred some mighty powerful feelings deep inside him that he didn’t aim to deal with. Ever.
“Of course. Whatever you say, Cord.”
“This ain’t over, partner. Not by a long shot.” Gil shot Cord a look that could shred leather and elbowed past him.
Trixie rested her hand on Cord’s arm, pulling his attention back to her. “What did Mr. Yancy mean by that?”
Cord shrugged, but he had a nagging feeling Gil intended to dig up the past Cord had buried and put from his mind long ago.
A numbing cold seeped into Bea’s bones as she and Cord stood before the staid preacher in Revolt’s Methodist Church with Benedict and Mrs. Mimms serving as witnesses. The ceremony seemed painfully short and to the point.
“I do.” Bea forced her sacred vows out on a shiver, hoping for the best and fearing the worse.
She was taking Mr. Oakes’s word as gospel and marrying Cord Tanner. A stranger. For richer or poorer. For better or worse.
All because her grandfather refused to give her the title to the home she loved because she was unmarried. Well, her autocratic grandfather had underestimated her this time. She was willing to risk much to gain what she most wanted.
Being a missus would allow Bea to provide a home for her aged retainers and her beloved horses. And should Cord refuse to abide by their contract, she’d do what she had to do to ensure she didn’t remain Mrs. Cord Tanner till death do they part.
“I do,” Cord said in answer to the preacher’s question.
“I hereby pronounce you man and wife. Kiss if you want.” The preacher turned aside to sign the marriage certificate.
Cord didn’t move. Didn’t say a word. Bea wasn’t sure if she was relieved or disappointed. What did she expect? Their marriage was a business arrangement.
Handing the holy document of marriage over into Mrs. Mimms’s safekeeping, Bea quit the church on Cord’s arm and hoped he couldn’t feel her trembling. In order to maintain the upper hand, she had to remain calm and collected in his company.
A hot, dry wind whistled around the building, whipping her grosgrain mourning skirt about her suddenly weak ankles and threatening to tear the black ostrich plume from her bonnet.
The same smattering of citizens who’d strained their ears when Gil confronted Cord earlier gathered on the boardwalk before Lott’s Mercantile and gawked at her and Cord. She knew the reason for their curiosity and shock.
When mourners wished to become socially active, they left cards with friends and acquaintances to signal they were anxious to receive visitors. They didn’t leap from a state of mourning into the state of holy matrimony without following etiquette.
But Bea had and, in doing so, she’d trampled social mores beneath her French heels. Perhaps that would work to her advantage, though.
For Bea’s stratagem to succeed, her grandfather had to be convinced she’d married Cord because she loved him and couldn’t wait any longer. What better way to accomplish that goal than to present herself as a blushing bride before the town?
Outside Lott’s Mercantile, the gossipmongers huddled on the boardwalk, no doubt having a field day blabbering about this scandal of the heart. Gil Yancy leaned against a porch post, rolling a cigarette and glaring at Cord.
Bea had expected her marriage would stir Gil’s animosity. Gil was not one to lose graciously. How convenient he’d found a willing ear in bottle-necked Arlene Lott, reigning town gossip.
Nate Wyles’s presence surprised and alarmed Bea. Her former foreman slumped against the post across from Gil, torturing her with a lewd perusal. The man was vile to the core. Seeing him here engulfed Bea in grim memories of the day her papa died.
“Don’t that just beat all,” Nate said in a voice loud enough to carry into the hereafter. “And here I’d always heard you can’t hitch a blooded horse with a mustang.”
The insult dredged a chorus of gasps from the onlookers.
Beneath her arm, Cord’s muscles tensed. His clipped curse was barely audible. But Bea heard it, and his furious undertone matched her spike of anger. How dare Nate Wyles liken her to a thoroughbred and Cord to a horse of indeterminable breeding?
“Pay no attention to the lout,” she said to Cord.
Gil blew out a plume of smoke and smirked at Cord. “Yep, it sure does confound a man when a lady up and decides to scrape the bottom of the barrel.”
Bea longed to rap the two cowboys upside their hard heads, but common sense prevailed over her temper. It wouldn’t do for her grandfather to hear that she and her husband had created an undignified scene in the street on their wedding day.
“Ignore those two,” Bea whispered to Cord. “Do assist me to the surrey and we’ll be off to the Prairie Rose.”
Bea expected Cord to heed her order, but he didn’t budge or acknowledge her. Her skin chafed with growing unease.
She clear. . .
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