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Synopsis
Desire untamed… Raised in luxury in San Francisco, exquisite Elizabeth Easton thought Seattle a raw, rough frontier harbor. But when the noble Suquamish warrior, Strong Heart, sweeps her into his flight back to his people, Elizabeth discovers what true wilderness is. For deep in the breathtaking forests of the great Pacific Northwest, Strong Heart is free from intolerance and injustice. Elizabeth is free from her controlling businessman father. And both she and Strong Heart are unbound from the prejudice that keeps them apart in the white world. Soon the handsome, sensitive man becomes her guide to ecstasy . . . and she resolves to defy anything—and anyone—that tries to end their undeniable love . . . Praise for Cassie Edwards “A sensitive storyteller who always touches readers’ hearts.” — RT Book Reviews “Cassie Edwards captivates with white hot adventure and romance.” —Karen Harper “Edwards moves readers with love and compassion.” — Bell, Book & Candle
Release date: June 27, 2017
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 384
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Wild Embrace
Cassie Edwards
Chief Moon Elk rearranged his robe of black sea otter fur more comfortably around his lean shoulders, and pulled up his legs and squatted close to the fire. His steel-gray eyes were not large, but were bright and steady in their gaze, the skin of his copper face was fine in texture, although age and weather had wrinkled it.
“Remember always to walk softly, my son,” Chief Moon Elk said as he peered at Strong Heart, who sat beside him feasting on a bowl of soup made from clams and wild vegetables. “While you are helping Four Winds escape from the white man’s prison in Seattle, you must not shed blood. No good ever comes of killing whites. Our Suquamish people always suffer in the end.”
Strong Heart paused momentarily from eating. “This I know,” he said, nodding his head with grave dignity. “And no blood will be shed. I would do nothing to lead trouble to our village. By choice, our clan of Suquamish have kept ourselves from those who were tricked by the white man’s treaties and promises. Because of this, ours has been a peaceful existence. So shall it continue to be, Father.”
Chief Moon Elk’s gaze moved slowly over Strong Heart, admiring his muscular son attired in fringed buckskin. “Your plan is to dress as a white man during the escape, and you will ride your horse instead of traveling by canoe to Seattle?” he asked, wiping his mouth with a cedar-bark napkin, his own stomach warmed comfortably with soup.
“Ah-hah, yes, that is my plan,” Strong Heart said, leaning closer to the fire to ladle more clam soup into his elaborately carved wooden bowl. The ladle was decorated with the crest of his family: the red-tailed hawk.
Strong Heart began eating the soup again, needing his fill now, for he was not planning to stop for anything until he reached the outskirts of Seattle. His plans for Four Winds were several sunrises away. He had other chores to do before freeing his friend from the cruel clutches of the law.
Moon Elk studied his son for a moment without offering a response to what Strong Heart had said. It was like seeing himself in the mirror of the clear rivers and streams those many years ago when he could boast of being his son’s age of twenty-nine winters. Moon Elk had begun to shrink with age, so he was no longer as tall as his son. Strong Heart was more than six feet in height, a giant among his Suquamish people, and most whites.
And not only was his son tall, he was powerfully built, broad shouldered, thin flanked, and lithe. His light copper-colored skin was smooth, with muscles that rippled beneath the flesh. He wore his dark brown hair long and loose, past his shoulders, and his gray eyes held strength and intelligence in their depths.
Ah-hah, Moon Elk thought proudly, there was a steel-like quality about his son.
His son was a man of daring and courage.
“My son, not only will the color of your skin give away your true identity, but also your dignified gracefulness. You are a noble man who towers over the white man,” Moon Elk said. “This can perhaps betray your plans, my son. No white man walks with the dignity of my son, nor carries within their hearts such compassion.”
Moon Elk leaned closer to Strong Heart and peered into his eyes. “My son, is Four Winds worth risking your life for? The world would be void of a much greater man should you die.”
Strong Heart was unmoved by his father’s steady stare, or his words. “Even now I am sure the white people are building a hanging platform for my friend, Four Winds,” he said flatly. “My friend will not die with a noose around his neck. Do you not recall his dignity, Father? Being caged and awaiting his death, his dignity has been taken from him. And I see his life as no less valuable than mine. I will set him free, Father. And do not fear for my safety. I have faced worse odds in my lifetime than a cultus, worthless sheriff, who is blinded by the power he feels by caging men the same as some might cage a bird for entertainment’s sake. It is he who should be caged, and put on display in a white man’s circus!”
“Such a bitterness I hear in your voice,” Moon Elk said, shaking his head sadly. “Now, when the autumn salmon harvest is near, and when your heart should be happy and your very soul should be filled with song, you are filled with bitterness over another man’s misfortunes. That is me-sah-chie, bad, my son! Me-sah-chie! ”
“Ah-hah, it is regrettable, yet is it not as regrettable that Four Winds was arrested unjustly?” Strong Heart said, setting his empty bowl aside. “You, as well as I, know his innocence. Although we have lost touch these past moons after his Suquamish clan moved north to Canada’s shores, I know that his heart remains the same toward life. He could never ride with outlaws, killing and stealing! Never!”
“Who can say what drives a man, even to insanity?” Moon Elk rumbled. “The same could apply to a man who takes up the ways of a criminal. Is it not the same? Men are driven by many things to become who they are. As I recall him, Four Winds seemed a driven young man. You did not also see this, my son?”
Strong Heart arched an eyebrow and fell deep into thought as he peered into the flames of the fire. He was remembering many things about his friend Four Winds from when they were youths together. Some good. Some me-sah-chie, bad.
Strong Heart had overlooked the bad, for Four Winds’s goodness had always outweighed his shortcomings.
“Ah-hah,” Strong Heart finally said, looking back at his father. “I remember that Four Winds was in a sense driven, but not much more than I, Father. In games of competition, we both strived to excel.”
“Do you not recall the times he would avoid you for days after losing at games with you?” Moon Elk persisted. “This is why I fear he may have changed now into someone you do not know. Or should not risk your life for.”
“Father, this is not at all like you,” Strong Heart said, rising. He then knelt on one knee before his father and placed a gentle hand on his shoulder. “Trust my judgment, Father. Never before have you doubted me.”
Moon Elk turned his eyes to Strong Heart and placed a hand over his son’s. “It is not you I doubt,” he said softly. “It is Four Winds. Remember this, my son, as you take the long ride to Seattle. I trust your judgment in all things. It is only that I worry too much over my son who is destined to one day be a great chief. Remember always the importance of being a tyee, chief. He is a man whose opinion carries more weight than his fellow tribesmen.”
“I remember all of your teachings, Father,” Strong Heart said, rising to his full height. “And I understand the importance of being a tyee. But that is in the future. I must do what I must now for a friend.”
Moon Elk rose to his feet also. He walked with his son to the large cedar door and swung it open. Together they stepped outside to a blossoming new September day, the air heavy with the sweet fragrance of the cedar-and-pine forest which lay just beyond the village.
Moon Elk walked Strong Heart toward his san-de-lie, horse, a magnificent roan. “You will also search again for Proud Beaver, your grandfather?” he asked, his face drawn. “Your mother still grieves so over him, fearing that her father is dead.”
Strong Heart turned and saw his mother coming toward them, having left the longhouse so son and father could speak in private about things that would only trouble her. She had busied herself by going to the river for water and walked with a huge earthenware jug balanced on her right shoulder.
It saddened Strong Heart to see his mother’s change since the disappearance of her father. Her eyes were no longer filled with laughter. She scarcely ate, and had become frail and gaunt.
Then Strong Heart smiled as he looked at her pert nose. It had remained the same—tiny and toke-tie, pretty—the reason her parents had called her Pretty Nose on the day of her birthing.
Pretty Nose set her heavy jug on the ground and went to Strong Heart. Tears filling her eyes, she embraced him. “My son, return safely to me,” she murmured. “This that you do is courageous, yet I cannot say that it pleases me. Courage is just a word. It cannot fill my arms if you are dead!”
“Mother,” Strong Heart said, placing his hands at her tiny waist, holding her away from him so that their eyes could meet. “You worry too much. This son of yours will return soon. And I promise to search for Grandfather. I shall go back once more to our ancestral grounds where our village once stood. We all believe that is where Grandfather went when he disappeared a moon ago. He felt as if the spirits of our dead ancestors were beckoning him there. He spoke of that often to me.”
Strong Heart lowered his head momentarily, then looked back at his mother. “Had I heeded the warning in his voice and words, never would he have left our village. I would have kept watch. I would have stopped him.”
“Do not blame yourself, my son,” Pretty Nose said, gently placing a hand to his cheek. She looked adoringly up at him. “How could you know that his mind was aging more quickly than his body? We have not lived beside the waters of Puget Sound for many moons now. Many moons ago, even before Chief Seattle signed treaties with the white people, our people took money from white people for their land. Those who did were ignorant enough to think the value of the money was worth more to them than the land. It was a mistake. It ate away at your grandfather like an open wound festering with disease. His regrets turned him away from us. Ah-hah, it has surely carried him ‘home,’ to our ancestral burial grounds.”
She flung herself into her son’s arms and clung to him, sobbing. “Please find him, Strong Heart,” she whispered. “Please?”
“I shall try is all that I can say,” Strong Heart said, easing her from his arms. He framed her face between his hands. His mouth went to her lips and he kissed her softly.
Then he turned and, with an easy grace, he mounted his horse, settling himself comfortably on the saddle stuffed with cottonwood and cattail down. He reached for his rawhide reins, and took a last look at his village before leaving. The long houses were built of cedar wood fitted so expertly together that there was no need of nails. Each home was decorated with its owner’s family crest painted on the entryway door posts, and outside the square houses was erected a line of totem poles, carved with the animals and spirits sacred to the clan. Behind them the Duwamish River flowed peacefully downstream.
Strong Heart then shifted his gaze to the saddlebags on his horse, his thoughts sorting through what he had packed to ensure the success of this venture that he was embarking upon. He was taking a change of clothes which would give him the appearance of a white man—a flannel shirt, leather breeches, and jacket, and high-heeled boots. He was carrying a pair of Colt revolvers with seven-inch barrels and pearl handles. A sombrero hung from the saddle horn.
Ah-hah, he thought smugly to himself. All of this would be used when the time came for his masquerade.
Strong Heart patted the knife sheathed at his waist, then placed a hand on the rifle that was resting in its holster at his horse’s flank. He valued this repeating rifle as if it were his right arm. It had gotten him through many scrapes when gangs of bandits had lurked beside the trails, waiting to attack any traveler who looked as if he might have something worth stealing.
Until recently, when they had been forced to go into hiding due to the many possess chasing them, the desperadoes had swarmed the countryside, attacking stations along the trail where travelers stopped to exchange tired horses for fresh ones for the next lap of their journey.
The robberies had lessened at the same time of Four Winds’s arrest, yet Strong Heart still would not believe that his friend had any connection with the outlaws. It was surely a case of mistaken identity that made the posse think that Four Winds was a desperado.
Strong Heart looked at his parents, seeing the concern in their eyes for the dangers of his mission. Yet not even this could change his mind.
“I must go now,” he said.
“Strong Heart, take many braves with you,” Moon Elk said, in a final plea to his son. “They will ride beside you. They will help you.”
“Father, as I have told you before, I must ride alone,” Strong Heart said shortly. “Less trouble comes with lesser numbers. Many braves would draw attention—not avoid it. I, alone, can move about without being noticed.”
Moon Elk nodded in acquiescence. Pretty Nose stepped closer to Strong Heart. Tears streamed from her dark eyes as she reached a hand toward him. “Kla-how-ya, good-bye, my son,” she said, sobbing. “Hy-ak, hurry! Make haste in returning to me!”
“I will, Mother,” Strong Heart said, then urged his horse away in a gallop, not looking back. He kept his eyes straight ahead as he left his village behind him, savoring the wild, deep free feeling of being alone on a journey of the heart. He loved the quiet power of it.
He soon forgot the heartache that he had left behind and enjoyed this land that was precious to him. It was a wild yet peaceable land, sunny and quiet. Strong Heart urged his horse in a steady pace along the trail. The wind was soft today, and the mountains beyond were misted and breathtakingly beautiful. There was fullness to everything.
When the haloed fire of the setting sun was fleeing before an ashen dusk, Strong Heart rode through familiar terrain. With his horse breathing heavily, he topped a rise.
Drawing rein, he took in the imposing view of the Cascade Range. No matter how often he saw the green-cloaked mountains with their thick covering of firs, hemlocks and cedars, he was in awe. And standing sentinel over all was the pure white peak of Mount Rainier.
Dwarfed by the mountains, the city of Seattle was not nearly so beautiful. Below, he recognized Skid Road, which took its name from the skids of logs that were pushed down from the slopes above to the ships on the waterfront, waiting to transport the lumber to faraway ports. The muddy, rutted road was lined on either side by bars and brothels, making it both noisy and occasionally dangerous.
Looming high above Seattle on another slope of land, yet just below where Strong Heart stood, was a long, ugly and ramshackle wooden building, with the name COPPER HILL PRISON written on a large sign at the front. He squinted his eyes, watching the men hammering outside the prison, the tell tale signs of a hanging platform taking shape.
Heaving a long sigh, Strong Heart shifted his eyes to where the Sound lay. He knew that among its sheltered coves and winding channels, salmon were swimming peacefully through the kelp forests. Soon they would be making their journey upriver. He would be there waiting for them, meeting them at the canyon for the autumn harvest.
Then something else caught his eye: a huge, four-masted ship approaching Seattle. He watched its movement through the choppy waves made by the cool northwest breeze. He always felt awe for these large vessels with their white sails catching the wind. He could not help but wonder whom this ship carried to the land that once belonged solely to the Suquamish.
His jaw tight, he wheeled his horse around and followed the slope of land that took him away from Copper Hill Prison.
Tonight and tomorrow he would renew his search for his grandfather.
Then he would return to study the prison, and how often people came and went from it.
The wind was damp and chilly as it blew across the deck of the four-masted schooner, whipping Elizabeth Easton’s elegantly trimmed black cape about her ankles. Her luxuriantly long, red hair whispered in the breeze around her face. Her impudent green eyes watched the ship pass Seattle, to go to a private pier a mile or two down the Sound.
Elizabeth clutched her gloved hands to the ship’s rail, and although it was growing dusk, she was able to study the city. From this vantage point, she could not deny that it was a lovely setting. Seattle was framed by mountains and water, the dark forest crowning the hilltop above the city. If she inhaled deeply enough, she could smell the mixed, pleasant fragrances of roses, pine, and cedar. If she could forget her resentment for having been forced to come to the Pacific Northwest with her father, she would regard the land as nothing short of paradise.
In the dimming light of evening, her eyes locked on something that gave her a feeling of foreboding. She had been told about the prison, its reputation having traveled as far as California.
“Copper Hill Prison,” she whispered, shivering at the thought of the kinds of criminals that were known to be incarcerated there. She feared that this city of Seattle might be even worse than the one she had left behind, San Francisco.
As the moon rose bright and beautiful in the sky, Elizabeth turned her attention from the city, and watched the land creep by on her left. Soon she would be reaching the place that she would call ‘home.’ She didn’t look forward to it, for she had not wanted to leave her home in San Francisco. But leaving San Francisco had been a part of her father’s plan for more than two years now. He had gone on many scouting expeditions in the Pacific Northwest, searching for just the right spot to build his fishery. After much study, he had found that the area around Seattle abounded in shellfish and other fish, making it possible for him to procure fresh fish year round for his planned business.
He had heard that much profit could be made in salmon, which were in abundance in the autumn. He planned to double his wealth on salmon alone, by exporting packed salted salmon to all corners of the world.
Elizabeth grasped the rail harder as the ship edged close to a pier. The water was deep enough here so the ship could dock without the need of longboats to carry cargo and passengers to shore.
In a flurry of activity, Elizabeth was whisked along with the others to the pier. She watched guardedly as her trunks were being taken from the ship and brought to land.
She sighed heavily, still not believing that her father was not going to take the time to go up to the house with her. Instead, he was going to join the ship’s crew to help unload his own supplies to begin constructing his fishery tonight. Once he began, she knew not to expect his company, except for short visits, until it was completed.
Except for Frannie, her devoted maid, Elizabeth would be spending her every moment alone. Long ago, Elizabeth’s mother, Marilyn, had fled the life Elizabeth’s father had given her, leaving behind much bitterness and hurt. Elizabeth didn’t think that she could forgive her mother, ever, yet deep down inside she had feared that when she and her father left San Francisco, it would cut the ties with her mother forever. If her mother decided to return, to be a part of the family again, she would not know where to find them.
And Elizabeth knew that she should not care. She had been eight when her mother had left her. She was now eighteen and had learned, in the many absences of her father, to fend for herself.
If she allowed herself, Elizabeth could understand why her mother had left to seek a new life elsewhere. Elizabeth had felt the same abandonment many times. Surely her mother had felt the same, when her husband had traveled the high seas.
A slim, muscled arm slipped around Elizabeth’s waist as her father stepped to her side. She stiffened as she was encouraged to lean against him. These rare shows of affection were always brief. She was well aware that her father only paid her these attentions because he knew that it was expected of him, not because he actually wanted to be open with his feelings. He was one who shied away from revealing feelings of any sort. He had become a cold, embittered man since his wife’s departure.
“So, daughter, do you think you can survive the transition without your father?” Earl asked, hugging Elizabeth to him. He looked down into defiant eyes, yet shrugged it off because he did not wish to take the time to question it. Though Elizabeth was petite, she was not frail and could withstand any change without his pamperings.
“I’ll never understand why you had to move to what I feel is the end of the earth,” Elizabeth said, drawing away from him. “Father, that is the only description that comes to mind when I try to describe this wretched place. And you aren’t even going to take the time to go to the house with me. Just how long would that take, Father? But I’m wasting my breath, aren’t I? You are determined to leave me to find my own way in this new place, and in a strange house, no matter what.”
“Elizabeth, if I’m ever to succeed in my new venture I must get right to constructing the fishery,” Earl said, clasping his hands behind him. “Try to understand, Elizabeth. Although I won’t be suppin’ with you each night, I’ll always be near. Soon we’ll get acquainted with our house and land together.”
“Yes, soon,” Elizabeth said, her voice bitter. She hugged herself, her gaze sweeping around her. The moon was high now, lighting everything with its silver light. Elizabeth could see that the whole face of the country seemed covered with trees, with huge, looming bluffs making up the sides of the Sound.
Her gaze shifted upward and she shivered when she looked at the monstrosity of a house that she would soon be entering. Tremendous in size, with its towers and turrets and rough stone construction, it stood high on a cliff, protected by a grotesque, iron fence.
Its great stone edifice overlooking the waters of the Sound looked like some unblinking, unmoving sentinel. She had been told that it had survived Indian attacks, two earthquakes, and a fire.
Trees crowded around the dark bulk of the house, crackling in the wind.
“I know the house seems grim,” Earl said, following her gaze, then looking back at her again, seeing her disapproval—even traces of fright in her wide, green eyes. “But it has to do for now. One day soon we’ll replace it with a new one. But first, let me make this the greatest seaport in the Pacific Northwest.”
Elizabeth moved her eyes to her father, wondering about a man who already had so much money he could retire to live comfortably for the rest of his life, yet hungered for more. Anyone that looked at him could see that he was a man of wealth. Tall and thin, he wore his clothes well. Tonight he sported a tan suit with a gold satin, embroidered waistcoat, and a white ascot with a diamond stickpin in its velvet folds. His golden brown hair was clipped immaculately to his collar line, his golden mustache was bold and thick, hiding his upper lip.
His eyes were the same soft green coloring as hers, yet in them were no warmth—no feeling.
“Elizabeth,” he said, nodding toward the Sound, “there’s no other place like this on the face of the earth. The water’s alive with fish. And as I’ve told you before, salmon is the prime catch. We’ll pay the Indians to catch ’em, and we’ll sell ’em at a greater profit.”
“Father, what if the Indians don’t agree to catch the salmon for you?” Elizabeth asked softly. “They will surely look to you as an intruder. Most are still angry over having been forced to live on reservations.”
“Not all Indians live on reservations,” he said matter-of-factly. “There are some who weren’t tricked by treaties. It’s these free Indians that I plan to approach—that I plan to take my offer to.”
“That doesn’t seem like good logic, Father,” Elizabeth argued. “If they couldn’t be paid off then, why would you think they could be paid off now?”
“Things were different then,” Earl scoffed. “It’s a new day, a new time. Surely the Indians are more sensible in their thinking now and will be able to see a good way to make a profit when it is shown to them in black and white. All men want to make money, even Indians.”
Elizabeth didn’t respond, having never won an argument with her father in her entire life. She could not help but think that he was perhaps the most bullheaded man in the world.
“I hope you’re right,” she said sullenly. “I’ve sacrificed enough for this new idea of yours that is supposed to make you wealthier. I found it very hard to say a final farewell to my friends in San Francisco.”
Earl embraced Elizabeth again. “Baby, you’re going to inherit all of this one day,” he said huskily. “It’ll be worth the sacrifice of leavin’ friends behind.” He patted her on the back. “You’ll see. You’ll see.”
Elizabeth slipped her arms about him, this time relishing this moment of closeness. She knew that it would be short-lived. She had seen her father looking nervously at the activity of the crew on the ship and the pier. He wanted to join them.
“Perhaps something good will come of this move after all, Father,” she murmured. “If you establish a business here on land, you won’t be out at sea as often. I so worried about you when you took those long sea voyages. I’m glad you are no longer planning to carry cargo as far as China. Now the ships will come to you.”
“Baby, had I not gone to China, how could you have boasted of having some of the finest silk dresses in San Francisco?” Earl teased. He pulled away from her arms. “You know there won’t ever be as fine a fabric hauled aboard my ship again, don’t you?”
“Yes, I know,” Elizabeth said, slipping her hands inside her cape, to smooth them along the skirt of her silk dress. “But I truly don’t care. I’d much rather have you than any foolish silk fabric brought from China.”
She wanted to shout at him, saying that had he not gone to all corners of the world, neglecting his wife for his business, his wife might have never fled for a better life elsewhere. Her mother was surely with a man who now catered to her every whim. As Elizabeth could recall, her mother had been absolutely, ravishingly beautiful.
But Elizabeth thought better of mentioning her mother now, seeing no need to spoil her father’s mood.
She had already done that, time and time again.
Earl cast another nervous glance toward his ship and his eager crew. He watched as the last of the trunks were placed on the pier.
Then he again looked into Elizabeth’s troubled eyes. “Baby, I really must get back to the ship. The men are awaiting my orders. They are almost as anxious as I am to begin building the fishery. We are going to begin as soon as the supplies are sorted out and ready.” He placed a gentle hand on Elizabeth’s cheek. “I’ll be gone more than I’ll be seein’ you, but I’ll be up at the house lookin’ in on you from time to time.”
He grew frustrated when he could tell that she still did not understand any of this. Why couldn’t she see that it was imperative to get his fishery built as soon as possible?
“But, Father, even after you go and make the Indians an offer, what will happen if they don’t agree to catch the salmon for you?” Elizabeth asked, fear gripping her when she gazed up at the massive fence that had been erected around the house. Indians were the cause. Elizabeth’s father had told her that many years ago a whaling captain had been determined to have his house on this land that overlooked the Sound. For some unknown reason the Indians had not wanted the house built on that site. They had first killed several of those who had built it, and then had tried to burn it.
The captain had not let anything, even Indians, stop him.
Now another man, just as determined and stubborn, had taken possession of the house and land, and Elizabeth had to wonder what she truly had to fear, since she was this man’s daughter and had to live there, also.
“Indians are driven to find means of survival just the same as the white man,” Earl said, shrugging. “Most are dirt poor and will surely be happy to hear the clink of coins in their pockets after I pay their wages. That will keep ’em in line. You’ll see.”
Earl went to his waiting servants. He eyed them speculatively, then began handing out orders. One by one they turned and began dragging their trunks up a briar-laden path that led to the house.
Earl singled out a hefty, towering black man and ordered him to take Elizabeth’s trunks to the house. Earl had left his own on the ship, knowing that he would be spending more time there than in the house.
Then Earl gently took an old black woman by an elbow and took her to Elizabeth. “Frannie, you see to Elizabeth while I’m busy building my fishery,” he said to her. “See to it that she’s made comfortable enough to forget San Francisco, her friends, and her damn mother.”
“Yas, suh,” Frannie said in a slow, calm drawl. “My baby’ll not want for a thing.”
Earl gave Elizabeth a troubled, yet stern stare. “Elizabeth, I don’t want to receive word that you’ve left our estate grounds, unescorted,” he said flatly. “This is a wild land, filled with savages and ruthle
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