Wild Innocence
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Synopsis
A Pampered Belle. . . Devastated by her fiancé's betrayal, young Rachel Dempsey fled a life of privilege in Baltimore's high society for a hard-scrabble existence at her father's mission on the rugged shores of Lake Superior. There she tended the wounded brought to the mission's infirmary and vowed no man would ever touch her heart again--certainly not Black Hawk, the disturbingly sensual Ojibwa warrior she was tenderly nursing back to health. A Fearless Brave. . . Black Hawk had never allowed a woman to distract him from the dark dream of vengeance he had harbored against his hated Sioux enemy since boyhood. But soon the warmth in Rachel's eyes began melting the ice that shrouded his soul, and when danger threatened the mission, the fierce warrior spirited away the beautiful white angel to the safety of his own village. There Rachel discovered a new peace among the gentle Ojibwa, while the tenderness in Black Hawk's fiery touch ignited a sudden passion--convincing them both that they shared a love as bold and timeless as the untamed plains of the wild Northwest. 110,000 Words
Release date: January 16, 2014
Publisher: eClassics
Print pages: 352
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Wild Innocence
Candace McCarthy
“Don’t be ridiculous, Rachel!” Aunt Bess cried. “You can’t just run off to be by yourself!”
Rachel didn’t answer immediately. Seated before her vanity table, she studied her reflection with a critical eye. The young woman who gazed back at her seemed a stranger. She had Rachel’s chestnut-brown hair coloring and eyes of green, but her face was paler than usual. Her eyes appeared larger, like a frightened doe’s. Where once Rachel had been sure of her looks, suddenly she felt confident no longer. Her nose was too small, her lips too large and lush, and her eyes too bright. Rachel saw nothing of her own natural beauty in the mirror this day; she was conscious only of her flaws.
“Rachel!”
“I have to leave, Aunt Bess,” Rachel said, her heart beating hard within her chest. “I’ve been humiliated before everyone. Now, I find that some of the people I considered my friends are enjoying my discomfort. It’s bad enough that I had to face the crowd at the church alone.” The memory of those embarrassing, painful moments after she’d been jilted renewed her tears. It had been days since the fiasco at the church, but the shame of it lingered.
A tinge of bitterness crept into her tone as she continued. “Jordan is away on his honeymoon.” Rachel closed her eyes a moment and fought the surge of pain. “When he returns with his new bride, the talk and the rumors will only worsen. There’s nothing for me in Baltimore now ... except you, and I’ll miss you terribly. But it hurts too much to live here.”
“But where will you go?” her aunt asked with concern.
Rachel met Bess’s alarmed gaze in the mirror. “I’ll join Father and Amelia at the mission.”
“But that’s a terribly long way! Surely, no journey for a young woman to attempt on her own.” She set her jaw. “I’ll go with you.”
But Rachel was determined that her aunt should stay. “No, you will not. You have a life here. You’re happy in Baltimore.” She turned in her chair to face Bess. “I’ll hire someone to take me.”
“Who?” Bess demanded.
“I don’t know!” Rachel exclaimed. “But I’ll not stay!” She’d rather brave the wilderness all alone than stay and face such humiliation again.
“I know someone who can take her,” a soft feminine voice said from the far side of the room.
The two women turned to gaze at Miranda Clark. She smiled as she approached them.
“And just who is that?” Bess asked.
“My uncle. He travels that territory. I’m sure he’ll be happy to escort Rachel.”
For the first time in two days, Rachel’s eyes gleamed. “He will?”
Miranda nodded, looking pleased. “Absolutely.”
“And you? Will you accompany me, Miranda?” Rachel asked. She considered Miranda Clark her one and only true friend.
Miranda looked genuinely surprised by the question. “I don’t know ...” She looked thoughtful as she considered the idea.
“Pleased, Miranda.”
“I—” Her hazel eyes suddenly twinkled as she approached. “All right, I’ll go. I’ve always enjoyed an adventure, but Rachel, don’t expect me to stay out there. My family will want me to return.”
“Of course they will.” Rachel managed to grin. “I appreciate that you’ll accompany me. We’ll have a wonderful time.” She feigned cheerfulness as she looked at her aunt. “There, Aunt Bess, now there is no cause for concern. Everything’s all taken care of. Miranda and I will be escorted to Wisconsin by Miranda’s uncle.”
Aunt Bess nodded, but appeared uncertain still. “When can I meet him?”
“Uncle Rupert?” Miranda said, her voice rising suddenly. “He’s not in Baltimore, I’m afraid. He lives in a small village in Pennsylvania. The only way you’d be able to make his acquaintance is if you come with us.”
“Surely, it’s not necessary that you meet the man, Aunt Bess,” Rachel said after catching a meaningful glance from her friend. “After all, he is Miranda’s kin.”
Aunt Bess frowned. “I don’t know—”
“Don’t you trust us, Auntie?” Rachel asked.
Bess looked shocked by the question. “Of course I do!”
“Do you think Miranda and I would go with the man if Miranda didn’t think he could keep us safe?”
“Well, no ...”
“Excellent!” Rachel exclaimed. “Then it’s all set. We leave for Wisconsin as soon as it can be arranged!”
Grudgingly, Rachel’s aunt agreed, before she left the two young women alone in her niece’s bedchamber.
Rachel wondered why Miranda didn’t want Aunt Bess to meet Rupert Clark. “What’s wrong with your uncle?” she asked her friend.
“Nothing really, he’s a dear man, and I trust him implicitly, but—”
“But?”
“His appearance is not one to inspire confidence in your aunt. She’d take one hard look at him and promptly demand that you remain at home.”
“He’s that bad?”
“He looks like a woodsman,” Miranda explained.
A woodsman, Rachel thought a week and a half later. Miranda wasn’t joking when she said that Rupert Clark looks like a woodsman, she decided as she studied the unkempt, bearded individual whom Miranda had introduced as Uncle Rupert.
Rachel had been more than mildly shocked when she’d met him, wondering how a man this grizzly and unkempt could be even remotely related to her well-kept, pretty friend. But then she had gazed long and hard into his twinkling blue eyes, and had been reassured immediately by the kindness she saw there. They’d been traveling with Rupert for two days now, and Rachel’s respect and admiration for Rupert Clark had only grown.
“Mr. Clark?”
The man turned and focused his blue gaze on her.
“How much farther is it to the Wisconsin Territory?” she asked. “Not that I mind the trip,” she said, although she did. “I was just wondering.”
Rupert tugged on his gray beard with tobacco-stained fingers. “Well, lass, that depends on whether or not we encounter any Injuns.”
“Indians!” she gasped. “You mean we may actually see savages?”
“Better not call them that to their faces. Some take mighty exception to the term.”
“Do they speak English?” Miranda asked, her eyes widening with surprise.
The old man faced his niece. “Some. Especially the ones who reside near the mission.” He looked back at Rachel with a half smile. “Why did you think your father went to the mission? Just to doctor some missionaries?”
“I—ah—I guess I never gave it much thought.” Rachel blushed, knowing how selfish she sounded. Her father and sister had left to live in the wilderness, and Rachel had been more interested in the impact their leaving would have on her life than in the safety and interests of her family. She’d been so caught up in her own life that she’d given no consideration to her father and sister’s feelings or fears.
I miss them, she thought. She missed the long talks she used to have with Amelia, confiding in her sister, sharing dreams. She missed seeing the way her father’s eyes would light up with pleasure whenever she walked into a room dressed up for a ball or party.
The decision to join her family was the right one. They loved her. They would understand and help soothe away the pain she’d suffered because of Jordan.
Rachel vowed to be more aware of her family’s needs in the future. She felt a small smile settle on her lips at the prospect of being with those she loved. She couldn’t wait to see Father and Amelia.
They traveled for days by carriage, by rail, by boat, then finally by wagon. Their accommodations along the way were by no means luxurious, but they were suitable, Rachel decided. They stayed at inns, hotels, and private residences of people who knew Rupert Clark. She and Miranda had suffered no ill effects from the hours of traveling, but Rachel wanted the trip to be over. Each day that saw her farther and farther from Baltimore, and the life she’d enjoyed until recently, made her heart ache. She found herself of late recalling her time with Jordan, her happiness when she’d been with him, how excited she’d been when he’d asked her to marry him.
The landscape blurred as tears filled her eyes. Why had Jordan asked her to marry him if he’d had no intention of following through?
The widow Nanette. Rachel had a mental image of a woman with dark curly hair, a white complexion heavy with perfumed face powder and rouge, and a large beauty mark on her chin. An ugly mole, it is. She felt guilty thinking it, but for only a moment. It actually felt good to feel anger instead of pain.
Rachel still couldn’t believe that Jordan had chosen that woman over her. Not after he’d kissed and held her as if no other woman in the world existed for him.
I’m a fool, she thought. Thank goodness she’d had sense enough to keep her virginity for the marriage bed. Something that Jordan will never have from me now. Something the widow had given up long before she’d ever met Jordan. But now the widow had used her own experience with men to seduce and lure away Rachel’s betrothed.
Pain lanced within Rachel’s breast, making her stomach hurt and her head spin. She had to forget Jordan. She didn’t need him. In fact, she didn’t need any man. Her sister didn’t have a husband or lover. She didn’t need—or want—one either.
A teardrop escaped to drip onto Rachel’s cheek, and she quickly dashed it away before Miranda or her uncle could see it. I have a new life to dead. Father and Amelia will need help at the mission. I’ll be happy dedicating my life to helping others. She tried not to think of the husband she’d almost had and the children she would never conceive.
I’ll stay a virgin. The whole thing about the marriage bed sounded a little frightening anyway.
She sighed. But she would have liked to try it, at least, just once.
As the morning wore on, Rachel’s traveling party ventured into the wilderness with forests and scenery more rugged and beautiful than any they’d encountered before. As the trees thickened, and Rupert steered the wagon along a narrow path that was just large enough for the conveyance, Rachel studied her surroundings with unease.
“Is this Indian country?” she asked Rupert in a hushed voice.
“Yep,” he replied without looking at her.
Rachel glanced in the back of the wagon, and was only slightly reassured by the sight of Rupert’s double-barreled rifle lying behind the man’s end of the seat. She wanted to ask Miranda’s uncle if he knew how to use the weapon, but she knew it would be a foolish question. It was obvious that the man had to be an excellent marksman to have survived this long in this wilderness.
“Are the Indians friendly, Uncle Rupert?” Miranda asked.
“Some are, some aren’t,” Rupert replied.
Rachel saw that her friend wasn’t concerned.
Why can’t I be like Miranda? Instead I’m nervous and scared. Miranda must truly believe in her uncle’s ability to keep us safe.
“Are we in any danger?” Rachel asked.
“Life is dangerous,” he said. “A lightning strike in a storm. A carriage accident on a busy street.”
She sensed Miranda’s gaze and turned to look at her. “Aren’t you worried?”
Miranda nodded. “Of course I am. But, I also know my uncle. He’s the best there is. We’ll be safe enough until we reach the mission.”
That night they camped out in the open for the first time. Rupert found a clearing beneath a stand of trees. There he instructed the young women to spread their sleeping pallets.
“I don’t like this,” Rachel muttered to Miranda as she unrolled the quilts that would serve as her bed that night. “There are wild animals out there. What if one of them comes and eats us in the night?”
Rupert hooted with laughter from a short distance away. “I don’t reckon you’ll sleep through it if one does!” Chuckling, the man walked back to the wagon to unload some supplies.
“Miranda, I’m scared.”
“Don’t worry. Uncle Rupert will watch out for us while we sleep. He’ll build a fire to keep the animals away.”
“But when will he sleep?” And the Indians? she thought. What will keep the savages away?
Miranda shrugged. “He’ll probably nap some of the time, I suppose. But he’s a very light sleeper,” she quickly assured her frightened friend.
Rupert shot a rabbit for dinner. After a meal of rabbit stew, he told the girls stories as they sat around the campfire, while dusk turned into the darkness of night. Despite her initial fear of sleeping out in the wild, Rachel found herself caught up in Uncle Rupert’s tale of the time he’d spent five days with Indians. Every once in a while, the sounds of the night invaded Rachel’s sense of peace. When an owl hooted in the distance, Rupert paused in the middle of the tale to announce what the sound was, then promptly went back to his storytelling. After several such occasions, Rachel no longer started when she heard a new forest sound. She listened with rapt interest to Miranda’s uncle as he related the story of one adventure after another.
“You young ladies had best turn in,” Rupert said after finishing his fifth story. “We’ve a long day ahead of us tomorrow.”
Rachel’s heart thumped hard as she nodded and stood. “Good night, Mr. Clark. Thank you for sharing your stories with us.”
Rupert nodded. “My pleasure, Miss Dempsey.”
“Please call me Rachel. It’s strange, but I suddenly feel as if I’ve known you a long time.”
“I’m glad,” he said, while Miranda beamed at the both of them. “I’d be pleased if you’d call me Uncle Rupert like my Miranda here.”
Rachel smiled. “Good night, Uncle Rupert.”
“Good night, Rachel. Good night, Miranda.”
After the last exchange of good nights, Rachel and Miranda climbed into their bedrolls. Rupert stoked up the fire, then with his rifle across his lap, sat and kept watch.
It didn’t take Rachel long to get comfortable, a fact that surprised her. She lay, staring at the lush canopy of green foliage overhead, looking for a glimpse of the stars in a break in the trees. That night the moon was bright and was nearly full. The light and Rupert’s presence had a calming effect on her, and soon she closed her eyes to get some sleep.
Later, she wasn’t sure what had woken her, but she felt no alarm as she opened her eyes and saw that it was still night. The sound of wood in the fire crackling and popping convinced her that Rupert was awake and at watch. Reassured, Rachel rolled over and went back to sleep without glancing at him.
A while later, she felt something in her hair—a light touch that dragged her from the depths of sleep. Believing that a breeze had begun to stir the forest, she opened her eyes, then gasped at the sight of an Indian standing above her. The savage was clad in only a loincloth with leggings. His dark eyes glinted in the darkness as he stared down at her. His hair was black and hung past his shoulders. In the moonlight, his face looked as if it had been etched from raw earth. A copper band encircled his upper right arm. Her heart stopped, then beat faster, as she saw the knife in his right hand. Terrified, unable to move or scream, she could only gaze back at the brave.
Rachel caught her breath as the Indian crouched at her side and lifted a lock of her unbound hair. The brave grunted with pleasure as he tugged on the silky strands.
She began to tremble with fear. “What do you want?” she whispered.
His gaze narrowing, the Indian rose. Rachel was afraid to look away, toward Miranda and her uncle, terrified that she might find he’d already murdered them.
She sat up slowly, carefully. “What do you want? Please, can’t you just leave us alone!”
“Gichi-mookomaanikwe.”
“I don’t understand! What do you want?” She started to rise. The brave raised his knife threateningly, and she lowered herself to the ground again. He mumbled something in his strange tongue, and Rachel shook her head to tell him that she didn’t understand him.
Was the brave alone? She saw no other figures in the dark.
Her gaze went quickly back to the Indian. “What do you want from us?”
His grin was a flash of white in his dark face. “Gichimookomaanikwe.”
He bent again, and she closed her eyes in expectation of his hurting her. But all she felt was the gentlest touch on her cheek, a caress that made her shiver and nearly cry out.
When she opened her eyes again, he was gone, and she wondered if she’d actually seen the man, or if she’d simply been dreaming.
She glanced toward where her two friends had been sleeping, and was amazed to see that they continued to sleep peacefully, blissfully unaware of the Indian’s visit.
She got up and grabbed Rupert’s gun, telling herself that she would fire the weapon at the Indian if he returned.
Her heart thumping, her eyes wide, she lay down again. When she awoke next, the morning sun was bright in a clear, cloudless sky, and her traveling companions were eating breakfast.
“Did you sleep well?” Miranda asked upon seeing her friend rise.
“For part of the night.” Rachel paused and bit her lip. “You didn’t hear or sense anyone here last night?”
Miranda smiled. “Like an Indian or a wild animal?”
Rachel blinked. “Yes!”
“No.” Miranda frowned. “No, of course I didn’t. Why do you ask? Did you?”
Rachel glanced about, and saw that there was nothing that suggested their nighttime visitor had been real. “No, I didn’t see or hear anyone.”
Miranda glanced down and saw the gun near Rachel’s sleeping pallet. “Isn’t that my uncle’s rifle?”
She felt a jolt. Her cheeks brightening, Rachel nodded. If she’d been dreaming, when did she pick up Rupert’s rifle? “All right,” she admitted reluctantly, “so I thought I heard something last night.”
“Oh, Rachel ...”
“I’ve never slept out in a forest before,” she said in defense.
“I told you, Uncle Rupert will keep us safe.”
“What if I said that I saw an Indian last night?”
Miranda looked skeptical. “And he just quietly left—is that it?” She smiled. “And I suppose he didn’t want to wake us.”
Rachel did think it seemed odd that an Indian would come and leave so quickly and quietly. She must have dreamed his visit ... and the way he’d touched her face and hair.
As the day wore on, Rachel couldn’t stop thinking about her dream. What if it had been real? What if for some strange reasons of his own, a real Indian had come into their camp, stared at them while they slept, then having been caught in the act, left because he’d had no other members of his tribe to help him take prisoners.
The image of the man was so clear in her thoughts. She couldn’t control the quick little thump of her heart as she recalled his dark hair and eyes, his powerful, lithe form. For a savage, he wasn’t too terrible to look at.
A handsome Indian? I’m going crazy, she thought. I’m delirious from the journey. Perhaps Jordan’s betrayal had not only broken her heart, but robbed her of her sanity!
A mist enshrouded the domed wigwams of the Indian village as Black-Hawk-Who-Hunts-at-Dawn and his small band of Ojibwa men returned home. They had been gone for a fortnight, after journeying to the village of their Ojibwa brothers to the east. Their common enemy, the Sioux, had attacked the eastern encampment, and Black Hawk, the war chief in his tribe, had left quickly to offer aid to the community.
It was dawn, and his people were just stirring. The scent of smoke clung to the damp air as the women added fuel to their cooking fires. A dog barked from the opposite end of the village. A child began to whimper from inside one of the huts, and a mother’s voice answered soothingly.
Black Hawk absorbed the sights and sounds from afar before entering the village clearing. He didn’t wait for his band of men to follow him as he headed for the wigwam of the chief, Big-Cat-with-Broken-Paw. He knew his brothers were as anxious to converse with the chief as he was.
A young golden-haired girl emerged from a wigwam as Black Hawk came abreast of the structure. Her eyes lit up when she saw him. “Black Hawk! You’re back!” She launched herself into the warrior’s arms. “It’s so good to see you!”
“It is good to see you also, Little Flower,” he said, surprised by her presence. “You are growing like a weed! Are you here visiting Barking Dog alone, or did my friend Dan-yel come with you?”
The child was the niece of his white friend, Daniel Trahern. She sometimes came to stay with her friend Barking Dog and the child’s grandmother, Swaying Tree.
“My family is here with me.”
Black Hawk smiled with pleasure. “Tell Dan-yel that I will seek him out as soon as I meet with Big-Cat-with-Broken-Paw.”
The girl nodded, then ran to another wigwam, which she entered. Black Hawk continued toward the hut of his chief.
The chief’s wigwam was like the others within the village. The dome-shaped structure was constructed of bent saplings covered with birch bark. A deer hide draped the doorway. Black Hawk called out a greeting. Invited to enter, he raised the door flap and went inside. He greeted the inhabitants of the lodge.
The chief was seated on a mat near the fire. His wife was serving up a bowl of corn porridge for him. “Ah, Black Hawk,” Big-Cat-with-Broken-Paw said, “you have returned. Good, good!”
Black Hawk smiled at the man’s wife and sat near the fire. His expression grew solemn as he returned his attention to his leader.
“You have much to tell me,” the chief said.
The warrior nodded. “Our enemy has destroyed White Fox’s village. Only four of our brother warriors have survived. The attackers have taken the women and children.”
The chief scowled. “The Sioux will pay for this!” he barked angrily.
“But that is not all,” Black Hawk said. “They have continued their trail of destruction to the village of Red Nose just south of our brother White Fox. The women and children managed to escape, but ...” He felt a flash of all consuming anger. “They murdered Red Nose.”
“No!” Big-Cat-with-Broken-Paw cried.
“It is so,” Black Hawk assured him. He felt a swish of air behind him as someone raised the door flap. His brothers Thunder Oak and Rain-from-Sky entered, followed by the chief’s son, Gray Squirrel.
“Black Hawk speaks the truth,” Thunder Oak said as he, too, sat by the fire. “The Sioux have murdered more of our people and kidnapped our women and children. It is time we seek out our enemy and put a stop to the killing.”
“We must have a council meeting,” the chief said. “This decision cannot be made quickly.”
“It must be made quickly!” Gray Squirrel exclaimed. “Until we attack, our enemy will continue to hurt and kill our people. Red Nose did nothing to provoke the Sioux attack. His death and the deaths of his people must be avenged!”
“Gray Squirrel,” Black Hawk said with patience, “I, more than you, want vengeance against the Sioux, but our chief is right. We must have a council meeting.” He hated the Sioux. A band of Sioux warriors had tortured and murdered his father when he was only eight years old. It was something that he would never forget. Someday, he would find the leader of that band, who had killed his father in cold blood, and he would make him pay for all the pain and suffering and loss to his father, himself, and his people. It was often the driving force of his day.
“We shall meet in council in five days,” Big-Cat-with-Broken-Paw said.
“Five days!” Gray Squirrel exclaimed.
“What matter is five days?” Thunder Oak said. “Our chief—your father—and my brother are right. We must plan to win, and such things are not easily accomplished.”
“We must invite our brothers to the north and our Ottawa friends as well,” Rain-from-Sky said.
All the Indians agreed. “I will send a messenger,” the chief said.
“I will visit our Ottawa brother, Great Deer,” Thunder Oak offered.
Big-Cat-with-Broken-Paw nodded. “Good. Rain-from-Sky, would you go to our brothers in the north?”
“I shall be honored to go there,” the brave answered.
“And you, Black Hawk,” the chief said, “you have some special visitors. Perhaps Dan-yel Trahern will help us as he has done before.”
“I’m sure of it, Grandfather.”
The meeting ended, and Black Hawk followed the others from the chief’s wigwam. He headed toward the wigwam of the matron Swaying Tree, knowing instinctively that he would find Little Flower there.
“Black Hawk.” Daniel Trahern’s voice hailed him in Ojibwa from the direction of the forest.
Black Hawk turned and regarded his friend with delight. “You have fared well these last months, my friend.”
“And you?” Daniel said. “You look well, but I hear there is much to worry you.”
The brave inclined his head. “The Sioux have once again struck our people. Red Nose is dead; his village was destroyed. They have taken the women and children. Only a few braves have esca. . .
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