Read Fire Brand Online

Authors: Diana Palmer

Fire Brand (10 page)

A long moment later Ned lifted his head. He had tasted tears on her soft mouth. His dark eyes searched hers. “Why the tears, Aggie?”

“You'll go home...!” she whispered, and her voice broke.

“No!” His lean hands came up to frame her face, to brush away the tears. “My God, I'm not leaving you—not now, not ever! Aggie,” he breathed, “I love you!”

She wasn't certain that she'd heard him, but he repeated it. When he kissed her again, it echoed in her whirling mind, bringing spring to the winter of her heart, blossoming in her like roses in a barren garden. She whispered the words back to him, glorying in the newness of loving. She thought she heard a sound nearby, but she was too lost in Ned to care what it was, or whom.

* * *

B
Y
THE
TIME
Gaby woke up, dressed, and got downstairs after a totally disturbing night, the rest of the family was already at the breakfast table. Bowie was wearing a chambray shirt with jeans and boots, brooding as he ate.

Aggie was talking to Ned Courtland. His hair was faintly disheveled and his face was closed. His thin lips pursed as he listened to Aggie, but his mind was obviously somewhere else. Aggie herself had dressed to the teeth in a white, Mexican-style dress. With her hair neatly brushed and makeup on, her dark eyes sparkled with new fire. She was actually glowing.

“Good morning,” Gaby told them, sitting down next to Bowie. Aggie was at the other end of the table, and Ned Courtland was at Bowie's other side.

“Good morning,” Aggie said.

Gaby felt a little uneasy in her form-fitting olive green blouse and neat jeans. Her tanned arms were bare under the short sleeves and the vee-neck was more revealing than anything she'd ever worn before. She felt Bowie's eyes on her.

“I hope you slept well, Mr. Courtland?” she asked.

“I slept very well, Miss Cane,” he replied. He smiled back at her, but when his eyes moved down the table to Aggie, his smile changed. “Aggie and I were up at dawn, watching the sunrise.”

“It was lovely,” Aggie said, and blushed.

Bowie clanged his fork against his plate. “I've got to help Montoya do some work in the garage this morning,” he muttered, rising. “One of the trucks is running rough, and Bandy's busy breaking new horses for the remuda.”

“Bandy's too rough with them,” Gaby murmured, glancing at the other three faces. Something was very wrong. She could feel the tension in the atmosphere, and she wondered what she'd missed.

“Can't be helped,” Bowie said quietly. “We don't have time to gentle each horse individually.”

“I'd make time,” Ned Courtland said, lifting his head. “A horse is a creature with feeling and intelligence. Raking him with spurs will break his spirit.”

There was a distinct challenge in the very set of the older man's head, and Bowie smiled coolly as he met it head-on. “We don't use big roweled spurs on our stock,” he told Courtland. “When Gaby says that Bandy's rough, she doesn't mean that he whips the horses bloody or beats them. He simply rides them down until they give in, and the horses always have an equal chance. Bandy's had two broken ribs in the past six months.”

Courtland had started to speak when there was an interruption from the hall.

“Señor Bowie, there is a man to see you,” Montoya called from the doorway.

Bowie glanced at Gaby with an odd expression before he nodded curtly to the family and strode out.

“I'm getting pretty tired of this verbal wrangling, Aggie,” Ned said. There was steely purpose in his dark eyes. “I've already taken more from your son in two days than I'd take from most men in one. We've got to get this thing settled.”

Aggie grimaced. “You can see what it's going to be like,” she told him earnestly.

“I don't care,” he replied stubbornly. “I want it out in the open.”

Aggie glanced apologetically at Gaby. “Ned's asked me to marry him,” she said, and blushed again, remembering how he'd asked her.

“Oh, how nice,” Gaby said, and wondered what in the world she and Bowie were going to do now.

Aggie gave her a hard look. “So I'm going to have to fight you, too, is that how it stands?”

“Of course not,” Gaby said quickly, because if she voiced her suspicions or made waves right now, she might accidentally push Aggie away. She got up and hugged the older woman, placating her. “You know I only want the very best for you.”

“Yes, I know that, baby girl.” Aggie hugged her warmly. “Be happy for me.”

“I am.” She congratulated Mr. Courtland, noticing the curious way he eyed her, as if he saw right through her pretense.

“Now all we have to do is convince Bowie,” Aggie murmured with narrowed eyes.

“He's not going to take it lying down,” Ned said quietly. “He'll fight it with his last breath. You need to talk to him.”

“Bowie doesn't listen.” Aggie replied. “He likes his own way.”

“I like my own way, too,” Ned said. “And I'll get it.”

Gaby felt cold chills at the way he said that. She'd have to talk to Bowie, and fast.

“It's my own fault,” Aggie was saying. “Bowie and I were never close. He and his father tried to be, but they were both too cool and distant to make a go of it.”

“I hope he doesn't decide to make trouble,” Ned said, almost to himself. “Not before I...” He stopped, as if he was aware of Gaby's scrutiny.

Aggie didn't notice the thought voiced aloud; she was brooding again. “Maybe if we tied him up and put him in the closet,” she mumbled, “and got a head start, we could get to Wyoming before he missed us.”

Gaby grinned. “He'd cut himself loose and come after you,” she said. She glanced at Mr. Courtland. “So you're in the cattle business, Mr. Courtland?” she began with her best reporter's smile.

“In a very small way,” he returned. “I'm more of a horse man myself.” He pursed his lips and glanced at Aggie with a calculating look. “Not that I've got much capital to invest in them.”

“Are you from Wyoming?” Gaby persisted.

He frowned. “Well, no. Not originally.”

“Where did you.”

“Stop doing your reporter number, Gaby, or I'll kick you,” Aggie threatened. “Which reminds me, how long are you staying?”

Gaby was suddenly under fire, and her mind threatened to shut down. Aggie had seen through her questions. “I'd sort of like to stay for two weeks, if you don't mind. I'll be quiet as a mouse. In fact, I'll hang out with the coyotes and chase cats or something.”

Aggie's face lost its coolness and she laughed. “As long as you aren't underfoot all the time, I don't mind. Stay as long as you like.” Her eyes narrowed. “How about Bowie?” she asked with a calculating smile. “Does he want to stay two weeks, too?”

Gaby flushed, which helped drag the red herring right under Aggie's nose. She looked delighted.

“He can stay, too, unless he gets in my way,” Aggie added firmly. She glanced at Ned, feeling girlishly young. “After all, courting couples need a little time alone together, you know.”

Bowie would love this. Time to get more involved, he'd be thinking, and Gaby was really suspicious now about Mr. Courtland's motives. He sounded and looked more and more like a threat. But what could they do? Aggie was far past the age of consent. If she wanted to get married, it would take more than Gaby and Bowie to stop her.

“Are you going to tell Bowie what we've decided?” Ned asked unexpectedly, staring at Gaby.

“He's sure to find out,” she hedged.

“I was afraid of that.” Ned Courtland sighed heavily. “Sure as God made little green apples, he'll sew his shadow to my boots and trail after us like a kid.”

“He'd better not,” Aggie muttered. She was girded for battle, and Gaby didn't like that determined look. “Gaby, don't you say a word to him about the marriage, or I'll throw you all the way back to Phoenix. It's my right to tell him.”

Gaby grimaced. She didn't want to promise, but if she didn't, Aggie was quite capable of telling her to leave, and that would ruin everything. “Okay,” she said. “I'll let you tell him—but don't take too long.”

“I won't,” Aggie said. “I don't want to hurt either of you, but I don't have to have permission to get married.”

“Of course you don't,” Gaby agreed, faking a smile.

She got up. “I'll just move along and let you two have a few minutes to yourself,” she said. She glanced at Mr. Courtland with a cagey smile. “What breed is a red and white cow, do you know?”

“It's a Hereford,” he said. He studied her for a minute. “And if you want to know, the Japanese trade agreement has already gone through. We'll be sending more beef over there.”

“Why did you send Bowie off on a tangent by pretending not to know?” she asked softly.

“He expected me not to know,” Ned returned easily. He leaned back. “You know, trust is hard to get these days. I understand the misgivings he has, but a woman shouldn't have to fight her own kids to be happy. No child has the right to tell his parent how to live.”

“On the other hand,” Gaby replied, “a child has every right to try to protect that parent when he or she is vulnerable.”

He cocked an eyebrow and smiled. “I wouldn't know. I don't have any kids.”

She glanced toward Aggie. “If you marry Aggie, you will have,” she promised dryly. “A two-hundred-and-twenty-five-pound son.”

Ned's dark eyes twinkled. “As long as I don't have to bounce him on my knee, we should manage all right.”

Gaby smothered a laugh. “I'll see you both later.”

She smiled at Aggie, but when she was out of the room, the smile faded. Things were so complicated. She could see why Bowie was worried about the elusive Mr. Courtland. He was like two sides of a coin, and she couldn't decide which face was the true one. He acted so suspiciously, as if he had an amusing secret and was playing a part. If he was a con man, there was every good reason to make sure he didn't get Bowie out of the way. Aggie was so obviously in love with the man that it was going to be difficult to convince her that he was a scoundrel, even if he turned out to be a bank robber. She went out the front door, having forgotten all about Bowie's visitor until she heard the curt anger in his deep voice.

“I've told you how I feel about this,” Bowie was telling a small, wizened man in a suit. “I won't sell land to a potential polluter. My God, man, can't you see the impact that outfit would have on the water table around here?”

“It's a sound financial venture, Mr. McCayde,” the older man said. “And a number of people in Lassiter are in favor of it. You're not a popular man right now. You have the best land for the project, and it would mean a great deal to the local economy...”

“Not in the long run,” Bowie said stubbornly. “The answer is no.”

“Won't you reconsider?”

“I will not.”

“Mr. McCayde.” The small man smiled, spreading his hands. “Surely you don't intend to go on with this one-man crusade to preserve the land intact. It isn't realistic—not at all. You can't hold back progress.”

“Stand back and watch me.”

“The town will fight you,” he assured Bowie, “tooth and nail. And you'll be the only loser... Mr. McCayde!”

Bowie had picked the little man up in mid-tirade and was calmly carrying him to his car. As Gaby watched, tom between shock and hysterical laughter, Bowie put the man into his car, closed the door, and walked off toward the garage. The visitor, whom Gaby finally recognized as a local realtor, fumbled his engine into life and took off jerkily.

It was several minutes before Gaby could stop laughing long enough to go in search of Bowie. His actions were typical of his hard-bitten personality. Like many desert-bred men, he was nothing if not blunt and forthright about things. But he had a unique way of settling arguments, she thought. That poor realtor wasn't going to forget his reception at Casa Río for a long time.

She could understand his point of view, and Bowie's. But it was hard to match heritage against hungry children and unemployed people. Bowie was so stubborn, she wondered if anything would change his mind. If the townspeople of Lassiter were really up in arms, she could see trouble coming in swarms: But the land question wasn't as urgent as Aggie's situation was.

Out in the corral, Bandy was breaking another horse, his small, grizzled figure clinging stubbornly to the saddle of a bucking gelding. Outside the fence were several small Mexican boys, children of the workers, who were too young to be in school. The woman who was supposed to be watching them was busy putting a basket of laundry into a beat-up pickup truck, to be taken into town to the laundromat.

Bandy was suddenly thrown and landed with a “whump!” in the dust, while the angry horse threw up his hind legs and bucked around the corral, trying to get the saddle off.

“Sorry, Bandy!” Gaby yelled at him. “Are you okay?”

“Everything but my pride is.” He chuckled, dusting himself off as he walked toward her. “Good to have you home, kid.”

“Good to be home.” She liked Bandy. His father had been a friend of the infamous Pancho Villa, and Bandy could spin a fine tale about the old days down in Douglas, on the border, and the excitement of watching the Mexican Revolution from the rooftops of that small town.

The pale blue eyes studied her warily from a face like scorched leather. “You down here because of Miss Aggie's house guest?” he asked pointedly. “Because I'd bet money Bowie is.”

“Shame on you for gossiping,” she chided.

“Should be, I reckon. He's no lily, that Wyoming fella,” he said, nodding toward the newcomer, who was walking toward the corral with Aggie. “Look how he walks—just like a cowboy. Nothing in the world more ungainly on the ground than a... Good God!”

Other books

Tours of the Black Clock by Erickson, Steve;
12 Hours In Paradise by Kathryn Berla
Book of Stolen Tales by D J Mcintosh
Limestone Man by Robert Minhinnick
Of Bone and Thunder by Chris Evans
The Golden Lily by Richelle Mead
Alphabet by Kathy Page
The Rebel by McGoldrick, May