Only in My Arms (34 page)

Read Only in My Arms Online

Authors: Jo Goodman

Mary's hand strayed to her side to finger the rosary that was no longer there. The wind picked up again, blowing life into the cavern. Mary bowed her head and prayed for all the lost souls, Ryder among them.

Her voice came to Ryder on the back of the wind. He stood just inside the entrance and leaned heavily against the stone archway. She wasn't visible to him, but her voice was the sweetest music.

"Mary."

She thought she had imagined it at first, that it was only the wind playing tricks on her. But then it came again and Mary knew—she
knew
her prayers had been answered. Her eyes flew open and her head snapped up and she searched the yawning entrance for the dark silhouette that was no part of the landscape. "Ryder!" She was on her feet when she saw him, running to his side.

He was almost toppled by the force of her arms around him. His greeting was a groan.

Mary stepped back instantly, her eyes trying to pierce the darkness to search his face. "What is it?" she demanded. "You've been hurt, haven't you?"

"It's not so bad."

Fear made her voice sharp. "I suppose you think that's an answer to my question. You should have said, 'Yes.' I'll be the one to determine how bad it is."

"Be careful. You're beginning to sound like a wife." He sucked in the beginnings of a laugh as pain shot through him. Ryder clutched his side to limit the agony to as small a place as possible.

Mary stopped her gentle search. "Let me light a lantern," she said. "I can't do you any good in the dark. I may even hurt you."

Ryder missed her hands immediately. "What are you doing here anyway? You should be back in the chamber."

Mary struck the flint. White light nicely illuminated the sour look she gave him. For good measure it was accompanied by an unladylike snort.

His smile was lopsided. "Point taken," he said dryly.

Mary raised the lantern. "Oh, God," she whispered. Ryder's face was ashen and lines of strain were clearly etched at the corners of his mouth and eyes. Dried blood covered his fingers and streaked the front of his breechcloth. The wound that was the source of the blood ran in an ugly, jagged line for most of the length of Ryder's left thigh. He had torn part of the breechcloth to make a bandage, but it was inadequate for the task. Some of the buckskin had dried to the wound while elsewhere blood continued to drip.

She looked at the way Ryder was still holding his ribs. "Broken?" she asked.

He nodded. "Two, I think."

Her eyes dropped to his feet. The bundle of clothing he had gone out for was lying there.

Ryder followed her gaze. "I brought back the prize."

Mary didn't comment. She couldn't help but wonder at the cost. "Let me fix a bandage for you now."

He shook his head. "I'll bleed more if you lift the bandage I've made. I want to get out of this area. We're too vulnerable."

"Were you followed?"

"No, but I won't be so difficult to track."

She understood. He hadn't been able to cover the route he had taken. Somewhere beyond the cavern there was enough of Ryder's blood for the trail to be picked up again. Mary wouldn't let herself think about that now. Ryder wasn't nearly as strong as he was pretending to be. "I need to get you back to the chamber where I can look after you properly," she said. "Should I support you or would it be less painful for you to walk unassisted?"

"I can go alone," he said. "You carry the clothing and the light. Don't forget to bring my lantern."

Mary led the way as Ryder hobbled behind her. It was difficult to keep her pace as slow as his. His normal stride would have swallowed hers; now it was only a third as long. She asked no questions, not wanting to tax his strength any further. Halfway to the chamber it seemed that Ryder's face was the same pale shade of gray as his eyes. A hundred yards from their chamber's entrance Mary had to present her shoulder and arm for his support whether it pained him or not.

Leaving one lantern and the clothes bundle behind, Mary managed to get Ryder to the bed. She realized how much he had girded himself for that effort. Once he was lifted onto the edge of the rock shelf, he collapsed.

Mary's work began at that moment. She made Ryder as comfortable as possible, rearranging the blankets under him and folding another for a pillow. At the well she filled the basin and dipped several cloths into the cold water. Laying it all aside for a moment, Mary raided the trunk for material that would make the best bandage. She settled on her own chemise, tearing it into long strips. She rifled the saddlebag that Florence Gardner had packed and found a flask of alcohol, the bottle of liniment, and a small sewing kit.

Ryder's eyes were closed when Mary returned to the bed and his breathing was shallow. She removed his bandana and put the back of her hand to his cheek. His skin was cold and clammy. She touched his lips lightly with her fingertips and began to work.

The jagged wound on his thigh required her first attention. There were other scratches and cuts, but none so deep as to call for stitching the way this longest one did. Little Sisters of the Poor had served the hospital in Queens for years. Mary was no stranger to nursing. She had been called upon to cleanse wounds and stitch them before, and she had always done it with a glad heart. It wasn't the same now. Her hands were shaking.

She pushed Ryder's breechcloth free of his thigh and began removing the dried-on bandage. The wound bled again, but she had learned from doctors that wasn't necessarily a bad thing; infection could be washed away by the blood. Mary carefully laid back the torn flesh and used Ryder's knife to cut away the dead and shredded tissue. She cleaned the wound first with soap and then inspected it. There were embedded bits of gravel that had to be painstakingly removed. When Mary had removed as many of them as she could hope to get, she cleaned the wound again, then liberally showered it with alcohol.

Ryder had been stoic until that point, centering his mind on something other than the pain. With the introduction of the alcohol, he fainted.

"Thank you, God," Mary whispered. It was beyond her how he could have withstood so much in the first place. She glanced at his face and saw the release of tension in his features. With his final collapse, she noticed that her hands were no longer shaking. Mary bent to her task, working quickly before Ryder regained consciousness.

She threaded the needle deftly, wishing only that she had one curved for sutures. "Oh, Maggie," she said softly, "what I wouldn't give for even a tenth of your skill." But her physician sister couldn't aid her now, so Mary set to work. She sutured the underlying tissue first with the alcohol-soaked thread. The wound took sixty stitches before she was ready to close the skin over it.

Ryder came awake as she was finishing the last of the skin sutures. He watched her cut off the thread and study her work with a critical eye. "Well?" he asked hoarsely. The white lines were at the corners of his mouth again.

"Mama said that needlepoint was never my strong suit," she said. "But I think she'd change her mind if she saw this."

"It didn't have to be pretty," he said.

Mary laid one hand over his forehead, brushing back his thick hair where it clung to his skin. She smiled down at him. "Oh, it's not," she told him. "But it's good."

"That's all right, then." He closed his eyes. Mary's fingers were warm where they stroked his cheek. He wanted to reach for her hand, but his arm fell uselessly back to his side.

She bent and kissed his cool cheek. Her hand found his. Tears welled in her eyes as she felt him squeeze it. In other circumstances she would have called the gesture gentle. She recognized it now as weak. "Rest," she said softly. Then she sat by his side while he did just that.

"You should eat something," Mary told him. She raised a spoon of vegetables to Ryder's lips.

He took a bite, chewed, and then laid his head back down. "It's enough," he said tiredly.

"But—"

"It's enough."

"Very well." Mary gave in because she couldn't force the issue. Ryder wasn't regaining his strength with the speed Mary had hoped for. He slept in fits and starts, the pain of his broken ribs giving him little relief when he unwittingly turned on his side. What measure of comfort he could derive from sleep was erased soon upon waking. The scar on his thigh was puffy and red where it curved near his knee, and Mary was afraid she was seeing the first signs of infection.

She took away the food, rinsed the plate, and then sat down in the rocker. She spent what passed for her nights in that chair, moving it closer to the bed so she would hear Ryder each time he woke. "Would you like me to read to you?" she asked.

"No."

"Then let me bathe you. It will ease the heat in your skin."

Her hands all over his body? Ease the heat? Not likely. "No."

"As you wish." Once again she acquiesced with a grace that would have astonished her family or the Little Sisters.

"I know what you're doing," he said.

"Oh?" She didn't bother looking in his direction, pretending no interest as she unrolled his maps.

"You're giving in."

One of Mary's brows shot up. She raised her face and speared Ryder with a level look. "Not fighting is not always the same as giving in."

Groaning softly, Ryder closed his eyes. That meant she was biding her time. Probably had plans to force-feed him while he was unconscious and bathe him while he slept. He turned gingerly over on his side, determined to stay awake as long as possible. "What are you doing with those?"

"Looking for gold," she said. "Same as you were."

"You don't know where to look."

She shrugged and bent to her task again. "I found Colter Canyon marked on this first map, and I've been able to match the elevation markers and topographical features to the second map. It's really just a closer view, isn't it? I suppose it intentionally wasn't marked as Colter Canyon to make it less useful to someone who stumbled upon it."

"Like you."

She ignored his sarcasm and said patiently, "No, not like me. Like another prospector. That
is
who drew this map, isn't it? Your prospector friend?"

Ryder's brows raised a fraction. He nodded his head slowly.

"Your amazement is not flattering. I
know
how to read a map, and I can put two and two together for the correct sum as well as anyone else."

At least he'd gotten a bit of a rise out of her. "Yes, you're right. Joe Panama drew the map. He explored most of this area at one time or another. He was convinced there was a mother lode of silver in these parts."

Mary could hear the strain in Ryder's voice, the small breaths between sentences that signaled he was tiring. She thought of cautioning him, but decided against it. Showing concern for his strength was a sure means of raising his ire. "Did he ever discover it?" she asked. Perhaps she could simply exhaust him with questions.

Ryder shook his head. "Not that he ever told me."

"He's dead?"

"A few years ago. He killed himself not far from here after a fall broke his back."

Mary's features softened compassionately. "You found him?"

"No," he said, watching her closely. "I was with him."

Her eyes widened. "And you let him kill himself?"

"I let him end his suffering," he said, "because I couldn't end it for him."

"He asked you to?"

"Of course." He saw Mary's brows draw together as she struggled with this information. "Measuring one sin against the other?" he asked. "Was letting Joe pull the trigger any different than pulling it myself? What if I told you that he didn't carry a gun?" He saw her brows lift fractionally. "That's right. I gave him mine."

Something of the sorrow Mary felt in her heart touched her eyes.

"I'm not a saint," Ryder said.

"I never mistook you for one."

"If you're cataloging my sins, I have some more I—"

"I'm not judging you," she said quietly. "I was only thinking how it must have pained you to make such a difficult choice. I know what the Church teaches, but I can't help wonder how I might have decided in the same circumstances."

"You might find out," he said gravely.

At first she didn't take his meaning. Her features went from blank to horrified as she saw him tap his wounded leg lightly. "What are you saying? You want me to shoot you?"

"Not just this minute."

"Don't make light of this," she said angrily. Mary's mouth flattened and her tone became sharper. "Or me. I find nothing about it remotely humorous."

"I recall that not so long ago you held a Henry rifle to my chest and claimed you were willing to use it."

Mary did not appreciate being reminded. "That was different," she snapped.

"What was different was that I was in good health then. Now that I'm likely to die, you're not willing to help me along. You have a confusing sense of morality."

"It would have been a grievous sin if I had killed you then. It would be an equally grievous one if I did it now."

"So you're saying it really wouldn't have been different at all," he said thoughtfully. "You're very quick to change your opinion." He saw her face flush and her eyes flash. "You look as if you're giving my request more serious consideration. Perhaps the key to getting what I want is to goad you into it."

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