The Lady in the Mist (The Western Werewolf Legend #1) (6 page)

Sonja nodded.  She understood his meaning.  Rather than try for outrage at the affront of his plight in life, she firmed her bottom lip before asking, “You are decorated?”

Surprised momentarily, Ty paused.  She’d examined his medals.  Now if she would tell him where his clothes were.  “Yes, I fought in the first Manassas.  Received the badge of honor for bravery there.”

“I’m impressed,” she offered coolly.  “Do you miss your family, Lieutenant?”

Something had her back stiff.  “Yes, very much.  I find the not knowing to be the worst.  Still, no word from me can’t be good for their nerves.  Of course, I can take care of myself, but that doesn’t hold water where Maggie and Cloe are concerned.”

“Your wife and mother?” she asked.

“No, my brother’s wife is Cloe and Maggie is our housekeeper.  She’s like a mother to us though; she’s been with us ever since I came along.”  Ty paused a moment when he remembered how he’d been thinking of them that night in the swamp.  With his death near, he realized he’d been wishing to see them one last time.  “Did you find me in the swamp?”

Sonja nodded.  “Yes, I did.”  She dropped her gaze to her lap.  “You were dying,” she said softly.

Ty waited before asking the questions he’d wanted to ask since he awoke.  Afraid she wouldn’t tell him, he hesitated.  She must’ve seen the hesitancy in his face.  “Go ahead.  You have a question.  Ask, Lieutenant.”

A warm flush filled his jaws as he realized she’d read his mind.  “Are you the woman who came to me out of the mist?”

“Yes”

“Did you carry me?”

Sonja tensed with the question.  Her jaw clinched telling him she didn’t want to give away anything but maybe he could get at least that much out of her.  “Yes, I located a horse.”

Horses?  Where had there been horses?  The Yankees had shot theirs first.  He didn’t recall the vision he’d seen in the mist on a horse.  “I thought perhaps your husband helped you carry me home.”

She sent him another tense lipped glance. “He’s… he’s gone.”  Her chin lifted a fraction.

The statement had taken some consideration.  Finding something amiss, he went on, “Gone where?” he asked.

Sonja glanced at the drapes over the singular window in the room.  Tiny beads of sunlight poked through and played across the bed, eliminating the dust particles floating in the light.  She lowered her head.  The statement became clear before she answered and Ty realized how he blundered.  In a voice he could barely understand, she said, “He’s dead. He died at the First Manassas.”  Before Ty could apologize, she rose and headed for the door.  “I have things I have to do.  Call me when you are through.”

Berating himself for his stupidity, he called out to her.  “Wait, Mrs. Brooks, I’m sorry.”

Sonja stopped but didn’t turn back around.

Ty rose, hobbling to her.  Reaching out he traced a golden curl down her cheek.  “I’m sorry.”  The man she’d called husband had gone off to fight the Rebels at the First Manassas.  He was a Rebel from the First Manassas.

“You aren’t responsible.”

Two strokes of the clock in the front room sounded before either of them looked away.  Sonja was the first to move.  Without another word, she closed the door behind her leaving him alone once more.

Ty let her go.  What had he done?  He shouldn’t have touched her, but he couldn’t help the feeling washing over him.  She’d saved his life.  He should be grateful.  But the urge to comfort her came from somewhere deeper.  He wouldn’t be around for long, his conscious reminded him.  Ty found he didn’t care at the moment.  Turning, he followed her to the kitchen.

She stilled when he came up behind her.  “I should be apologizing for back there.”

Her back stiffened.

“But, the truth is I can’t apologize for the way I feel.  You’ve cast some sort of spell over me.”

She lowered the skillet to the counter top.  Resting her hands atop the blackened iron, she stilled again.  She didn’t turn to him but stared out the window instead.

“I’m grateful to you for all you’ve done.”

Sonja released a breath before dropping her gaze to her folded hands.

“But I shouldn’t be feeling the way I do right now.  My feelings will cause you nothing but pain.”  Ty paused.

Sonja turned to him, her eyes swimming with tears.  Her mouth trembled.  “No, you’re wrong.  I will cause you pain,” she said.

Tears trickle unheeded down her cheeks.  “You’re in grave danger, Sonja.  You’re harboring the enemy.”

“Yes, I am.”  The words were a statement, pure and simple.

***

The day moved like molasses in the winter.  Ty chaffed at having to remain in bed while Sonja, staying distant since their talk, chopped wood outside.  Chickens clucked while a rooster crowed his warning to any trespassers.  At the window, a goat appeared.  When he realized Ty watched him, he bumped the windowpane as if to say, “Where’s my food?”

Getting up, Ty tried out his leg, managing to limp to the front door with a crust of dried bread in hand.  When the goat spied him, he came running.  Soon they were engaged in a game of tricks for a treat.

Drawn to the sound of wood being chopped, Ty found her hard at work.  She labored without a break.  Ty could see how hard she pushed herself.  Slowly, he made his way to where she stacked wood.  When she turned, he handed her a cup of water.  “Soon, I’ll be able to do that for you.”

When she cut her eyes at him coupled with a dubious stare, he understood.  The doubt in her expression didn’t stop him from explaining further.  “Helping is the least I can do after all you’ve done for me.”  Waiting for a reaction with a keen eye, his lips turned up into a crooked smile.  “You saved my life.  I owe you more than I’ll ever be able to repay.”

Sonja wiped the sweat from her brow before picking up the ax again.  “You don’t owe me anything, Lieutenant.  I tried my best.  Still, by some miracle, you survived.”  Her shrug spoke volumes.  “It’s as simple as that.  Some live, some don’t.”

Ty understood her meaning.  Reaching for her arm, he turned her and found her eyes.  “That may be the case, but I pay my debts.  I’ll stay for as long as I can.  A man pays his debts.”  Pausing, he recognized the irritation and pain in her face.  “There now,” he said as she tried to dislodge his grip.  “I’m not a man to speak lightly of such a serious pledge.”  He held on.  Her response would come.

Sonja nodded.

“I’ll have a lot of work to do, but I promise, I’ll do everything I can to help before I move on.  Maybe I can even change your mind of me as a Rebel.

She looked down for a moment.  “There’s much to be done.  You’ll have your work cut out for you, Lieutenant.  Are you up to the challenge?”

“I believe I am, Mrs. Brooks.”  Giving her a wry grin, Ty angled his head, tilted toward the barn.  “Is there room in there where I can bunk?”

Sonja nodded.

“Well then, I’ll get my things and be out of your way.”  With a two-fingered salute, he started back to the cottage.

“Wait.”  Her voice held flustered impatience.  Shaking her head at him, she said, “The nights are still cold this early in the year.  You can bunk by the fire in the front room if you like.  I don’t mind.”

She started to turn back to the woodpile, but before she turned to leave, her features relaxed some.  Inwardly he smiled.  Perhaps he would win the day after all.

“All right, you have a deal.”  Rubbing the length of his thigh through the homespun trousers, he smiled.  “I should be able to handle the chore by tomorrow, the next day at the latest.  Leave the wood splitting for me.”

She studied him coolly.

He winked.  “I’ve had a good doctor.”  With a wicked grin, he turned before heading back the way he’d came.  Whistling a mindless tune, Ty motioned for the goat to follow.  Retracing his steps to the front porch, he settled once more to rest his leg.  Though strong, the leg hadn’t healed completely.  He didn’t assume he’d been exaggerating about the progress he made.  At the rate of healing he’d witnessed, he’d give the limb a day or two before he could get started on the work.

“All right, I’ll leave the wood to you,” she said after she trailed behind him to gather her garden basket.  Positioning a straw bonnet over her golden curls, Sonja veered away from the house toward the path leading to the swamp.

From his perch on the porch, he examined her trim form as she walked the foot trail toward the garden she’d told him about.  Her hair shining in the sun reminded him of spun gold. Hesitating a moment, Ty considered what he’d set into motion.  Being a Rebel meant he had a duty to fulfill.  Dallying with a woman wasn’t part of his duty.

The widow Brooks was a fetching woman to be sure.  He couldn’t take his eyes off her until she disappeared into the undergrowth.  She held herself in check while sharing only what she deemed necessary.  The woman had secrets.  Ty debated the challenge of discovering all her secrets.  She would be worth the effort.  After all, he’d promised to help out.  Besides, a mysterious woman always proved interesting.  He did find Sonja Brooks quite mysterious.  With his curiosity peaked, Ty set about making plans.

He had some obstacles to overcome.  One being the fact he remained the enemy.  Another was the fact he had Indian blood, a half-breed.  Both he could work with.  After all, he had a talent for waxing inventive when it came to wooing a woman.  Sonja Brooks fascinated him.  Oh, yes, he wanted nothing better than to get to know her on a very personal level.

He hadn’t been completely honest with her about wanting to repay his debt.  The reason for staying had been two-fold.  As an officer in the Confederate Army he had unfinished business.  Discovering the real reason for the attacked on his unit encompassed that business.

Though disguised as a supply detail, his mission had been to deliver much-needed weapons, mainly gunpowder to Jeb Stewart’s army.  They were planning to meet the Yankees in an area deemed ‘the wildernesses.  With plenty of time to consider the ambush of his detachment, Ty had concluded, spies had infiltrated their lines alerting the Yankees of their whereabouts.  Ammunitions were like gold to both sides in the war.  Easy to surmise that the Yankees had taken them before setting the wagons ablaze.  Confederate gray could’ve actually been turncoats for the Union Army.  Glancing back down the trail, Ty clinched his jaw tighter.  What kind of cowards delivered such a message?

A red haze formed over his eyes.  Retribution would be sweet.  He’d enjoy taking his revenge on the ones responsible.  The timing needed to be soon, he mused, but without a weapon to his name, he would have to bide his time.  A fact-finding mission was in order.  Ty rose setting off down the road.

***

The battlefield held an eerie calm.  The ground, dark with scorched patches of burned earth where wagons had exploded into bits held their own harsh reality.  Debris littered the area. Scattered everywhere were the remains of metal, wood, and clothing, as well as men’s bones.

Standing there, Ty recalled the awful sound of the first explosion, which had taken out the last wagon in the supply line.  He could still hear the anguished screams of his men.

Immediately, he’d given the order to take cover as snipers began picking off the Rebels one by one.  With no idea where the shots were coming from, Ty had ordered none of his men waste ammunition until they could pinpoint their targets.

He bore down on the memory of the hot metal penetrating his thigh.  Pain, the likes of which he’d never experienced, ripped him open in a flash of light mixed with a horrible burning.  Everything began to move in slow motion afterward.  Quelling the panic, which ensued, proved futile. One after another, the explosions continued.  His men calling for help, while gunfire surrounding them.  The showers of fire debris raining down on them mixed with the blood proved too much.

Dropping to his knees, Ty banked a hand on either side of his head to block the sounds.  The turmoil grew in intensity.  Clutching at his head, he wished for peace.

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