Authors: Peggy Webb
Tags: #Indian heroes, #romantic suspense, #Southern authors, #dangerous heroes, #Native American heroes, #romance, #Peggy Webb backlist, #Peggy Webb romance, #classic romance, #medical mystery, #contemporary romance
Her feet felt heavy as she walked into the room, and dust and tears clogged her throat. A film of dust lay over all the feminine things she’d bought for her daughter, who preferred frogs to frills.
It was time to clear the dust away. Past time. No matter what Cole said.
She called his name once more, and the echoing silence mocked her.
She hurried outside, filled with purpose. The sweet smell of hay tickled her nose as she pushed open the heavy barn doors. Cole stood in the center of the barn, pitching hay. He didn’t even look up, but his mare whinnied a greeting from her stall.
“I was looking for you in the house.”
Cole stared at her as if she were a stranger, or worse, someone he had grown to hate. Anna shivered at the power of grief.
“I want to talk to you, Cole.”
A wisp of hay drifted down from the loft and settled on his cheek. He continued pitching hay as if he hadn’t heard her.
Rage built in Anna. A senseless disease had stolen her children, and now a senseless silence was stealing her husband.
“Dammit, Cole. Speak to me.”
Slowly he turned to stare at her, his entire body rigid and unforgiving, as if she had personally been responsible for the death of their children.
“I can’t go on like this.” She launched herself at him, knocking the pitchfork from his hand. “Do you hear me, Cole? I can’t go on this way.”
He caught her upper arms to keep them both from falling. A muscle ticked in the side of his jaw, and his own rage was plainly stamped on his face.
She beat his chest with her balled-up fists. The mare whinnied and kicked the wall of her stall.
“You killed my children and now you’re killing our marriage. I won’t let you. Do you hear me? I won’t let you.” Tears streamed down her cheeks as she caught the lapels of his shirt. “I love you, Cole. I won’t let you do this to us.”
Desolate, she pressed her face into his chest and her tears soaked the front of his shirt. Softly, he touched her hair. Astonished, Anna looked up into the face of her husband.
“Sweet
lhokomuk
,” he whispered. “My sweet
lhokomuk
.”
Standing on tiptoe, she wrapped her arms around his neck and felt the blessed touch of his lips upon hers. She clung to him with the urgency of a parched desert wanderer who had suddenly discovered water.
“My darling . . . my love.” As she swayed against him, the months of their discord vanished.
Locked together, they fell upon the sweet-smelling hay, desperate in their haste. With the hungry grunting of animals, they tore aside restraints until at last they were joined, legs tangled, hips melded, wild in the ancient rhythms they knew so well. There were no sweet words, no erotic meanderings, no tender caresses, only the hard straining of bodies too long denied.
If Anna missed the whispered love music of Muskogean and the slow-melting heat of kisses that started at the throat and went to the outer edges of her being, she wasn’t about to say so. It was enough that Cole was in her, filling her with his hard flesh and the sweet semen that spewed from him like warm honey.
Afterward she lay in his arms, hoping for the soft love words she remembered so well. But he lay silently against the hay, holding her so tightly, she could barely breathe.
“Cole?” When he didn’t answer, she lifted herself on her elbow and kissed his lips. “I love you, Cole.”
His eyes were black pools, sucking her down until she was filled with his tragedy and his despair.
Winds moaned around the eaves and snow drifted through the cracks. Anna shivered, suddenly so cold, she had to bite her bottom lip to keep her teeth from chattering.
“I’m cold, Cole. Let’s go inside.”
They straightened their clothes, then went into the house, side by side, not touching. Inside the warm kitchen, where they’d made love against the refrigerator and on the floor and in the pantry, giggling like teenagers, Cole sat on a tall stool, as silent as the mountains. And Anna knew she was losing him. She put water on the stove for tea then, and stood in front of him, forcing him to look at her.
“Your loss is mine too, Cole. Your pain is mine.” She might as well have been one of the kitchen appliances for all the notice he took. “Every day of my life I feel the emptiness . . . and it hurts so much, I want to fall with my face to the ground and never get up.”
“But I don’t give in, Cole. I won’t be defeated. I have my son and I have you.” She caught both his hands. “Let’s leave here. Let’s go to California and make a fresh start.”
Water boiled over, hissing like snakes in the quiet room. The front door banged open and Clint called, “Hey, anybody here? I’m home.”
Cole squeezed her hand, then abruptly he released her and stood up.
“I’m sorry, Anna.”
His footsteps echoed on the tile floor and the back door banged shut behind him.
“Hey, where’s Dad going?”
“I don’t know.”
“He forgot his coat.” Clint lifted Cole’s leather jacket with the sheepskin lining off the coat rack.
“Maybe he’ll be right back.” Anna knew she was lying to herself.
Cole didn’t come back, not even when all the stars left the sky and the snow came down so thick, she couldn’t see the trees in her front yard.
o0o
Wrapped in his buffalo robe, the shaman stood in the doorway of his cabin and watched the snow cover the tops of the mountains. The north wind wailed his winter song, and the smoke from his pipe curled upward to join the wind. Out of the smoke and the snow came the white buffalo, charging across the mountaintops like thunder. With its dazzling white skin, it flashed by so quickly that he was temporarily blinded.
Feeling his way, the medicine man went inside and shut the door. He’d seen the sign. Soon the white witch would be driven from the land, and once more it would be filled with peace and light, its people begging for the return of the Great One.
Filled with power, he cast aside his robe and pipe and began the ancient dance of his ancestors.
o0o
Winds buffeted the barn door, and snow sifted through the cracks to cover the piles of hay like powdered sugar. Eagle leaned against the side of an empty stall with his arms wrapped around himself, not certain whether the cold he felt came from outside or whether it was a bone-deep malady destined to freeze his soul.
Anna had been in tears when she called him. Cole never touched her anymore, she said, spilling intimate secrets that Eagle had no right to hear. He took no interest in his son, none in her work, and he wouldn’t even talk about moving to California for a fresh start.
“He can’t seem to work through his grief, Eagle,” she’d said. “I don’t know what to do anymore. Please help me.”
Cole stared at him with eyes as black as tar pits, showing nothing, neither love nor welcome.
“Anna sent for you,” he said.
“I came to help,” Eagle said, ashamed of himself. Anna shouldn’t have had to call for help. He should have been there to offer. He’d failed his family.
“Get on your horse and leave.”
In spite of his months of grieving, Cole still had the look of a man who could wrestle with the cougars that prowled the mountains and come out a winner.
“No. I won’t leave. Not until you talk to me.”
Cole turned his back and began to pour feed into a bucket.
“Let’s talk about your family, Cole. Anna loves you, and Clint worships you. How can you turn your back on them? And what about our parents? They’re old and needy.”
Dovie cried over her lost grandchildren every day, and Winston, whose stroke had left him emotionally fragile, was unable to provide the kind of comfort and support she needed. Wolf and Star, away at school in Boston, had no idea what was happening to the family.
Yesterday, standing in Dovie’s kitchen with a mug of hot chocolate warming his hands, Eagle had listened to his mother’s anguished ramblings.
“Remember when you were six years old and so sick . . .” She laced her hands tightly together across her lap. “How can you remember? You were almost dead . . . like our little Bucky and Mary Doe.”
Her voice broke, then she pulled herself back together. “Cole sat by your bed the whole time, refusing to even come to the kitchen for meals. I had to bring his food on a tray.”
Dovie reached a fragile, blue-veined hand toward Eagle, and he clasped it tightly. “He loves his family so. Why doesn’t he come to see us now?”
If there were any mercy left in the universe, it would surely have rained down upon Dovie Mingo’s head. She was good, a woman whose purity of heart should have kept her folded under the protective wings of the Great Spirit.
But Eagle knew there was no mercy. Sometimes there was not even justice. There was only courage.
“Your family needs you,” he said.
“Go to hell.” His brother didn’t even turn around.
“You’re a coward, Cole.” Leaving his place by the stall, Eagle towered over his brother with his hands balled into fists. “You’re a yellow-bellied coward!”
Cole launched himself upon his brother. His fists were hard and deadly. Eagle let himself become a punching bag, taking blow after blow in the stomach without flinching.
“Take that back.”
“
Imilha
!” Eagle said. “Coward!”
Grunting with effort, Cole swung repeatedly, until finally he sagged. Eagle wrapped his arms around his brother, and together they fell upon the hay. Lying side by side, staring up at the silver sunlight sliding through the barn’s rafters, the brothers drifted backward to a time when they could bend over the creek and see their twin reflections in the sweet water singing over the rocks, a time when dreams were as high and bright as the kites they flew on the March wind.
“Remember that dog I had?” Cole said. “Sally?”
“Sally was mine.”
“Ours.”
“She was the best squirrel dog in Witch Dance.”
“They don’t breed squirrel dogs like that anymore.”
“No. They don’t.”
“Bucky loved dogs.” Cole began to cry.
Eagle comforted his brother as if he were a child, and Cole’s tears wet the front of his shirt. When the racking sobs ended, Eagle pulled him to his feet.
“There is a grief counselor in Ada you and Anna should see, Cole.”
“No. No doctors.”
“Do it for Anna, Cole. I’m going in the house and tell her to set up an appointment.” Eagle started toward the barn door, then turned and held his hand out to his brother. “Coming?”
“Not yet. But soon, Eagle. Soon.”
Eagle pulled his coat collar close as he walked through the snow Lights beckoned from the windows of Cole’s house, and inside he could see Anna, bent over her sewing with the graceful sweep of her hair hiding her face.
What would he tell her about her husband? That he didn’t want anybody’s help? That the dead were more important to him than the living?
She looked up and smiled when he entered the room. Eagle decided he would temper the truth with mercy.
o0o
When Kate saw the note slipped under her clinic door, she recoiled. Instinctively she pulled her coat collar close and swiveled her head, searching the area for intruders. It was only five o’clock, and shadows still lay on the land.
Was that movement behind the silver maple on the hillside? Kate shrank into the clinic doorway, partially hidden. A flurry in the nearby treetop made her jump. Lifting her gaze, she saw an owl climbing toward the rising sun, beating its wings on the air.
“By all the saints, I’m going to have to do better than this.”
If she didn’t get control of herself, she’d be such a bundle of nerves that she’d be of no use as a doctor. She took a deep, steadying breath, then bent and picked up the note.
“Please help me, Doctor Kate. My husband won’t let me bring Adam and Rachel to you. Come to them, please. They are very sick from the Witch Creek. Marjorie Kent.”
Kate leaned against the door, weak. She’d thought the war was over, but it seemed she’d won only the first battle.
She grabbed her black bag and went into the stable to saddle Mahli. The Kents lived in back country. Her car would never get through the rough terrain, and her old mare would be hard pressed to make it.
“It’s just you and me, old girl.” Kate rubbed the mare’s velvety nose. “I hate to ask you to do this, pal, but it’s the only way”
Mahli whinnied and tossed her mane. A high-priced Thoroughbred would never have lasted as long as Mahli, but she was a Chickasaw horse, built for endurance as well as speed. Mahli’s speed was no longer anything to brag about, but she would go until she dropped in her tracks.
Kate set a sedate pace, saving Mahli’s strength for the rough terrain near the Kent place. Cold winds whipped her hair and reddened her cheeks, but Kate was oblivious of the weather. She was remembering summer winds and summer stars and Eagle Mingo waiting on a rainbow-colored blanket.
You will come to me
, he’d said, and she had, riding the back of her mare as pale as moonlight.
When Mahli was gone, her last fragile tie to Eagle would be dead. Kate shivered, chilled to the bone by wind and memories.
At the foot of the Arbuckle Mountains, Mahli balked. The road leading upward was hardly more than a faint trail through huge boulders and thick scrub brush.
“Come on, girl.” Leaning low, Kate rubbed Mahli’s neck. “You can do it.”
Mahli started upward, gingerly finding her footing among the rocks. Clouds obscured the sun, and thunder rumbled like the distant beat of war drums. A flock of ravens, black as night, rose upward, crying their discontent.
Mahli sidestepped, her ears flattened. Shivers ran through Kate once more, and she glanced over her shoulder. Was someone hiding behind the rocks, or was it merely a shadow? Suddenly she wished she hadn’t come alone. There was nothing for miles around except rocks and scrub brush and patches of trees. She could vanish, and it would be days before anyone found her.
Instinctively she reached toward the black bag hanging from her saddle. It contained more than medical supplies; inside was her .38 Smith and Wesson.
Behind the rocks, the man laughed without sound. Did the white witch woman think he was afraid of her gun?