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Authors: Kat Martin

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BOOK: Magnificent Passage
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The governor seemed undaunted. “I assure you, gentlemen,
no one else
but
you could
drag
her here. You've read the papers. You know a little about what you're dealing with. When Julia wants something, she'll do anything in her power to get it.
“I've asked your help because there is no one else I can trust. She may be hot-headed, but she is still my daughter. We haven't been close since her mother died, but she's my responsibility, and it's high time I did something about it. I'll pay you six months' wages to bring her home.”
Hawk raised a brow at the sum. At most, it would take two months to complete the job—half a year's pay for a couple months' work wasn't bad. Along with the savings he already had, it would be more than enough to make the final payment on the ranch he was buying near Placerville. He'd be able to close the sale earlier than anticipated. The sooner he made the final payment, the sooner he'd be able to take possession of the property. He could hardly wait.
He glanced to his partner. James nodded his agreement.
“Well, Governor, looks like you win.” Hawk sank slowly back into his chair, glad for the money, but unhappy about the nature of the assignment. The last thing he wanted was to drag an unwilling woman halfway across the country—especially a spoiled one like Julia Ashton. He'd already formed a dislike for the girl, just from the stories he'd heard.
“There's only one more thing I ask,” the governor added. He scratched at his graying temple. “Your solemn word, as gentlemen and as my friends, that you will not”—he searched for the right words—“take . . .
liberties
with my daughter. I know how enticing she can be, but I want your word you will not in any way . . . ”
Hawk looked the governor squarely in the eye. “You have my word.”
“And mine, sir,” James added.
“It's settled, then.” The governor looked relieved. “Here is a daguerreotype of my daughter. It's a little old, but I prefer it to the engravings in the papers. My secretary, Isaac, will give you the rest of the information you'll need before you leave.
“This must be kept strictly confidential. Julia's reputation would be sullied worse than it is already if it were discovered she traveled here without a female chaperone. But, against my wishes, she left Mrs. Riden back in Boston. Besides, you'll need all your wits about you just to get
her
here. She'll try to make your life miserable on that trip. Don't be afraid to use whatever force you need, within reason, to keep her in line. Now, get a good night's sleep, and I wish you a safe and successful journey.”
The governor shook hands with the two men. “Good luck, gentlemen. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have a meeting at the Capitol.” With his shoulders a little straighter than when he arrived, he departed.
A servant brought the two men a whiskey and Isaac brought the needed information. Hawk drained his glass in one quick motion. James followed suit, and they left the study.
They crossed the formal entry and the wide front porch, and walked into the bright sunlight. Great expanses of manicured lawn surrounded the mansion and red, pink, and yellow roses flowered beside the house. The two men headed up the curving carriageway to where their horses were tied.
“Well, Hawk, what do you think we've let ourselves in for?” James asked.
“God only knows. Guess we'll find out in Fort Laramie—if she's still there.”
CHAPTER
THREE
AUGUST 12, 1868
FORT LARAMIE, DAKOTA TERRITORIES
 
J
ulia folded another blouse and laid it atop the other articles in the trunk. She and Mandy were trying to select only the items Julia would need for her elopement—to Julia, “necessity” meant at least one steamer trunk.
“Jason's so nervous he can hardly eat,” Julia said. “I think he would have moved his leave forward if the fort weren't so darned short-handed. He's had that wagon he borrowed packed for three days.” Her clothes were strewn all over Mandy's bedroom.
“Well, he only has to wait one more day.” Mandy handed her cousin a red plaid dress, one of the few practical dresses Julia owned. “Then as soon as you two get far enough away, you can get married. You'll be Mrs. Jason Michaels.”
“Has a nice ring to it, doesn't it? Mrs. Jason Michaels. Oh, Mandy, I can't wait.” Julia's face glowed happily, like a little girl whose secret wish was about to come true.
Mandy wondered if her cousin's bright cheeks reflected her enthusiasm for getting married—or her anticipation of
the honeymoon ahead. She felt her own cheeks redden at the thought.
“I really think we've done a good job of planning so far,” Julia said. “If my calculations are correct, my father's men probably won't even get here for another week. With our head start, your three-week trip, and the weeks it will take the men to return and restart the search, Jason and I ought to have plenty of time to get married—and enough time alone for Father to worry I might be pregnant.”
“Julia!”
Julia smiled as if Mandy were a naive child, and shook her head. “Sometimes, Mandy, I just don't know about you.”
Mandy refused to be ruffled.
Julia packed a lacy chemise, then sniffed a bar of honeysuckle soap Mandy had given her as a present and packed it away. Suddenly Julia giggled.
“Do you remember the time we put the Chinese firecrackers in old Mrs. Finch's stove?”
Mandy laughed. “‘We' didn't put the firecrackers in the stove—you did! But it certainly was funny. Mrs. Finch kept saying, ‘What did I put in those pies?' She actually thought she'd made the stove explode!”
Mandy sank down on the bed and wiped tears of laughter from her eyes. She looked over at the younger girl.
“I'm going to miss you, cousin.”
She and Julia hugged, knowing it would be months, maybe even longer, before they would see each other again. But there was no turning back now. Mandy wondered briefly at the path each had chosen.
She glanced over Julia's shoulder, her gaze drawn to the
street outside the bedroom window. A man in buckskins and another in a dusty black suit were being pointed toward the house. Their horses, well lathered, looked as though they'd been ridden hard.
“When you get to—”
“Julia!” Mandy interrupted. “Look at those two men over there.” She pointed down the street. “They're coming toward the house. You don't suppose? . . . Surely your father's men couldn't be here yet!” Mandy peered back out the window.
“Oh, my Lord!” Julia shrieked, quickly counting on her fingers the weeks since she'd first written her father. “If he wasted no time, if he was determined from the start—it might be them!”
The words sent Mandy into a panic. She ran to the window, wringing her hands. Beads of perspiration gathered at her temples.
What had she gotten herself into?
How could she have ever agreed to Julia's plan? She closed her eyes and slowly opened them again. The men were still coming toward the house—and getting closer.
“We have to be calm, Mandy,” Julia kept saying. “We've played this scene twenty times. We just hoped to have a little more warning, that's all.”
Mandy could barely comprehend her cousin's words. She couldn't move or speak. Her eyes were glazing over. The “posse,” as she had laughingly nicknamed them, looked even more dreadful than she'd imagined.
“Mandy, please. Just keep calm,” Julia said, as if Mandy were going to a ball instead of embarking on a thousandmile journey across the toughest country on the continent.
“Everything's going to be fine. You go put on your ‘Julia' clothes, just in case. I'll keep an eye on the men.” They'd
altered several of Julia's dresses—a rose batiste, a soft pink muslin, a riding habit—by shortening them a few inches and taking in the waists until the dresses fit perfectly. Mandy hadn't worn such pretty clothes in years.
“It probably isn't even the right men,” Julia was saying, but she didn't sound convinced. “I'll hide in your father's room just to be on the safe side. If it is them, you'll have to start acting now. You get them away from here. I'll leave a note for Mrs. Evans saying you had to leave urgently to visit your sick Aunt Adelaide over at Fort Casper, just as we planned. I'll be sure to tell them an aide from the fort came to take you back. Mrs. Evans is expecting me to leave, so there's no problem there. When I'm finished, I'll go to Jason. We can leave as soon as it's dark.”
Mandy just stared out the window, unable to accept any of this as real. It had all seemed like a game up until now. Learning to flirt, learning to swoon. Julia even gave Mandy lessons on how to cry on cue, although she wasn't able to master the art. Julia's slim hands on Mandy's shoulders spun her around.
“Please, Mandy,” Julia pleaded, “if you care about my happiness, you'll do as we planned. You've got to keep those men away from Sacramento City as long as possible. Jason and I need time!”
Still Mandy stared blankly, trying to register her cousin's words.
Julia closed her eyes. Her bottom lip trembled, and large tears rolled down her cheeks. It was a good act, and it always worked. But this time Mandy was sure the tears were real.
She shook her head as if to clear it, embraced her cousin
quickly, determined not to let her down, and hurried to her narrow upright chest beside the window. She pulled out Julia's rose batiste dress and tugged at the pins holding back her hair. She stepped into the low-cut dress, designed to display Julia's ample bosom, as were all her dresses, and worked the buttons that closed up the front. Feeling warm air on parts of her skin rarely exposed caused Mandy's cheeks to flame. God, how would she ever be able to carry off such a deception?
She straightened the bodice of the dress and powdered her nose. Julia grabbed a brush and fluffed Mandy's hair, now cut shorter to curl just above her waist. Several wispy tendrils curled near her ears.
Mandy checked the mirror, adding a little rouge to highlight her cheekbones and a bit of color to her lips. The thick swatch of hair she had worn across her face was brushed back, exposing more of her creamy complexion. Gold flecks, much like her cousin's, glittered in her green eyes.
With her chestnut hair brushed out and curling loosely, her décolletage showing for the first time, and the tight-waisted dress enhancing the figure she usually took such care to hide, she looked beautiful. Though she'd always known she was attractive beneath her plain facade, it felt wonderful now to look like a woman—a beautiful woman, just like her cousin. If it weren't for the circumstances, Mandy would have been thrilled.
They finished in minutes. Mandy summoned her courage. She knew she looked like Julia, but she certainly didn't feel like her. Her whole body felt numb, and there was a distinct buzzing in her ears.
The men were dismounting in front of the house.
“You know, Mandy,” Julia whispered as she headed toward the bedroom door, “going to California might turn out to be the best thing that's ever happened to you.”
Mandy sighed. “Maybe—if your father doesn't kill me when I get there.”
Julia laughed. “I wish I could be there to see his face.”
Mandy grimaced at the thought and a sinking feeling gnawed at the pit of her stomach.
God, she must be out of her mind!
Three loud raps on the door put the plan into motion. It was now or never. Mandy checked to be sure her father's bedroom door was tightly closed, Julia well hidden within, as the pounding became more insistent. She squared her shoulders, tossed back her hair, and marched resolutely to the front door. She opened the door only slightly.
“Miss Julia Ashton?” A tall, dark-haired man peered at her through the narrow crack. The man was dressed in a well-tailored black suit so covered with dust it appeared almost gray. From his unkempt hair and unshaven appearance, it was obvious he'd ridden long and hard.
Giving him a look of disdain, as she was certain Julia would have, she stared haughtily back at the man. “What do you want?”
He seemed aware of her regard and began almost apologetically, “I'm sorry my friend and I did not have time to dress properly for the occasion, Miss Ashton. My name is James Long, and this is Travis Langley. We've been sent by your father to bring you home.”
Travis Langley! The name sent chills down her spine. She could barely make out a second shape behind the door,
but she remembered the big man well. Now their plan was doomed to fail before it ever got off the ground. She stood in the doorway trying to decide what to do. More than two years.
Would he remember her? Would he recognize her?
She hardly recognized herself.
BOOK: Magnificent Passage
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