A Lawman's Christmas: A McKettricks of Texas Novel (6 page)

BOOK: A Lawman's Christmas: A McKettricks of Texas Novel
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Dara Rose didn't ask the marshal to sit down, and she couldn't offer him coffee because she didn't have any.

So the two of them just stood there, each one waiting for the other to speak.

Finally, Clay grinned ever so slightly and turned his hat decisively in his hands. He went to the door and
opened it, pausing to look back at Dara Rose, his impressive form rimmed in wintry light.

“Good day to you, Mrs. Nolan,” he said.

Dara Rose swallowed. “Good day, Mr. McKettrick,” she replied formally. “And, once again, thank you.”

“Anytime,” he said, and then he left the house, closed the door behind him.

Dara Rose resisted the temptation to rush to the window and watch him heading down the walk.

Harriet appeared in the doorway to the bedroom, hair rumpled, rubbing her eyes with the backs of her hands. “I thought I heard Papa's voice,” she said.

Dara Rose's heart cracked and then split down the middle. “Sweetheart,” she said, bending her knees so she could look directly into the child's sleep-flushed face, “Papa's gone to heaven, remember?”

Harriet's lower lip wobbled, which further bruised Dara Rose's already injured heart. How could such a small child be expected to understand the permanence of death?

“Is heaven a real place?” Harriet asked. “Or is it just pretend, like St. Nicholas?”

“I believe it's a real place,” Dara Rose said.

Harriet frowned, obviously puzzled. “Is it like here? Are there trees and kittens and trains to ride?”

Dara Rose blinked rapidly and rose back to her full
height. “I don't know, sweetheart. One day, a long, long time from now, we'll find out for sure, but right now, we have to live in
this
world, and we might as well make the best of it.”

“I think I would like this world better,” Harriet told her, “if there was a St. Nicholas in it.”

Dara Rose gave a small, strangled chuckle at that, and pulled her daughter close for a hug. “We don't need St. Nicholas, you and Edrina and me,” she said. “We have one another.”

Chapter 4

A
fter the chickens were fed and had retreated into their coop to roost for the night, Dara Rose made a simple supper of baked potatoes and last summer's string beans, boiled with bits of salt pork and onion, for herself and the girls, and the three of them sat at the table in the kitchen, eating by the light of a kerosene lantern and chatting quietly.

The subject of St. Nicholas did not come up again, thankfully. In Dara Rose's humble opinion, Clement C. Moore had a lot to answer for. By writing that lengthy and admittedly charming poem, “'Twas the Night Before Christmas,” he'd created expectations in children that many parents couldn't hope to meet.

Instead, Edrina recounted her visit to the O'Reillys' after lunch, and fretted that it wasn't fair that she had to wash the blackboard every single day for a week when
all she'd done was defend herself against that wretched Thomas. Large flakes of snow drifted, like benevolent ghosts, past the darkened window next to the back door, and brought a sigh to hover in the back of Dara Rose's throat.

Winter. As a privileged only child, back in Massachusetts, she'd loved everything about that season, even the cold. It was a time to skate and sled and build castles out of snow and then drink hot chocolate by the fire while Nanny told stories or recited long, exciting poems about shipwrecks and ghosts and Paul Revere's ride.

Had she ever really lived such a life? Dara Rose wondered now, as she did whenever her childhood came to mind.

“Mama?” Edrina said, breaking the sudden spell the sight of snowflakes had cast over Dara Rose. “Did you hear what I said about Addie O'Reilly?”

Dara Rose gave herself an inward shake and sat up a little straighter in her chair. “I'm sorry,” she said, because she was always truthful with the children. “I'm afraid I was woolgathering.”

Edrina's perfect little face glowed, heart-shaped, in the light of love and a kerosene lantern. “She's really sick,” she informed her mother, in a tone of good-natured patience, as though she were the parent and Dara Rose the child. “Mrs. O'Reilly told me she has romantic fever.”

Dara Rose did not correct Edrina. She was too stricken by the tragedy of it, the patent unfairness.
Rheumatic fever.
Was there no end to the sorrows and hardships visited on that poor family?

“That's dreadful,” she said.

“And Addie gets lonely, staying inside all the time,” Edrina went on. “So I said Harriet and I would come to visit on Saturday morning. We can, can't we, Mama? Because I promised.”

Dara Rose's heart swelled with affection for her daughter, and then sank a little. It was like her spirited Edrina to make such an offer, and follow through on it, too, whether or not she had her mother's permission. When Edrina made a promise, she kept it, which meant she was really asking if Harriet could go with her.

As far as Dara Rose knew, rheumatic fever wasn't contagious, but heaven only knew what other diseases her children might contract during a visit to the O'Reilly house—diphtheria, the dreaded influenza, perhaps even typhoid or cholera.

“You mustn't promise such things, in the future, without speaking to me first,” Dara Rose told Edrina, hedging. “I feel as sorry for the O'Reillys as you do, Edrina, but there are other considerations.”

“And it stinks over there,” Harriet interjected solemnly, her nose twitching a little at the memory.

Dara Rose had lost her appetite, which was fine, because she'd had enough to eat, anyway. “Harriet,” she said. “That will be enough of that sort of talk. It is not suitable for the supper table.”

Harriet sighed. “It's
never
suitable,” she lamented.

“Hush,” Dara Rose told her, her attention focused, for the moment, on her elder daughter. “You may visit the O'Reillys on Saturday morning,” she stated, rising to begin clearing the table. “But only because you gave your word and I would not ask you to break it.”

“If I hadn't promised, you wouldn't let me go?” Edrina pressed. She'd never been one to quit while the quitting was good, a trait she came by honestly, Dara Rose had to admit. She had the same shortcoming herself.

“That's right,” she replied, at some length. “I have to think about your safety, Edrina, and that of your sister.”

“My safety? The O'Reillys wouldn't hurt us.”

“Not deliberately,” Dara Rose allowed, “but it isn't the most sanitary place in the world, and you might catch something.”

Although she didn't mention it, she was thinking of the diphtheria outbreak two years before, during which four children had perished, all of them from one family.

“Is that suitable talk for the supper table?” Harriet asked sincerely.

“Never mind,” Dara Rose said. “It's time you both
got ready for bed. Shall I walk with you to the outhouse, or are you brave enough to go on your own?”

Edrina scraped back her chair, rose to fetch her coat and Harriet's from the pegs near the back door. Her expression said she was brave enough to do anything, and protect her little sister in the bargain.

“Maybe that's why Addie's so lonesome,” Edrina said, opening the door to the chilly night, with its flurries of snow. “Because everybody is afraid of catching something if they visit.”

Chagrin swept over Dara Rose—
out of the mouths of babes—
but she assumed a stern countenance. “Don't stand there with the door open,” she said.

Later, when the children were in bed, and she'd read them a story from their one dog-eared book of fairy tales and heard their prayers—Harriet put in another request for the doll from the mercantile—kissed them good-night and tucked them in, Dara Rose returned to the kitchen.

There, she took the two letters Mr. McKettrick had delivered earlier from her apron pocket, and sat down.

The kerosene in the lamp was getting low, and the wick was smoking a little, but Dara Rose did not hurry.

She knew the plump missive was from her cousin, Piper, who taught school in a small town in Maine. She meant to save that one for last, and she took the time to
weigh it in her hand, run her fingers over the vellum and examine the stamp before setting it carefully aside.

She opened the letter from the Wildflower Salve Company first, even though she knew it was an advertisement and nothing more, and carefully smoothed the single page on the tabletop.

Her eyes widened a little as she read, and her heart fluttered up into her throat as her excitement grew.

Bold print declared that Dara Rose was holding the key to financial security right there in her hand. She could win prizes, it fairly shouted. She could earn money. And all she had to do was introduce her friends and neighbors to the wonders of Wildflower Salve. Each colorfully decorated round tin—an elegant keepsake in its own right, according to the Wildflower Salve people—sold for a mere fifty cents. And she would get to keep a whopping twenty-five cents for her commission.

Dara Rose sat back, thinking.

Twenty-five cents was a lot of money.

And there were prizes. All sorts of prizes—toys, household goods, luxuries of all sorts—could be had in lieu of commissions, if the “independent business person” preferred.

Out of the goodness of their hearts, the folks at the Wildflower Salve Company, of Racine, Wisconsin, would be happy to send her a full twenty tins of this
“medicinal miracle” in good faith. If for some incomprehensible reason her “friends and relations” didn't snap up the whole shipment practically as soon as she opened the parcel, she could return the merchandise and owe nothing.

Five dollars,
Dara Rose thought. If she sold twenty tins of Wildflower Salve, she would earn
five dollars—
a virtual fortune.

The kerosene lamp flickered, reminding her that she'd soon be sitting in the dark, and Dara Rose set aside “the opportunity of a lifetime” to open the letter from Piper.

A crisp ten-dollar bill fell out, nearly stopping Dara Rose's heart.

She set it carefully aside, and her hands trembled as she unfolded the clump of pages covered in Piper's lovely cursive. The date was nearly eight months in the past.

“Dearest Cousin,” the missive began. “News of your tragic misfortune reached me yesterday, via the telegraph…”

Piper's letter, misplaced all this time, went on to say that she hoped Dara Rose could put the money enclosed to good use—that the weather was fine in Maine, with the spring coming, but she already dreaded the winter. How were the girls faring? Did Dara Rose intend to stay on in “that little Texas town,” or would she and the children consider coming to live with her? The teacher's
quarters were small, she wrote, bringing tears to Dara Rose's eyes, but they could make do, the four of them, couldn't they? There were crocuses and tulips and daffodils shooting up in people's flower beds, Piper went on to relate, and the days were distinctly longer. For all that, alas, she was lonesome when she wasn't teaching. She'd been briefly engaged, but the fellow had turned out to be a rascal and a rounder, and there didn't seem to be any likely prospects on the horizon.

Dara Rose read the whole letter and then immediately read it again. Besides Edrina and Harriet, Piper was the only blood relation she had left in all the world, and Dara Rose missed her sorely. Holding the letter, seeing the familiar handwriting spanning the pages, was the next best thing to having her cousin right there, in the flesh, sitting across the table from her.

But what must Piper think of her? Dara Rose fretted, after a third reading. She'd written this letter so long ago, and sent such a generous gift of money, only to receive silence in return.

The lantern guttered out.

Dara Rose sighed, folded the letter carefully and tucked it back into its envelope. She took the ten-dollar bill with her to the bedroom, where the girls were sound asleep, and placed it carefully between the pages in her Bible for safekeeping.

She undressed quickly, since the little room was cold, and donned her flannel nightgown, returned to the kitchen carrying a lighted candle stuck to a jar lid and dipped water from the stove reservoir to wash her face. When that was done, she brushed her teeth at the sink and steeled herself to make the trek to the outhouse, through the snowy cold.

When she got back, she locked the door, used the candle to light her way back to the bedroom, blew out the flame and climbed into bed with her daughters.

She was tired, but too excited to fall asleep right away.

She had ten precious dollars.

The Wildflower Salve Company had offered her honest work.

She'd as good as—well,
almost
as good as—spent an evening with her cousin and dearest friend, Piper.

And Marshal Clay McKettrick had the bluest eyes she'd ever seen.

 

T
HE JAILHOUSE,
C
LAY SOON
discovered, was a lonely place at night.

He'd already had supper over at the hotel dining room—chicken and dumplings almost as good as his ma's—and he'd paid a visit to Outlaw, over at the livery stable, too. He'd even sent a telegram north to Indian
Rock, to let his family know he'd arrived and was settling in nicely.

That done, Clay had filled the water bucket and set up the coffeepot for morning, then filled the wood box next to the potbellied stove. There being no place to hang up his clothes, he left them folded in his travel trunk, there in the back room, where the bed was. Most of his books hadn't arrived yet—he had a passel of them and they had to be shipped down from Indian Rock in crates—and he couldn't seem to settle down to read the one favorite he'd brought along on the train, Jules Verne's
Around the World in Eighty Days.
He must have read that book a dozen times over the years, and he never got tired of it, but that night, it failed to hold his interest.

He kept thinking about Dara Rose Nolan, the gold of her hair and the fiery blue spirit in her eyes. He thought about her shapely breasts and small waist and smooth skin and that flash of pride that was so easy to arouse in her.

And the same old question plagued him: Why in the devil would a man with a wife like that squander his time in a whorehouse, the way her husband had done?

Nobody could help dying, of course, but they had at least some choice about
where
they died, didn't they? It was simple common sense—folks didn't turn up their toes in places they hadn't ventured into in the first place.

Knowing he wouldn't sleep, anyhow, Clay strapped
on his gun belt, shrugged into his duster and reached for his hat.

He was the marshal, after all.

He'd just take a little stroll up and down Main Street and make sure any visiting cowpokes or drifters were minding their manners. If anybody needed arresting, he'd throw them in the hoosegow and start up a conversation.

What he really needed, he supposed, stepping out onto the dark sidewalk, was a woman. Someone like Dara Rose Nolan.

Maybe he'd get himself a dog—that would provide some companionship. He'd have to do all the talking, of course, but he liked critters. He'd grown up with all manner of them on the ranch.

Yes, sir, he needed a dog.

He hadn't even reached the corner when he heard the first yelp.

He frowned, stopped to pinpoint the direction.

“Dutch, you kick that dog again,” he heard a male voice say, “and I'll shoot
you, '
stead of him!”

Clay, having located the disturbance, pushed his coat back to uncover the handle of his .45 and stepped into the alley.

It was dark, and the snow veiled the moon, but light struggled through the filthy windows of the buildings
on either side, and he could make out two men, one holding a pistol, standing over a shivering form huddled close to the ground.

“Hold it right there,” Clay said, in deadly earnest, when the man with the pistol raised it to shoot. “What's going on here?”

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