An Outlaw in Wonderland (10 page)

BOOK: An Outlaw in Wonderland
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Somewhere. Anywhere but here.

“Too soon,” Annabeth gasped. “Help me.”

He spun, and the angry words died on his tongue.

She stood in a halo of light, clutching her stomach with one hand, reaching out the
other to him.

The moon turned the spreading puddle of blood at her feet the shade of a storm at
midnight.

•   •   •

Morning dawned and still Annabeth labored. Pain rippled across her stomach, settled
in her back, tightened. She could smell death; she saw it hovering in the black spots
that danced at the edges of her vision.

“Beth,” Ethan whispered.

Just that. Her name. Nothing more. What more was there?

The baby, the only thing that might have bound them together amid so much deceit,
was dying. Was this punishment for her sins? No child born this soon could live.

“Take me,” she prayed, though she knew it was futile. God did not bargain. Most of
the time, God did not even hear.

“You need to push,” Ethan said in a voice as dead as her heart.

She’d curled in on herself, hunching her shoulders, drawing up her knees as she attempted
to protect the life within. But her body had other plans. Her muscles bunched, and
the sensation was such a relief after the hours of pain that she bore down. Then she
couldn’t stop.

Over and over again she tensed; she grunted; she pushed. Ethan tried to take her hands,
and she swatted him away with weaker and weaker motions. Sweat poured down her face,
and still she pressed on. The world wavered—coming into focus, then going back out.
She almost passed out several times, but the pain always brought her around.

At last the baby slipped from her body. Annabeth strained her ears for a cry—even
a weak, mewling kitten sound would have been better than the rasp of her own breath
splitting the echoing silence. Ethan straightened, holding something far too small
in his bloody hands. She turned her face so she couldn’t see. “Take it away.”

“Him,” Ethan said in that same dead voice. “A boy. We should—”

“Out!” she shouted, or tried to. Her strength had died when he did; she couldn’t manage
much beyond a hoarse croak. “Get it away from me.” If she looked upon that tiny, still
face, she would shatter into a thousand bleeding shards.

Ethan’s footsteps retreated upward. Almost immediately they came back down. Annabeth
kept her eyes closed, her lips clenched as he cleansed and stitched, doing everything
that needed to be done. She would have liked to order him out, too; she wanted to
tell him she could take care of herself. But right now, she could do nothing but lie
there and try not to think. If breathing had required any effort, she would have expired.
Damn the ease of breathing.

“I’ll carry you to bed.”

“No!” She inched to the edge of the exam table and clung. The idea of going upstairs,
where he’d taken “it,” of sleeping in the bed where they’d shared so much, sickened
her.

“Beth, you can’t—”

“My name is Annabeth, you lying Yankee spy.”

She waited for the guilt to flow over her, for the apology to tumble from her lips.
But she felt nothing, certainly not guilt. And if her words made him leave her be,
she couldn’t be sorry for them. Her shoulders tensed against anything he might say.
Instead, she heard him go.

“I wish you were dead,” she whispered, uncertain if she were talking to Ethan or herself.

She must have slept, because the next time she opened her eyes, the sun was gone and
the moon was back. For an instant, she wondered why she was lying on the table in
the exam room in her night rail. Then she remembered, and a sob broke free.

She tried to snatch it back, but it was too late. She cried until her tears ran dry,
and her breath clogged in her throat. Perhaps breathing wasn’t so easy, after all.

When her sobs had faded, she heard how loud the silence was. Had Ethan returned? She
wasn’t going upstairs to find out. If he had, he didn’t care about her tears. He’d
said he didn’t know her, that he’d married a stranger. She had no doubt he wished
he’d never married her at all.

Annabeth sat up; then she stood up. She had to get out; she needed some air. But she
couldn’t walk around wearing nightclothes. Why didn’t she keep an extra dress in the
downstairs closet like Ethan kept extra—

She laughed, the sound a bit crazed and far too loud, then opened that closet.

“Thank you, Dr. Walsh,” she murmured, and withdrew the clothing Ethan set aside in
the office for emergencies. Children threw up; blood spattered all over. Ethan had
taken to leaving a fresh shirt and clean trousers nearby.

Her shoes still resided at the back door where she’d left them. She snatched Ethan’s
hat from the nail on the wall as she went past. But she couldn’t find any air on the
streets of Freedom, no matter how long she walked them.

She discovered herself in the stable, staring at her horse. The stable boy was nowhere
to be found. Visiting the outhouse or a woman—who knew? She certainly didn’t care.

Annabeth hitched the animal to their buggy. She wasn’t capable of riding astride—probably
wouldn’t be for over a month. But she had to find some air.

It wasn’t until she crossed into Colorado that she was finally able to breathe.

•   •   •

Ethan went to the nearest saloon. What else did a man do when he needed to forget?

But he couldn’t forget putting angry hands on his wife, wanting to shake her. Had
he? He couldn’t recall. He kept seeing, over and over, how she’d pulled away, banged
into the counter. Then there’d been so much blood. The child so still and white, Annabeth
the same.

He downed his whiskey and asked for more, though he knew he would never be able to
erase the sight with mere alcohol. Just as he’d never stop hearing the words she’d
whispered right before he’d left.

I wish you were dead.

At noon he stumbled to the house, opened the door, saw her lying where he’d left her,
fast asleep. Her color was better; she was breathing just fine. He should have gone
inside, woken her, made her eat and drink, carried her upstairs despite her protests,
then buried their child. Instead he shut the door and went back to the saloon.

By the time he returned, the whole world was blurry. He came in the front door, climbed
the steps, poured himself into bed. When he awoke, she was gone.

He waited for her to come back. Days turned into a week.

He sent a message to John Law through the Intelligence Service, asking for help in
locating her. A week became a month.

He attempted to find Fedya and Mikey. They had disappeared as thoroughly as his wife.

And the month became years.

PART II

Five Years Later

C
HAPTER 10

F
or most folks, a knock on their hotel room door meant little. For Annabeth, it could
mean anything.

She drew her gun. Ellsworth was known as the rowdiest of rowdy cattle towns. Full
of so many saloons, gambling halls, and whorehouses that most nights the sound of
the music, the laughter, the gunshots was deafening.

“Who is it?”

A spate of indecipherable Spanish erupted, and Annabeth opened the door to a Mexican
washerwoman. Figuring Lassiter Morant, the leader of the Morant Gang, had sent her
to collect the filthy clothes he’d discarded in their room before donning clean ones
and heading downstairs to play poker, Annabeth holstered her weapon and began to collect
them.

The door closed. “Ethan’s in trouble.”

Every bit of cloth tumbled to the ground as Annabeth’s hands went numb. Slowly, she
turned. Even though she hadn’t seen Fedya since they’d left Castle Thunder, she couldn’t
believe she’d missed that too-blue gaze.

“Are you crazy?” she asked.

“Are you?” Fedya waved a long-fingered hand, the movement causing his high-necked,
black lace shirtwaist to swirl around breasts that appeared completely real. “This
is not who you are,
moi drug
.”

The Russian words clashed with . . . everything—this room, his skirt, her life.

“It’s who I am right now. You, of all people, should understand that.” She’d seen
Fedya perform in prison. The way he could become someone else was uncanny. But she
hadn’t realized until this moment how very, very good at it he was. She eyed his face.
Was he wearing makeup? He had to be, though she couldn’t see any. “How the hell did
you find me?”

The Morant Gang moved quickly from place to place. Lass never told anyone where they
were going, just led them wherever that might be. He also made certain their faces
were covered and that when any killing occurred in public, he wasn’t the one doing
it.

They rode into a town like thunder, stole as fast as lightning, and left behind the
remnants of a hellish storm before disappearing into their secret hideout, leaving
anyone in pursuit scratching their heads and eating dust.

“How do you think I found you?” Fedya asked.

Annabeth’s sigh was as sad as her life. “Mikey.”

“Mikhail,” he corrected.

“How is he?”

“The same.”

“Is he here?” If she could just borrow him for a day or two, she wouldn’t have to—

“No. He’s . . .” Fedya glanced out the window and frowned. “You need to get to Freedom
as fast as you can. Ethan is . . .” A shadow flickered over his exquisite face. “He
will die if you do not do something.”

She followed his gaze, but all she saw was dust settling over the town of Ellsworth.
When she looked back, Fedya was gone. She didn’t bother to follow. Instead, she stood
there, ignoring the music and the laughter from the saloon below, the shouts from
outside. She was tempted to ignore Fedya, except . . .

There’d been something in his eyes that frightened her. He was not the type of man
to exert himself for anyone except, perhaps, Mikey.

“Mikhail,” she murmured.

That he’d gone to the trouble of finding her meant there was trouble. Big trouble.
In Freedom.

She retrieved Ethan’s old hat from the bed where she’d tossed it. The thing was filthy,
sweat-stained; she needed a new one. But she hadn’t been able to make herself throw
it away. She gathered her hair and stuffed it beneath the crown.

A curse since childhood, that bright red hair. The freckles, too, though both had
faded with age. Nevertheless, they marked her, made her memorable in ways and places
she would rather not be.

Like here.

Certainly Ellsworth was large enough, busy enough, wild enough that the Morant Gang
would go unnoticed if they didn’t shoot up the place. What law there was—and there
had been some pretty fancy lawmen who’d tried to tame Ellsworth—was too busy to take
a second look at Lass or any of his followers as long as they did only what they’d
come here to do. Drink. Gamble. Whore. And hopefully bathe. While Lassiter’s men were
dangerous, they weren’t stupid. If they caused trouble, he killed them himself.

Annabeth descended the staircase, keeping her hat pulled low. She weaved her way to
Lass’s table. As usual, he was winning.

His chestnut hair had been freshly washed and shone like silk in the dim light. She’d
consider him a handsome man if she didn’t know that beneath the good looks lay a whole
lot of crazy. She should leave and never come back, but she knew better. She was his
woman, and Lass protected his property with a swift and certain violence.

He allowed her to ride with them because she was useful—both in private and in public.
She did what she was told, and she didn’t whine about it. Annabeth knew better. She
also knew better than to turn up pregnant. There were ways to prevent such a thing
if a woman listened to others, if she learned about herbs and cleansers, if she paid
attention to the rhythms of her own body. Annabeth was no fool. If she couldn’t be
what Lass needed, she would be dead.

She hadn’t been scared of much in her life, but she was scared of Lass. He owned one
book,
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.
Annabeth didn’t know where he’d gotten it. He was not the kind of man to own a book;
he wasn’t the kind of man who could read. But he had read about Alice.

He’d dubbed his hideout Wonderland, and the place was nearly as hard to find as the
original. Perhaps because he let no one know its location whom he didn’t trust completely.
She wasn’t among the lucky few. She thought the hideout was in Kansas, but where was
anyone’s guess.

He cast her a quick “what in hell are you doing here?” glance from eyes so dark, they
seemed endless. She leaned close. “Gonna scout a few towns nearby.”

Lass frowned, and she nearly held her breath, afraid he’d say no. Then what would
she do? She managed to breathe in and out so her heart wouldn’t thunder. He would
hear; he would know, and then he would pounce.

“Five?” He tossed two cards toward the dealer.

He wasn’t asking how many towns but how many days until he would meet her at the arroyo—the
point where Lass blindfolded the untrustworthy before he led them to Wonderland. Folks
left the same way—if they left at all.

“Better make it seven.”

He glanced at her again. Again, she kept on breathing. She waited for him to ask how
long it took to scout a few banks, ask a few questions about the stage or the train,
listen to folks discuss the soon-to-arrive army, railroad, or coal-mining payroll.
But he lifted his two new cards, saw he’d drawn a double belly buster, and she became
a lot less interesting than the straight he now held in his hand. Annabeth headed
for the door before his attention returned to her.

She wouldn’t need seven days to do what she planned to do, but she’d take a little
time away. She had to sometimes, or she would go mad as that damn Hatter.

Before dawn tinted the sky, Annabeth guided her horse down a street she’d sworn never
to go down again. At this time of night, none of the townsfolk were about.

Annabeth dismounted. When the wind blew in from the prairie and whistled along the
street, she was thankful she’d worn men’s trousers rather than her split riding skirt.
The yards of material would have billowed, perhaps spooked the horse.

In some towns, she might be jailed for dressing as a man. Hopefully the recent escapades
of the legendary bounty hunter Cat O’Banyon, who was rumored to be a woman beneath
the men’s clothing, had put a stop to such threats. Annabeth doubted any lawman would
have the grit to put Cat behind bars.

There’d been a lot of rumors about Cat of late. She’d been seen in Abilene, then in
St. Louis. She’d been killed in Indian Territory. Then she’d just plain disappeared.

Annabeth paused outside the livery. Sometimes she wished she could disappear herself.
Instead, Annabeth tossed a coin to the boy who’d been sleeping inside the stable door,
handed him the reins, and moved on.

At the head of an alley that ran between the structures on Main Street and those to
the north, she made her first mistake. She should have gone to the saloon and asked
questions. Small town, someone would know something about the doctor. She would discover
what had made Fedya behave so strangely and deal with it. How bad could things be?

Ethan might once have been a spy, but that was long ago and far away. Whatever problem
there might be could be solved simply and quietly. He need never even know she was
there. But he was so close, and it had been so long. What could it hurt to take a
peek?

Thoughts like that always got her into trouble.

She palmed her daddy’s Navy Colt. Most of Freedom was asleep; she was certain of it.
But she’d been certain of a few things in the past that had turned out to be lies.
Which had taught her to trust no one, believe nothing. And draw her weapon for any
old reason at all.

She glanced through a back window, saw only darkness. She pressed her ear to the wood,
heard nothing but crickets singing to the night. Turning the knob, she nearly stumbled
inside when the thing swung wide. Why was she surprised? A good doctor never locked
his door.

As she slipped quietly through the first floor, her gaze wandered over the medicine
cabinet filled with colorful bottles—brown for cod liver, blue for laudanum, green
for tincture of ginger—the exam table, several chairs, a desk. Everything appeared
exactly the same, though hardly anything was.

Annabeth faced the staircase. She could slink and skulk a while longer, or she could
do what she’d come to do. Tightening her grip on the gun, Annabeth began to climb.

She reached the landing and glanced through the open doorway. Moonlight filtered across
the empty bed. She swallowed, the sound crackling through a pulsing silence broken
only by those damnable crickets. Why were they so loud?

Her gaze went to the window—nothing but a gaping hole where glass had once been. Her
heart, which had already been beating far too fast, beat faster. What had happened
here?

She backed out of the room, glanced toward the next, tensed. He wasn’t in there. There
was no reason for her to be. Nevertheless, Annabeth headed in that direction.

The first door had been open; the second was closed. She stood for several seconds,
staring at the knob, unable to make herself reach for it.

It’s only a room,
she told herself.
Probably empty. Gathering dust. The doctor’s not even here. He’s gone to help some
poor soul. Or maybe just gone.

But she didn’t believe it. She wasn’t that lucky.

Annabeth ignored the tremble of her fingers as they wrapped around the knob and pushed.

The moon cast an eerie light across the man slouched against the far wall. His black
hair tumbled over his brow, curled around his neck. Several days’ beard darkened his
jaw, making his olive skin appear pale.

Long legs stretched in her direction; the bottoms of his bare feet were filthy. He
smelled like a saloon the morning after any night. But Ethan Walsh was still one of
the handsomest men Annabeth had ever seen.

She retreated a step and saw the crib in the corner. She tried to snatch back her
pained gasp and failed.

His eyes opened, caught the gleam of the moon and shone silver.

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