Just After Midnight: Historical Romance

BOOK: Just After Midnight: Historical Romance
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JUST AFTER MIDNIGHT
 
 
Lori Handeland
 
 

 

© Lori Handeland, 1999, 2014

CHAPTER ONE

 

 

Dawson City, The Klondike

1898

 

“He’s deader ‘n a month-old corpse, I tell ya. Buried in the avalanche last April on the Chilkoot Pass. Planned to open another dance hall at the base. Told ‘im six hundred miles was too far to go for such nonsense, but he wouldn’t listen.” The rotund old man paused in the act of wiping a glass and peered at Megan Daily through watery, gray eyes that reminded her of the Yukon winter sky just outside the door at her back. “Hey, who are ya anyway?”

Her face drained of color. At the same time she seemed to travel outside herself, and she watched the scene from above, as though her body were an actor in a play and her mind the audience. The tall, thin young woman swayed, and her hand went up to touch the red hair smoothed into a severe bun. The sea-green eyes fluttered shut, and Megan wanted to call out for someone to catch her; the woman was going to faint. But the woman was
her
, and she
was
fainting. As if from far away the bartender shouted, and Megan anticipated the bone-jarring thud when her body hit the ground.

Instead, a pair of strong arms encircled her, and she looked up into the bluest pair of eyes she had ever known. Then blackness closed in, and she saw nothing more.

Sunshine, piercing yet warm, greeted her when she next opened her eyes.

“Hello.” The voice was deep and mellow with a touch of England, and Megan turned her head toward the sound.

He was dressed in red and sat on the bed, his body so close she felt his warmth. His auburn hair fell softly across his forehead, just brushing sandy brows. She resisted the urge to reach out and push the lock back into place so she could feel the texture of his hair and skin beneath her fingertips. The color of his eyes reminded Megan of a clear, blue sky in the midst of a Chicago winter. A stubble of beard shaded the fair skin of his jaw. From her vantage point, Megan viewed the angles and planes of a strong profile.

All her life she had been exposed to men; many of them as good-looking as the one beside her now. She had never been affected by a one of them— until now. Men were, well . . . they were men— trouble from the day they were born.

Suddenly Megan realized she lay on a bed with a stranger, staring into his eyes as though entranced. Whatever was the matter with her? Then everything came back with a piercing suddenness, and a sob escaped her throat.

Papa
.

Concern flooded the man’s features, and he reached out to take Megan’s hand. The warmth of his flesh covering hers soothed, and she turned her palm upward, winding her fingers through his. The stranger gave her a smile of encouragement that fair dazzled her, squeezed her hand, then withdrew his to stand.

A vague sense of disappointment flooded her at the loss of his warmth. She shook her head in irritation. She needed to get hold of herself and find out what had become of her father. “Where am I, Mr.—”


Lieutenant
Carson, miss. Alex Carson. Northwest Mounted Police.”

That explained the uniform, Megan thought, as she took in the red jacket, black pants, and knee-high boots.

“You’re upstairs in one of the rooms at The Celebration,” he continued. “And you are?”

“Megan Daily.” She struggled to a sitting position on the bed and extended her hand, feeling slightly silly for doing so when he had already held her hand in a more intimate manner.

Alex Carson’s lips twitched as though he’d read her thoughts, and then he grasped her fingers, drawing them toward his lips in a gesture at once Old World manners and yet too familiar. The return of the tingling warmth from his touch dismayed her. Megan withdrew her hand before his lips could meet her skin.

“Daily?” He frowned. “You’re Brian’s daughter?”

“Yes.” The tears gathered in her eyes again. She had to make him understand that this was all some terrible mistake. Her father would never die and leave her. He might go away for any amount of time, but he always came back. He promised her just that every time he left her behind, and Papa would never lie.

“Papa,” she whispered, turning her gaze toward the window. “You always come back.”

“Miss?”

Megan looked up into his concerned face and swallowed the rising tide of sorrow. Drawing herself up, she resolved to get to the bottom of the story. “Where’s his body?” The sound of her voice, calm and crisp, the way it should be, steadied her.

“There’s a graveyard for the victims at Dyea.”

“I want to see his grave.”

“Certainly, miss. I’m sure that can be arranged now that the weather has improved. You can never be sure any time before June.”

Megan nodded absently as she got up from the bed. Dizziness assailed her, but she gritted her teeth and fought the black dots swimming before her eyes. By force of will she made the unaccustomed weakness recede and moved to the window.

Dawson City was a town of contrasts. The main streets boasted wooden structures, some elaborate, others barely standing, but each one a business of some sort built to serve the thriving boomtown. Beyond them, on the higher ground above the city proper, waved a sea of tents that housed the new arrivals, greenhorns or
cheechakos
as they were called by the veteran sourdoughs. The street below Megan’s window buzzed with activity. Men, women, mules, dogs—every living being strove to slog through the boggy mud Front Street had become that spring. Yet no mountain was too high to climb in search of gold—the illusive, the unobtainable.

Megan sighed and turned away. How well she knew the worship of the great god greed. She had been following her father in his daily devotions for the past ten of her twenty-six years. It looked as though this time Papa’s god had eluded him forever.

“Are you feeling better now, Miss Daily?”

Though the words were quiet, Megan started nonetheless. Her gaze went to the handsome Mountie, and again she knew a tug of response when her eyes met his. Perhaps she should avoid this man and the strange sensations his presence engendered within her. But her need to see her father’s grave ran deep, and so she nodded in assent.

Alex Carson’s face and eyes lit with a smile, and Megan smiled in return, despite the heaviness within her heart.

“If you’d like, I can arrange for you to return to the outside by way of Dyea.”

The smile froze on Megan’s face. “I beg your pardon?”

“You can see your father’s grave on the way to your home. Dyea is several hundred miles from here, but it’s at the bottom of the pass if you plan to go that way. I’d be happy to take care of the arrangements for you.”

“Why would I leave? This is my home now.”

Alex frowned. “A lady like you has no place here. This is a dance hall.”

He said the words as though there were a sour taste in his mouth, and Megan’s brows drew together in confusion. “I know what The Celebration is, Lt. Carson. What I don’t understand is the problem.”

“Men pay women to dance with them.” Alex spoke slowly, as though to a child. “Among other things, I’m sure.”

“As far as I’m concerned, the women here fulfill a needed service in keeping lonely miners company. As my father explained in his letters, whores are housed on Paradise Alley. The girls at The Celebration dance. They make far and away enough money doing that, there’s no need to sell themselves for anything more.”

“And that’s as it should be, Lovey.”

A new voice caused both the lieutenant and Megan to turn toward the open doorway. Megan gaped. The woman was the largest she had ever seen, as well as the most colorful. A violet silk dressing gown tied with a green sash encased her ample figure. Blonde hair of a color not found in nature was piled on her head, adding to a height that must already have been six feet. Her face was painted artfully but heavily, and her long, pointed nails shone blood red. Megan estimated her age to be somewhere between ancient and dead.

“Who,” Megan asked, “are you?”

“Lovey, I’m your best friend.” The woman cackled at her own wit and entered the room.

Megan drew back as the woman bore down on her, enveloping Megan in the scent of violets. Megan’s shoulders met the wall with a thump, and the woman cackled again before placing one long, red fingernail beneath Megan’s chin and turning her face from side-to-side in the sunlight.

“You’ve got possibilities, Lovey. Definite possibilities.”

“What are you talking about, Queen?”

The Mountie's angry voice brought Megan back to her senses, and she jerked her face away from the brightly painted woman.

“Here now, there’s no cause to get testy with old Queen Love. I want to help.”

“She doesn’t need your help. She’s not staying.”

Queen Love turned to Megan. “Is that the way of it, Lovey?”

“Ah . . . no.” Megan shook her head to clear the foggy smell of violets and sunshine from her senses, then said more firmly, “No. I plan to manage The Celebration just as I did our restaurant in San Francisco. That was my father’s plan all along.”

“You mean you came here to take over this place?” Alex’s voice was incredulous as he stared at Megan.

“Certainly.”

“I never would have expected you for a whore.”

Megan gasped. What had happened to the sweet gentleman who had helped her? When had he been replaced by this sneering bigot? She had been right all along. A man was a man, no question about it.

“Now, Lieutenant, the girls don’t whore. The Celebration ain’t no cigar store.”

“And how many of the girls on Paradise Alley started out as dancers, Queen? You know as well as I do that there’s a thin line between respectable and whore in the Yukon.” He glanced at Megan. “It’s only a matter of time.”

Megan stepped away from the wall and crossed the distance between herself and the Mountie. “You, sir—” She jabbed her finger into his red clad chest. “—can get out of my dance hall.”

“Gladly.” After a sharp nod that was both sneer and dismissal, Alex Carson left the room, his footsteps clattering down the wood stairs and retreating toward the front door.

“Good riddance,” Megan muttered.

“Well now, Lovey, he’s got his troubles, same’s the rest of us. Don’t judge him too harsh before you know his reasons.”

“He can’t possibly have a reason to explain that behavior.” Megan stared at the door for a moment, an odd sense of loss flooding her at the Mountie’s abrupt departure. Shrugging off the feeling as exhaustion from her trip, she turned to the other woman. “Tell me about my father.”

The heavy makeup on Queen’s face sagged along with her expression. “I’m sorry you heard the way you did. That dolt Zechariah shouldn’t have blurted the news out to you that-away. He was told to come for me.” She sighed. “Well, there’s no help for it now. How’re you feeling?”

“Like I stepped into a dream. I can’t believe he’s dead.” Megan sank onto the edge of the bed.

Queen joined her and, as the mattress dipped alarmingly, Megan braced herself before she could be thrown against the woman’s side.

“The sad news is true. Brian’s gone to meet his maker. That’s a meeting I would have paid good money to see.” She cackled again before continuing. “I’ve been running the place since he died. Now that you’re here, you can have the job. I’d much rather do my own and be done with it.”

“And what is your job, Queen?” Megan found herself intensely curious about this giant of a woman.

“They come for miles to pay me a dollar a dance.”

Megan’s eyes widened. Men came for miles to dance with Queen Love? The prospect amazed her.

“I see what you’re thinkin’. I don’t understand it either, but men love me. Always have.”

Megan had no idea how to respond, but Queen obviously did not need a response since she began to talk about the workings of The Celebration in a businesslike tone in direct contrast to her appearance. Megan’s head swam with the unfamiliar details of dance hall ownership.

When her mother had died a few weeks after Megan’s thirteenth birthday, her father left her to be raised by a maiden aunt in Chicago while he went off to seek his first fortune. Aunt Saundra owned a dry goods store, and Megan had first learned about business at the older woman’s side. By the time Brian returned for a visit, three years later, Megan was running the store on her own and turning a larger profit than her aunt had ever dreamed possible. When her father saw the asset Megan would be to any of his ventures, he told her to pack up her meager collection of belongings, and they hit the road.

She spent the next ten years of her life managing restaurants and hotels in various boomtowns throughout the country. She had little time to lament her lost youth, though sometimes when she was alone in her bed, she dreamt of what her life might have been like if she’d remained with her aunt—dresses and dances, music and men. Instead of those sweet trappings of young womanhood, Megan witnessed the seamy side of male-female relationships. She had seen too many good women brought low for the love of an unworthy male. It was a hard lesson, but one Megan had seen played out too often to forget.

A half hour later, Queen paused for breath and Megan jumped in. “Queen, I think I should rest. This has all been too upsetting.”

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