Savage Thunder

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Authors: Johanna Lindsey

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Savage Thunder
Wyoming [2]
Johanna Lindsey
HarperCollins (1989)

Newly widowed after a shockingly brief marriage to an elderly British lord, Jocelyn Fleming still aches with the pain of unexplored desire. And now her restless heart is leading her far from the protective bosom of polite London society to the perilous beauty of the American West . . .and to Colt Thunder.

Breathlessly exciting but dangerously unpredictable, Colt is a loner whose Cheyenne blood burns hotter than the blistering Arizona sun. Jocelyn's wealth and title mean nothing to this strange whose passion rules his actions and his heart. But neither the wild desert stallion nor the untouched English rose can deny their irresistible attraction. . .or prevent the firestorm of emotion that erupts when their vastly different worlds collide.

Johanna Lindsey
Savage Thunder

Dedication

To Martha and Bill
for the inspiration of enduring love

Contents

Chapter One

The Callan Ranch was silent that summer day except for…

Chapter Two

Vanessa Britten ignored the embroidery in her lap and watched…

Chapter Three

It was not a road so much as a mule…

Chapter Four

“I don’ like the idear of killin’ no woman, Dewane.”

Chapter Five

“Vanessa? Vanessa, are you all right?”

Chapter Six

Ed Schieffelin had been warned by the post commander at…

Chapter Seven

Billy had had his fun. He wasn’t grinning as he…

Chapter Eight

Vanessa opened the door of their suite in the Grand…

Chapter Nine

“I’ll get it,” Billy called and bounded off the bed,…

Chapter Ten

Mrs. Addie Bourland’s Millinery Shop was sandwiched between the offices of…

Chapter Eleven

Billy should have known that Colt wasn’t so easy to…

Chapter Twelve

“He has done this for spite, you know,” Vanessa complained…

Chapter Thirteen

He knew she was there. He’d heard her approach, though…

Chapter Fourteen

“Ferme là!”

Chapter Fifteen

“Pete’s ridin’ in.”

Chapter Sixteen

They were a beautiful sight, the woman and the magnificent…

Chapter Seventeen

“What are you going to do when the man starts…

Chapter Eighteen

For the next several days Jocelyn saw nothing of Colt,…

Chapter Nineteen

Vanessa gave a weary sigh as she watched Jocelyn through…

Chapter Twenty

Jocelyn could not sit still as she waited for Colt…

Chapter Twenty-one

Through the open window came the sound of bootheels clicking…

Chapter Twenty-two

The room wasn’t empty. There were two men inside it,…

Chapter Twenty-three

No sooner was Jocelyn alone than she yanked off her…

Chapter Twenty-four

“His sister, Maura, is quite charming,” Vanessa was saying as…

Chapter Twenty-five

Standing at the long bar, Colt finished off the whiskey…

Chapter Twenty-six

“Good morning, Your Grace.”

Chapter Twenty-seven

Every instinct had warned Colt to stay away from camp…

Chapter Twenty-eight

Colt felt wonderful. He hurt like hell, but inside he…

Chapter Twenty-nine

Jocelyn set her plate aside and then stretched before leaning…

Chapter Thirty

They rode east toward the Manzano Mountains. The fast gallop…

Chapter Thirty-one

“This is purely a waste of time, if you ask…

Chapter Thirty-two

He wasn’t John Longnose, of course he wasn’t. She’d heard…

Chapter Thirty-three

Jocelyn had assumed she would be put on Sir George,…

Chapter Thirty-four

“I hope you know I aged ten years.”

Chapter Thirty-five

Jocelyn hadn’t known which room was Colt’s, but with a…

Chapter Thirty-six

It was absolutely out of the question. It was so…

Chapter Thirty-seven

They rode throughout the remainder of the night, keeping to…

Chapter Thirty-eight

She climaxed in her dream. She woke up with it,…

Chapter Thirty-nine

Colt returned with a pheasant and two small quail, some…

Chapter Forty

After three years of traveling and seeing the world, Jocelyn…

Chapter Forty-one

The Gold Nugget Brewery hadn’t sounded that crowded from the…

Chapter Forty-two

Colt watched the duchess walk out of the saloon, but…

Chapter Forty-three

There was a light swirling of snow outside the windows…

Chapter Forty-four

The first thing the woman said to him was, “Unless…

Chapter Forty-five

“You know, Chase, time’s a-wasting. Winter will be gone before…

Chapter Forty-six

“You’re the first to know, dear. I’ve decided to get…

Wyoming Territory, 1878

T
he Callan Ranch was silent that summer day except for the ominous crack of a whip. More than a half-dozen men were gathered in the grass-patched front yard of the ranch house, but not one made a sound as they watched Ramsay Pratt wield the whip with the expertise he was known for. An ex-bullwhacker, as stock drivers were frequently called, Pratt loved to show off his skills. He could knock the revolver out of a gunman’s hand with the flick of his wrist, or a fly off the rear end of a horse without touching the hide. Where other men carried guns on their hips, Pratt carried a twelve-foot-long bullwhip coiled on his. But this demonstration today was a mite different from his usual tricks. This one was stripping the flesh off a man’s back.

Ramsay did it at Walter Callan’s behest, but he derived a good deal of pleasure from it, for it wasn’t the first time he had whipped a man to death, or found that he enjoyed doing it, though no one here in Wyoming knew that. He didn’t have it easy the way gunmen did. If they wanted to kill a man, they could pick
a fight that would be over in a matter of seconds, then claim self-defense after the smoke cleared. But with Ramsay’s choice of weapons, he had to disarm a man first, then proceed to whip the life out of him. Not too many people bought self-defense in that case. But in this case, he was following the boss’s orders, and the victim was a no-account half-breed anyway, so no one would care.

He wasn’t using his bullwhip, which could take a half-inch chunk of flesh with each stroke. That would end the entertainment too soon. Callan had suggested a shorter, thinner horsewhip, still capable of making mincemeat out of a man’s back, but taking much longer to do it. Ramsay was all for that. He could drag this out for a good hour or more before his arm got tired.

If Callan weren’t so mad, he would probably have just had the Injun shot. But he wanted him to suffer, to scream some before he died, and Ramsay meant to oblige. So far he was just playing with the victim, using the same cracking technique he used with the bullwhip, slicing an inch here, an inch there, not really doing much damage but making each little cut felt.

The Injun hadn’t made a noise yet, not even a sharp indrawn breath. He would, though, when Ramsay started slashing instead of flicking. But there was no hurry—unless Callan got bored and called it off. That wasn’t likely to happen, not as furious as the boss was. Ramsay knew how he’d feel if he just found out the man courting his only daughter was a damn breed. All these months he’d been fooled, and Jenny Callan
too, from the look of her when her father confronted her with it. She’d turned right pale and sick-looking, and she stood on the porch now with her father, looking just as mad as he was.

It was a damn shame, for she was a real pretty gal. But who’d want her now after they heard who she’d kept company with, let touch her, and it was anyone’s guess what else he’d done to her. She’d been deceived just as her father had, but who could have guessed that the Summerses’ close friend was half Injun? He dressed like a white, spoke like a white, wore his hair shorter than most whites, carried a gun on his hip. It was just plain hard to tell what he was by the look of him, for the only things Injun-like about him were the straightness of his black hair and the darkness of his skin, which, truth to tell, wasn’t much darker than that of any other man who rode the range.

The Callans still wouldn’t have known if Long Jaw Durant hadn’t been there to tell. Durant had been fired from the Rocky Valley Ranch and had only signed on the Callan spread yesterday. He had been in the barn when Colt Thunder, as the breed was calling himself, had ridden in on that big-boned Appaloosa, a son of Mrs. Summers’ prize stallion. Naturally Durant was curious enough to ask one of the men what Thunder was doing there, and when told he’d been sniffing ’round Jenny Callan’s skirts these past three months, he couldn’t believe it. He knew Colt from his previous employment as being a close friend of the boss, Chase Summers, as well as his wife, Jessica. He also knew him to be a half-breed who until three years ago had been a full-fledged
Cheyenne warrior, though that knowledge hadn’t gone much farther than the Rocky Valley, apparently—until today.

Durant had wasted little time in finding his new boss and apprising him of this news. Maybe if he hadn’t done it in front of three other hands, Callan would have handled it differently. But with his men aware of his daughter’s shame, there was no way in hell he could let the breed live. He had gathered up the rest of his men, and when Colt Thunder stepped out on the porch, having collected young Jenny for an afternoon picnic, he was facing a half-dozen nervous revolvers trained on his belly, enough firepower to keep his hand away from his own gun, which he was quickly relieved of.

He was a tall man, taller than any of the men surrounding him. Those who had seen him come and go over these past months had never had reason to be wary of him, though, for he smiled often, laughed often, gave every indication of being a man of easy temperament—until now. Now there was little doubt that he had been raised by the Northern Cheyenne, those same Cheyenne who had joined with the Sioux to massacre Lieutenant Colonel Custer and his battalion of two hundred men just two years ago in the valley of the Little Bighorn up in Montana Territory. Colt Thunder, in the blink of an eye, became a Cheyenne brave, lethal, dangerous, the savage wildness of the Injun unleashed, striking fear into the hearts of civilized man.

He did not go down easily once he realized that shooting him was not their intention. It took seven
men to get him tied to the hitching post in front of the house, and of those seven, not one came away from the scuffle unscathed. Bruises and bloody noses tamped down any qualms the men might have felt when Walter Callan ordered Ramsay to fetch a horsewhip so the breed would die slow. The Injun hadn’t even flinched at that order. He still hadn’t, even though his shirt was now torn and soaking up blood from the many small cuts Ramsay had inflicted.

He was still standing, his hips against the five-foot-long hitching rail his only support, his arms stretched out to either end of it. There was room to bring him sagging to his knees, and he would go down eventually, but right now he stood straight and tall, his head defiantly erect, only the sure grip of his fingers curled around the rail an indication of pain—or anger.

It was that posture, so damn proud, that reminded Ramsay this wasn’t like those other times his whip had bitten into human flesh. The two Mexicans he had done the same to down in Texas had crumbled after only three or four licks. That old prospector Ramsay had relieved of his gold and his life in Colorado had started screaming even before the first stroke of the lash. But this was an Injun, or at least he’d been raised like one; hadn’t Ramsay heard somewhere about the Northern Plains Injuns putting themselves through some kind of self-torture ceremony? He’d wager the breed had a couple of scars on his chest or back to prove it, and that riled him. It meant it would be a long while and a lot of hard work to get any screams out of this one. It was time to get serious.

The first true stroke of the whip was like a red-hot iron laid across the breed’s back, branding him, the only difference the absence of the stink of burning flesh. Colt Thunder didn’t blink, nor would he as long as Jenny Callan was standing up on that porch watching him. He kept his eyes locked to hers. They were blue like his own, though much darker, like that sapphire ring Jessie was fond of wearing. Jessie? God, she was going to be angry about this, but then she had always been protective of him, especially since he showed up on her doorstep three years ago and she took it upon herself to turn him into a white man. She’d even had him believing it could work. He should have known better.

Think of her…no, he could only envision Jessie crying when she saw what was left of his body after they were done with him. Jenny—he had to concentrate on her.

Damn, how many strokes was that now? Six? Seven?

Jenny, beautiful, blond, sweet as Jessie’s homemade candy. Her father had settled in Wyoming only last year, after the Indian wars were over, the beaten Sioux and Cheyenne confined to reservations. Colt had been in Chicago with Jessie and Chase during the worst of the war, Jessie conspiring to keep the news from him, thinking he would want to go back and fight with his people. He wouldn’t have. His mother, sister, and younger brother were already dead, found and killed by a couple of gold prospectors heading for the Black Hills just two months after he had left the
tribe in ’75. The area had been swarming with prospectors ever since gold was discovered there in ’74.

It was the start of the end, that gold in the heart of Indian territory. The Indians had always known it was there, but once the whites did, you couldn’t keep them out. And even though they were breaking the treaty by being there, the army finally came in to protect them, and so the last great Indian victory at Little Bighorn, but then the end.

Colt’s mother, Wide River Woman, had seen it coming. That was why she had instigated the fight between him and his stepfather, Runs With the Wolf, pretty much forcing Colt into leaving the tribe. She would have sent his sister with him if Little Gray Bird Woman hadn’t already married.

She told him that only after it was over and done and too late to mend the breach, that and her reasons for doing it. He had been furious with her at the time. Her fears for the future meant nothing to him. He saw only the end to his way of life. But she had already seen that end, was giving him a new life in forcing him to go.

It was galling to see her proved right, to know that he would be living on a reservation now if he had survived the wars, just as his stepfather and older brother were—if they had survived. But it was even more galling to be saved from that degradation for this.

Twenty-five? Thirty? There was no point in counting, was there?

He had seen Ramsay Pratt’s skill with the whip several times before when he had come to visit Jenny.
The man took pride in what he could do. And he was showing off now for the men who stood behind him, slashing the whip down in the exact same welt as many times as it took to lay the welt open, again to deepen the cut, then again just for the hell of it, and the pain of it.

Colt knew Pratt could go on indefinitely wielding that whip. He was a big bear of a man, looked like one too, with a nose so flat it was almost unnoticeable, a shaggy mane of dirty brown hair floating wild about his shoulders, and a long, full beard and mustache that blended right into it. If any man looked like a savage, Pratt did. And Colt had seen the gleam in his eyes when told to fetch that whip. This was a chore he was enjoying.

Fifty-five? Sixty? Why was he still trying to keep track? Did he have any skin left? Was the damage as bad as it felt, or was it only Pratt’s skill that made it seem as if his back were going up in flames? Just barely, he was aware of the blood seeping into his boots.

How much longer would Jenny stand there and watch, her expression as hard and unemotional as her father’s? Had he really thought about marrying this girl, of buying a ranch with the pouch of gold he had found in his belongings when he arrived at the Rocky Valley, his mother’s parting gift to him?

From the first time he had seen Jenny he had wanted her. Jessie had teased him about his interest and encouraged him to do something about it. She had also instilled enough self-confidence in him so that he didn’t hesitate long.

When they actually met for the first time, he found the attraction was mutual, so mutual that in less than a month, Jenny gifted him with her innocence. He asked her to marry him that night, and they had been making plans ever since, were just waiting for the right moment to tell her father. But the old man had to suspect what was coming. With the Rocky Valley cattle grazing across the open range, practically right up to the Callan Ranch, it was an easy matter for him to come visiting three or four times a week at midday, as well as in the evenings. Walter Callan’s knowledge of how serious Colt’s suit was probably had a lot to do with his outrage now. And Jenny’s outrage?

He realized that he should have told her about his past, that White Thunder was his real name, that Colt for a first name was Jessie’s idea. The trouble was, he had known Jenny wouldn’t believe him, would think he was only teasing her. Jessie had done too good a job on him; most of the time he even thought like a white.

But to Jenny, he was no longer white. He had seen her fury before she closed it off and matched her father’s hard visage as the torture began. There were no tears, no thoughts now of his hands and mouth on her body, of begging him to make love to her each time they found themselves alone. Now he was just another Indian getting what he deserved for presuming to aspire to the affections of a white woman.

His legs were getting weak. So was his vision. The fire had worked its way up to explode inside his brain. He didn’t know how he was still standing, how he was keeping his facial muscles from twitching spas
modically. He had thought he had experienced the ultimate in pain during the Sun Dance ceremony, but that was child’s play next to this. And Jenny hadn’t closed her eyes or looked away yet. But then she couldn’t see his back from up on the porch. Not that it would matter. And it no longer mattered that he keep eye contact with her. It wasn’t working to block out the pain.

Walter Callan signaled Ramsay to stop a moment when Colt’s eyes closed and his head dropped back on his shoulders. “You still alive, boy?”

Colt made no response. The screams were there, in his head, in his throat, just waiting to escape if he opened his mouth. He’d bite his tongue off before he let them out. And it wasn’t the fierce pride of the Indian that had decided he would make no sound. The Indian respected the white man who could face death with courage. He didn’t expect any such respect from these men for his courage. His silence was for his own sake, his own self-respect.

But the silence around him had been broken by Callan’s question. There were exclamations of amazement that he was still on his feet, a debate on whether it was possible to faint without keeling over, a suggestion that a bucket of water be fetched to dump over him, just in case he really had fainted. At that point he opened his eyes, still cognizant enough to know that water touching any part of his mangled back would send him over the edge of control. It was harder to lift his head, but he managed that too.

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