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Authors: Debra Cowan

BOOK: Whirlwind Groom
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“I need to keep an eye on her symptoms,” Catherine said quietly. “Her leg will swell further and I'm very concerned that she may have trouble breathing. I've made her as comfortable as possible.”

“I'll fetch what you need.”

“Could you also stop by the house and tell my brother Andrew I'll be here overnight? He can stay with one of his friends, either Creed or Miguel.”

“Done.”

Davis Lee gave Josie one last look before walking out. As reluctant as he was to leave, he was glad to be doing
something besides staring at her waxen face. She was in good hands with Catherine, so why didn't the pressure in his chest ease?

 

Four hours later, Davis Lee had delivered the herbs to Catherine and seen Andrew settled with Miguel Santos, the nephew of the telegraph operator. He had also completed his nightly walk through town. It was a few minutes past eleven and all was quiet.

Jake was at the jail guarding McDougal and Davis Lee was free to head for his small house behind Haskell's that had been provided by the town. Instead, he stood in the street staring at the soft lamp glow in an upstairs window of the Whirlwind Hotel.

When he had returned with the things Catherine wanted, Josie hadn't looked any better. He wanted to check on her one last time, knew he wouldn't sleep until he did.

Using the key Penn had given him so he could keep an eye on the hotel if he heard something after-hours, Davis Lee let himself in, moonlight marking his way to the corner of the registration desk. He lit the candle always kept there by the old man and carried it upstairs to Josie's room.

Mindful of the other guests, he rapped softly with one knuckle. When there was no response, he knocked. Nothing.

He tried the door and found it unlocked, pushing it open to peer into the room. “Catherine?”

But it wasn't Catherine in the chair beside Josie's bed. It was Esther Wavers. The lamp on the bedside table threw a warm blanket of light around the room and Davis Lee stepped over to pinch out the candle on the dresser.

Josie was in bed, the blanket on the floor, the sheet down around her ankles. A splint braced her lower left leg and he saw the white gleam of the bandages Catherine had applied over the poultice. At the same time he registered that Josie wore only her chemise and drawers, his attention moved to
the older woman who hadn't reacted to his arrival. “Esther?”

He walked to the bed, his attention snagged on the dark hair spread like sable silk across Josie's pillow. Smoky yellow light slid over her, tucking shadows between her breasts, her legs. Her gossamer-light undergarment fit close to her body, the flush of fever evident even in the muted light.

Davis Lee dragged his gaze to Esther, concerned that something was wrong. The older woman slumped in the chair, head bowed, hands resting loosely on a water-filled basin in her lap. The steady rise and fall of her chest told him that she was asleep. Relief that she wasn't dead or unconscious mixed with a surge of irritation. What good was she doing this way?

Josie made a low, ragged sound, her breath catching in a way that had him turning. He was startled to realize she was crying in her sleep.

“Esther?” He kept his voice quiet and calm, reaching down to take the tilting bowl from her lap.

Moving fitfully, Josie threw a protective arm across her face. He eased down onto the edge of the bed.

Esther snuffled softly and his jaw tightened. He bumped the washbasin into her knee.

“Huh?” She jerked awake, blinking rapidly then squinting at him. “Oh. Sheriff?”

“Where's Catherine?” he asked tightly.

She covered a yawn, her voice scratchy with sleep. “Pearl Anderson's daughter-in-law finally went into labor and there was a problem. Pearl asked Catherine to come so I told her I'd stay with Josie.” Her gaze went to the bed, no doubt seeing the distress in Josie's face and body that Davis Lee saw. Guilt darkened the older woman's eyes and she snapped straight in her chair. “I didn't mean to fall asleep. Is she worse?”

“I don't know,” he said evenly. “Was she like this the last time you remember?”

“Yes.” She nodded, her wilted bun wiggling loosely on top of her head.

“Do you know what time that was?”

“No.”

Josie made more of those choppy sobbing noises. A hardboiled knot lodged in his chest. Was she dreaming or in pain? Catherine had said she might be disoriented, not that she might be delirious. It had to be due to the fever. He placed a hand on her forehead. She was burning up.

“I came by to check on her.” A rag floated in the bowl of water and Davis Lee scooped it up, squeezed it. He moved Josie's arm down to her side so he could wipe her face.

“I'm so sorry.”

He wanted to reassure the older woman, but all he could think about was Catherine saying that breathing might become difficult for Josie. She might have suffocated before Esther ever woke up.

He forcefully dunked the rag again, wringing it out before moving it gently over Josie's face. “Why don't you go on to bed, Esther? I'll stay with her.”

“Oh, Sheriff, I'll be fine now. I really didn't mean to—”

“I insist,” he said quietly.

“But someone might find out you're alone in here with her.”

And doing what?
he thought ruefully. The woman was practically unconscious. He gave her a flat stare. “In light of things, I don't really care.”


She
might.”

“I'm staying. Leave the door open. Hopefully Miz Webster will recover enough to take me to task herself.”

Esther hesitated, watching him wet the rag again and repeat the stroking motions on Josie's face. “All right.”

She walked to the door. “I'm truly sorry, Sheriff. I don't know what happened.”

He gave a noncommittal grunt, his attention on the slight figure in the bed.

Esther's footsteps sounded down the stairs then faded away. The rag warmed with the heat of Josie's flesh. The nearly transparent garment she wore wasn't a chemise as he had first thought, but some one-piece thing that looked like a chemise and drawers combined. Except it wasn't loose and shapeless like any shift he'd ever seen. This undergarment was fitted. Edged with delicate lace, it curved to her body like a second skin.

Especially damp as it was from repeated efforts to cool her down. The thin fabric clung to her breasts, revealing the darker flesh of her nipples, the dip of her navel, the shadow between her legs. Her breasts were small but full, and the perfect size for her petite frame. There was nothing wanting about them at all.

His mouth went dry and he grabbed the sheet, pulling it up over her. He dipped the cloth and ran it over her face, her neck, her chest. The faint tang of kerosene drifted from the lamp, but it was the scent of soft warm woman and honeysuckle that filled his lungs. Secluded with her like this, cornered by the night and the heat, Davis Lee felt his body harden. He lost track of how many times he wet the cloth, soothed her skin then repeated the motions.

He lifted her, applying the cool rag to her nape and the patch of skin on her back not covered by that infernal sheer piece of nothing. Her sobs quieted, but she twisted on the bed, kicking off the sheet.

He pulled up the cover and she moved it again. He couldn't tell if her fever was coming down. High color still flushed her cheeks and chest. Her hairline was wet, her un
derwear and the sheets damp. He reached out and stroked a finger lightly against her temple.

She turned into his touch, moaning, “William.”

Who was William? Husband? Lover? Brother? She had never answered his questions about her family.

She mumbled incoherently, her arm slanting across her face again.

He murmured soothing words, lifted her arm to draw the wet cloth over her face and chest. She twitched beneath his hand, her head turning from side to side on her pillow. Her hair slid across her face and Davis Lee nudged the wet strands away.

“Blood,” she whispered brokenly. “So much blood.”

Another sob choked out of her and his heart caught at the deep-reaching agony of it.
Blood?
What was going on in her head? Just another question to add to the others he had about her.

He wished her fever would cool, that Catherine would return. He took her hand and dipped it into the water up to her wrist, spreading the wet rag on her chest for a moment. The tiny mole he'd glimpsed before at the edge of her collarbone teased him. And so did that damn transparent undergarment.

Davis Lee stared at her plump breasts and the dusky nipples that had drawn up like shy buds. Despite the fact that he knew she was lying about something, want pounded through him, low and fierce and hot. He moved his gaze from the flat of her stomach to the dark shadow between her legs. His breath hitched on the same sharp edge of desire he'd felt for another woman with lies in her eyes.

Davis Lee dragged a hand down his face, wishing he could erase this picture of her from his mind. He had no doubt he would carry this image to his grave. What he needed was to focus on getting her fever down, helping her through this. Then finding out her connection to Ian McDougal and why she had really come to Whirlwind.

Chapter Five

T
he pain woke her, a searing agony that pulsed just below the surface of her skin. Her eyelids were heavy, and when she finally got her eyes open, her vision was slightly blurry. The tight heaviness against her lower left leg confirmed the splint she vaguely remembered Catherine fashioning. A bulky wrap of white cloth kept the poultice in place. The snakeroot must be drawing out the poison because her leg burned like fire.

Pale gray light tinged with the sun crept into the room. Trying to get her bearings, she stared at the dresser at the foot of the bed. She became aware of the damp sheets beneath her, the thick cotton feel of her mouth. The door was open.

Even with her senses dulled by pain and weakness she knew she wasn't alone.

Her head felt too heavy for her neck and it was an effort to look over at the window. Davis Lee. Her mind stalled on that for a moment. She remembered shooting with him, resting against him on the ride here. Catherine Donnelly had put the poultice on her leg then the splint. That was the last thing Josie remembered.

Where was Catherine? How long had the sheriff been
here? His back was to her. One broad shoulder braced against the wall as he stared out the window. He wore the same light blue shirt he'd worn yesterday. At least she thought it was the same.

The lamp's low flame burned beside the bed, giving a golden haze to the watery daylight seeping into the room. Her gaze skimmed involuntarily down the dark trousers that molded his lean hips and long legs entirely too well. She remembered how it felt to be cradled between his hard thighs, held against that brawny chest. Only then did Josie's numbed brain realize that she was nearly naked.

The fine lawn of her combination suit clung to her body like wet tissue. The sweats that she and Catherine expected now slicked her still-fevered flesh, causing the thin cloth to cup her breasts and the tops of her thighs. Who had undressed her? Him?

The fabric was transparent. Josie could see her nipples, her navel, everything she owned. Which meant he had, too.

The heat that flushed her from head to toe had her easing herself up and reaching for the sheet.

“You're awake,” he said, turning around.

How had he known that? Startled, she made a desperate grab for the linen and caught the corner, drawing it up to her chest.

“Every time I did that, you kicked it off.”

She frowned at the tired rasp of his voice. Dark stubble shadowed his too-strong jaw, sharpening the angles of his face. His eyes burned with blue fire and his coffee-dark hair was furrowed from his fingers. His hat hung on the chair beside her bed.

He moved over to her. She pressed the sheet to her breasts, mortified at the thought that Davis Lee had seen her nearly naked.

He reached for the pitcher on the bedside table. After
pouring water into a glass, he bent down and slid one hard, hot hand under her neck to hold her head.

His touch was gentle, at odds with the no-nonsense line of his lips, the cool knowing in his eyes. She sipped, looking down to escape his intense gaze. The liquid soothed the parched heat of her mouth but didn't quench her thirst.

She drank greedily and he pulled back a little.

“Easy,” he murmured.

Trying to slow down, she finished the rest. He lowered her head back to the pillow and returned the glass to the bedside table. Her body still burned with fever, but she could feel the brand of his touch on her nape. His gaze on her body.

Her eyes met his and she was struck by the hard glitter of want in his eyes. Jaw tightening, he stepped away, behind the chair.

She fastened her gaze on her hands. Weakness pulled at her. “I thought Catherine was here.”

“She was called away on an emergency.”

It took too much effort to nod so Josie just absorbed the information. The mildness of Davis Lee's voice relaxed her unease enough that she glanced at him. No emotion showed now on his handsome face, but his body was taut with a subtle tension. She didn't recall him coming back after he'd fetched the herbs for Catherine.

He gestured to her leg. “Still hurt pretty bad?”

“Yes.”

“Do you remember much of what happened after I brought you here?”

“Not really. Catherine, the snakeroot.” Somewhere in her mushy brain, she recalled another woman. Older. “Was Mrs. Wavers here?”

“For a bit.”

Her body ached. She didn't have the energy of a sun-warmed cat. “I was unconscious.”

He nodded.

“How long?”

“Ten or twelve minutes without coming to. Then you were in and out.”

She was thirsty and the pain in her leg radiated through her whole body. “I don't remember anything else.”

“You were burning up.” He felt her forehead, his big, rough hand gentle on her skin. “Still are.”

“Yes, I remember the fever….”

And strong hands moving softly over her face, her chest. Her gaze flew to Davis Lee. It had been him. Touching her. Soothing her.

His gaze dipped, skimmed over her body.

She squirmed beneath the sheet. “So…how long have you been here?”

“A while.”

She wondered if this dizziness was due to the snakebite or the blue-eyed man standing over her. “Who's watching the jail?”

“Your window has a perfect view of it.” His gaze sharpened like a newly whetted blade. “But Jake stayed with the prisoner.”

His pointed answer told her he was on to her spying, but she couldn't summon the energy to care or to keep it in her head for more than a fleeting moment. She could barely lift the sheet to blot her damp forehead and neck. For the first time she wondered if Davis Lee could be held responsible for McDougal dying in his custody. She wouldn't want that.

Despite her listlessness and dulled thoughts, she was well aware he had saved her life. He didn't look all that pleased about it. Neither was she. She didn't want to owe him, but she couldn't dance around the fact that she did.

“I…thank you. For saving my life,” she said quietly.

His shoulder lifted. “You're the one who knew what to do. I guess that's because your pa's a doctor.”

“I could've died out there.” She saw a flare of emotion burn through the guarded blue depths of his eyes.

Sober acknowledgment passed between them, and Josie felt a solid connection to another person that she hadn't experienced since the deaths of her parents.

He gave her a crooked grin. “You cured of wanting those shooting lessons?”

“No.” She licked her parched lips and tried for a smile. “I might have to save
you
sometime.”

He chuckled. “Unless you use something other than a gun, I don't have a prayer.”

“My aim will improve,” she said weakly.

“I'd say it has to.” His eyes crinkled at the corners. He poured more water and held her head to drink. “Feel like you're gonna make it now?”

“I think so.”

His fixed attention made Josie think he wanted to say something further, but the moment was lost as Catherine walked into the room.

“Morning,” he said. Immediate relief spread across Davis Lee's face. “Doin' all right?”

“Yes.” The nurse's gaze met his and it seemed that an unspoken message passed between them. She wore the same blue dress Josie recalled from last night.

He smiled fully at his friend, a smile Josie had seen only one other time. The expression blunted the sharp angles of his face. There was something in his demeanor…. Fondness, respect, something deep and soft.

Josie's gaze shifted to the raven-haired woman then back to Davis Lee. There had been something between them once. When? How serious?

Catherine's beautiful face was exhausted, but her eyes lit up at the sight of Josie. “I'm glad to see you're awake.”

“It's only been a few minutes.” The lawman scrubbed a hand across his face, stepping back to make room for her.

“I spoke to Dr. Butler about coming in to check you, but he thinks I'm doing everything possible. Still, if you'd rather he examine you, I'd be happy to send for him.”

“No. I think you're doing just fine.”

“I guess between the two of us we figured it out, didn't we?” Catherine smiled and put a cool hand against Josie's forehead. “I think your fever's down a bit.”

Josie blotted her wet face and chest with the sheet. “Now the sweats.”

“I'm afraid so. I can give you a sponge bath. That will make you feel a little better.”

“Thank you.”

“I can bring a bathing tub up here, Catherine,” Davis Lee said. “If you want it.”

She smiled. “That would be wonderful. I think Josie would appreciate a real bath.”

“Consider it done.”

Josie wasn't going to complain about getting in the water rather than just getting a wiping-down, but she was a little surprised that the sheriff would volunteer for such a chore when it would be easier if she just took the sponge bath. Josie knew his offer had more to do with his friendship with the nurse than anything about her.

Catherine squeezed Josie's shoulder. “I want to make another poultice and some tea for you.”

Davis Lee had remained in his spot away from the bed. “Want me to bring that tub now or wait for you to get what you need?”

“Now, if you don't mind.”

He cocked his head toward the door in a silent request and Catherine joined him. Their voices were too low for Josie to make out any words then he left.

As he left, the other woman returned to Josie. “I started the tea before I came up. It's steeping. When he returns, I'll get it.”

“I don't look forward to drinking it. Not if it tastes anything like this poultice smells.”

“I don't blame you.” Catherine made a face. “Since Davis Lee is gone for a bit, let me check your wound.”

Pushing the leg of Josie's combination up a little farther, she untied the cloth strips holding the splint in place then gently unwrapped the dressing, peeling it away with the poultice.

“Can you tell anything yet?” Josie tried to see but Catherine hid her view.

“I don't see any signs of infection, but it's still quite swollen. I think the poultice is working but it will take a while.”

“How does the cut look?”

“The scar probably won't be too unsightly. Davis Lee was careful.”

“Yes, he was.” Josie bit the inside of her cheek then asked Catherine what she hadn't been able to ask the man who'd saved her life. “Did you undress me?”

“Yes.” She smiled. “And I'm sorry I wasn't here when you woke. I hope you weren't uncomfortable with Davis Lee.”

Of course not, she thought testily. She was quite used to being practically naked and alone with men who gave her the shivers. “No,” she mumbled.

Catherine pressed a clean dry rag to Josie's perspiring forehead and chest. “The bath will help your fever to come down. Davis Lee said you were a little out of your head.”

Josie frowned. “What do you mean?”

“Just that you said some things.”

As if her heart weren't already beating too fast. “What things?”

“He didn't say.” She grinned. “Are you worried you said something shocking?”

“Of course not,” Josie said weakly. But she was.
What
had she said? “I appreciate you asking him to stay with me during the night while you tended to your other patient.”

“Oh, I didn't ask him. Esther agreed to stay with you when I was called away, but when Davis Lee came to check on you, he found her asleep.”

He had come to check on her? “He didn't tell me that.”

Catherine smiled.

“The two of you are really good friends,” Josie ventured, her eyes growing heavy.

“Yes. He was one of the first people I met when I moved here. One of the sweetest men I know.”

Sweet?
That was a word Josie hadn't put to the sheriff. “Were you…the two of you ever…?”

“Involved? Not seriously.”

“I guess that was before you fell in love with his cousin?”

“Yes.” At the mention of her betrothed, the same serene pleasure Josie had observed on her mother's face when she spoke about her father suffused Catherine's features.

“Does Davis Lee still care for you that way?”

“Oh, no.”

Her tongue felt thick. She fought the drowsiness spreading through her. “He seems to have taken your decision well.”

“He knew it before I did.”

A loud clambering, interspersed with Davis Lee's husky voice, had Josie's gaze going to the door. In a few seconds, he walked into the room, carrying an oblong tin bathtub. Muscles in his shoulders and arms bunched beneath his shirt as he placed the tub against the far wall. She noticed then that someone had moved her fabric and stacked it neatly in the corner. Catherine? Esther? Or Davis Lee?

He started out the door again and the nurse said over her shoulder, “I can bring the water up with Penn's dumbwaiter.”

“I'll do it. Oh, Mitchell Orr was downstairs checking on Josie. I told him she was doing okay, but wasn't up to having visitors right now.”

“That's good,” Catherine murmured, cleaning the wound again.

Josie didn't much appreciate Davis Lee saying who could and couldn't see her, but she had no energy to protest. Or visit with anyone either, if she were honest. “Thank you,” she said breathlessly.

“You're welcome.” His narrowed gaze probed hers, and he looked like he wanted to slap her in wrist irons.

Why? Because he knew she was watching the jail? Or maybe because of what she'd said in her fever? Panic flickered. What
had
she said?

Drat this snakebite! And her fever! And him! What if she had blurted out her reason for coming to Whirlwind to the one man who could stop her from getting justice for her family—the man who had saved her life?

 

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