Broddock-Black 05 - Force of Nature (3 page)

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Authors: Susan Johnson

Tags: #Scan; HR; American West; 19th Century

BOOK: Broddock-Black 05 - Force of Nature
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Hazard and Blaze were still in the breakfast room when their children entered.

“You heard,” Hazard said, looking up from his paper.

Trey’s smile was sunshine bright. “Hasn’t everyone? I’m sure the telegraph lines have been humming since your dinner party last night. Even the London office has heard by now.” Pulling out a chair, he glanced at his mother, his gaze affectionate. “How are you taking all this, Mama?”

“Your father is being particularly obliging,” Blaze replied with a teasing smile in Hazard’s direction.

“Sensible man.”

“Perhaps you could take a lesson from this.” Hazard’s tone was sardonic. “Considering the trail of broken hearts you’re leaving in your wake.”

“But to date only broken hearts, Papa.” Dropping into a chair, Trey grinned at his father.

Blaze sent her son a warning glance. “That will be enough of your impudence. Your father is still trying to deal with this very untidy situation.”

“How much do they want?” Unlike her brother’s lounging pose, Daisy sat at the table with ladylike composure, her hands folded in her lap.

Hazard smiled; his daughter’s query was posed with her usual calm. “Knowing Lucy, quite a lot.”

“Will they be leaving when they have what they came for?” Hazard shrugged. “I would assume so.”

“Your new half sister seems very pleasant, however,” Blaze interposed. “Unlike—well—”

“You may say it, darling, unlike her mother,” Hazard pronounced with a slight frown. “Without getting into personalities, let’s just say, Lucy Attenborough is typical of women who marry for money. And in that respect, she’s at least predictable.”

“She received a considerable settlement from her husband’s death, did she not?” Daisy had made a few pertinent phone calls before leaving home.

“Yes, not that it’s relevant to this situation.”

“Is the girl”—Trey half-raised his hand toward his face— “like us?” He and Daisy bore their Absarokee heritage with unadorned grace.

“The resemblance is quite remarkable,” Blaze answered. “No one would mistake her for other than your father’s daughter.”

“And you said she was pleasant?” Trey grinned. “So when do we see this pleasant young lady?”

“For heaven’s sakes, Trey.” Daisy cast her brother a censorious look. “She may be trying to extort money from Father.” “That remains to be seen,” Blaze remarked. “She was quite uncomfortable about having come. But that may have nothing to do with their monetary goals. By the by, she’s an engineer.”

“You’re kidding.” Trey slid upright in his chair. “Both my sisters are career women?” It wasn’t as though Trey disapproved of females in the work force; everyone in the Braddock-Black family contributed to the family businesses and Trey was an exemplary partner. But he wasn’t driven like Daisy.

“So it seems,” his mother replied. “Jo would prefer to support her mother, but Lucy is offended by so declasse an occupation.”

“Her name’s Joe?”

“Giuseppina. J-o.”

“So when are we going to meet our engineer half sister?” Trey’s curiosity was piqued by more than the circumstances of her birth.

More circumspect, Daisy gauged her parents’ expressions. “Or would you prefer we didn’t?”

“No, not at all. Your father and I were going to talk to you both this morning. You simply heard the news first. By all means, we’d like you to meet Jo. She gives every appearance of being agreeable doesn’t she, dear?”

Hazard nodded. “Although I’m reserving judgment until we get to know her better. With Lucy for a mother..his voice trailed off. “In any event,” he went on briskly, “your mother and I were planning to speak to our visitors this forenoon and perhaps we could all plan on meeting later.” Daisy lifted her chin a fraction. “Are you talking to them with or without your lawyers?”

“Without.”

“Do you think that’s wise?” Daisy always erred on the side of caution.

Hazard had carved an empire for himself on the frontier where violence was a way of life; he wasn’t easily intimidated. “It won’t hurt to begin informally,” he said. “But whatever the direction of our discussions, I’d prefer not involving you in this.”

Daisy’s mouth firmed for a brief moment. “I’m perfectly capable of dealing with these negotiations.”

“Of course you are. Not wanting you involved has nothing to do with your capabilities.”

“I think your father feels it’s too personal,” Blaze interjected. “He’d prefer someone outside the family handle the arrangements.”

“Everyone knows you’re the best lawyer in Montana,” Hazard noted. Daisy had passed the bar with the highest scores every posted. “I’d just like to keep the haggling over money separate from family. Then socializing with Jo won’t pose any problems.”

“We were thinking of having them over for tea this afternoon,” Blaze remarked.

Trey groaned.

“I’ll have something alcoholic for you and your father, so you needn’t break your bad habits for me.” His mother swept a glance over his range clothes. “But I will insist you find yourself some more decent attire. Surely with your tailor’s bills, you have something more appropriate to wear.”

“Yes, Mama.” When his mother spoke in that tone of voice, it never paid to disagree.

“Good. Tea then—say at five?”

And the conversation turned to less tumultuous matters as the servants brought in fresh servings of breakfast for Daisy and Trey. The family was even able to forget for brief moments during the lively conversation concerning their many businesses and activities that a ten-ton elephant in the guise of a young lady from Florence was hovering in the wings.


But once Trey and Daisy had gone, the potent question of birthright returned, as obdurate and difficult as ever.

“You don’t actually want to go and see Lucy in action, do you? And I’m not saying that to avoid taking you.” Hazard’s dark gaze was open, but he knew how little his wife liked controversy and whenever possible, he shielded her from the more turbulent issues in their lives.

Blaze wrinkled her nose. “Of course I don’t wish to see

Lucy anymore than I have to, but I’m curious—I can’t say I’m not. On the other hand, I know what she wants”—her brows rose—“and I don’t mean just money. So I suppose it’s a question of whether I care to watch her try to seduce you.” Her sky-blue eyes twinkled with mischief. “Which now that I think about it, I’m sure I don’t. So, no, I won’t go. I would suggest, however, that you keep your daughter, Jo, out of the negotiations. There’s no point in exposing her to all the ... er ... titillating details of your liaison.”

“I agree, but how do you propose I accomplish that? Jo didn’t look like the type who takes directions.”

“An inherited trait, no doubt,” Blaze said with a faint smile. “Perhaps I could go to the hotel with you and invite Jo to go shopping. If she doesn’t like shopping, we have one of the better bookstores in the West. A studious young woman may find that an appealing alternative. And I suspect, if Lucy sees an opportunity to get you alone, she’ll find a way to send Jo with me.”

“No question there,” Hazard said, drily.

“A better question is, Can you defend yourself?” Blaze teased.

“I’ll bring Sheldon along.” Although knowing Lucy, it wouldn’t matter if God himself were on the sidelines. She was brazen as hell. “Between the two of us, we should be able to hold her at bay,” he said with more conviction than he was feeling.

“Perfect. Sheldon has excellent mediation skills. He saved us at least a half million on those copper leases last year.”

Hazard smiled. “We’ll see how he fares against Lucy.”

Blaze held her husband’s gaze for a potent moment. “Just a reminder—I’m more than willing to be forgiving... up to a point. I even understand how Lucy Attenborough might have been appealing when you were young and without ties. However—”

“You needn’t say more, darling. I’ll see that Lucy understands.” But he almost felt like crossing his fingers behind his back as he spoke, because Lucy was not only bold as brass, but without scruples.

If he had his way, she’d be on the next train heading east no matter what it cost.

Chapter 5

O
n that same morning, while family matters were occupying the Braddock-Blacks, Flynn Ito’s thoughts were consumed with vengeance. He was standing on a windswept hill a day’s ride north of Helena, gazing down on the Sun River valley below. His ranch house, barns, bunkhouse, and outbuildings lay in an untidy sprawl along both sides of the river, the buildings’ rooftops covered with a light dusting of snow. Smoke curled up from the chimneys into the clear blue sky. The storm had blown over, the strong winds sweeping east into Dakota, and unlike the violence of his thoughts, the scene below was one of tranquility and calm.

He was standing in the small cemetery where his parents were buried; it was his place of solitude when the burdens of the world became onerous. And after yesterday’s standoff with the crew of the Empire Cattle Company who was found three miles inside his borders, and after his men had discovered a score of his cattle slaughtered at the Aspen ford this morning, he needed the peace of the graveyard to clear his thoughts.

To plan and prepare his reprisals.

He and his men would be riding out come nightfall.

The remittance men who ran the Empire Cattle Company needed to be taught a lesson.

Standing before the simple headstones, the granite unembellished except for the names carved into the rough stone, he spoke to his parents as though they were still alive.

“They keep coming, Father—like you said they would— the Sassenach devils,” he murmured, a small smile forming on his mouth. His Irish mother had detested the English.

Like many of the large cattle companies, the Empire was funded by English nobles looking for profit in the American West, and on occasion for a distant locale to send their scapegrace sons until their scandals died away. Remittance men, they called those ne’er-do-well sons, and tonight, Flynn would face those running the Empire Cattle Company. Not that blue bloods from England were worth a damn as fighters. But the brutal men they hired to maintain their range lands were quick with a gun and dangerous.

And like his samurai father before him, Flynn had fought a constant battle to guard his land from men like that. In this outland beyond the arm of the law, the strong took from the weak. An eye for an eye wasn’t just a biblical injunction, and justice was determined by the number of armed men who rode at your side.

Flynn’s men were loyal, their fighting skills well honed. He’d learned the art of war at his father’s knee. The military arts were the highest form of study in Japan, the way of the warrior a philosophy of honor and loyalty his father had always lived by. A ronin or “wave man” (wanderer), his father had been set adrift when the feudal system had been replaced by a central government and the samurai class disenfranchised.

Ito Katsakura had sailed for the goldfields of California to mend his fortunes, taking with him his samurai swords, the badge of his class, and the principles of Bushido that had guided his life.

Flynn’s mother, Molly, an Irish immigrant, endured the drudgery of a scullery maid in Boston for three scant months before seeing the advertisement heralding high wages for mule skinners in California. Who hadn’t heard the glorious tales of striking it rich in the goldfields? Hadn’t she seen a team driven a thousand times? How hard could it be?

She’d learned to drive by sheer audacity and wits, holding her own against the male drivers, working the route from San Francisco to the goldfields for almost two years. By then, she’d saved up enough to stake her claim, and on her first day panning for gold, she’d met Katsakura. She’d known immediately, she’d always said, that she’d found a man as strong as she.

The young couple worked a series of claims up and down the Sierra Nevadas, making just enough to keep their appetites whetted for more. But the big bonanzas were few and far between eight years after the Sutter’s strike. And when word arrived of the new gold discoveries in Montana, they’d followed the rush to the virgin fields.

Their luck turned in ’63—maybe it had to do with the fact that Molly had called their claim Flynn’s Luck, after their five-year-old son. She’d always said it had, but whatever the reason, that patch of real estate near Diamond City lay over a gold vein rich enough to enable them to buy vast acres of prime land, make them good friends with the bankers in town and give them a life free from want.

With bowed head, Flynn stood at his parents’ graves, asking their blessing as was his habit before he rode off to face his enemies. “We leave tonight,” he said, his harsh features in repose, his long black hair blowing in the wind. “The moon’s full—your favorite kind, Father... a raiding moon.” He smiled, remembering all the times he’d ridden with his father. His father’s samurai swords were thrust through his belt—a long sword and short one, their cutting edges uppermost, the fearful blades, strong and sharp enough to cut through armor. “Give me your strength and courage.” He lifted his head as though listening and his mother’s voice echoed in his ears. “A Flynn can take on a hundred Sassenach devils without breaking a sweat, my darling boyo . . . and don’t you forget it.”

His father’s calm voice seemed to resonate in counterpoint: “Attack when your enemies least expect it.” And attack your enemies' weak point, Flynn silently added; his father’s wisdom had become his own.

He missed his parents—as if they’d left him yesterday although almost a decade had passed since the choking disease put them in their graves.

And had he not been young and strong, it would have killed him, too.

Almost from the first, he’d had to fight to hold on to his land. He’d been attacked on the day of their burial—and the struggle had never ceased.

It made one cynical and if it didn’t break you, it made you strong. He had a reputation now for violence. Swaggering young gunfighters wanted to take him on to prove their manhood—arrogant, stupid, impatient young men—all of them dead. Although someday he knew, he’d meet someone who could outdraw him; it happened to everyone.

But until that day, he thought grimly, he still owned twenty thousand acres of the best grazing land north of the Sun River. And tonight, he’d see that the Empire Cattle Company understood exactly who owned that range.

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