Cora's Pride (Wilderness Brides Book 1) (3 page)

BOOK: Cora's Pride (Wilderness Brides Book 1)
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“That’s none of your concern, mister.” Cora had spun around to stare at him again. “Now if you’re really here to help, I suggest you get to work. The quicker the wagon wheel gets fixed, the faster we can be on our way. You can eat supper with us for your trouble, but we’ll part ways right after.”

Nathaniel held her stare in silence, meeting the challenge in her eyes. He’d much rather tell her what a foolhardy woman she was for thinking she could get through this wilderness on her own. Hell, they were already lost, and would have gotten even more lost, had he not come along.

He glanced over his shoulder toward the trees. He was running out of time. The Crow were not going to simply give up when they realized he had tricked them. He eyed the horse again.

“I’ll go take a look at that broken wheel,” he said.

With a quick nod to Anna Porter, he moved to the wagon. Nathaniel passed Cora, and offered her his best smile. She didn’t return it. Her face remained as icy as before. Once she lowered her weapon fully and turned her attention to the other woman, he knelt to inspect the broken wheel. It would take at least a few hours to fix. Time he didn’t have at the moment.

What if he’d led his pursuers straight to this camp? If the Crow had found his trail, these women were defenseless. He glanced toward Cora. That woman seemed too disagreeable for a sensible conversation. Better to act now and explain later.

He straightened and moved around the wagon to the horse. Giving the animal a pat on the neck, he glanced over his shoulder, then slowly untied the reins from the tree.

He eyed the women again and shook his head. They were foolish if they thought they’d get to Fort Hall alive. Anna busied herself with the fire, while Cora spoke to the two girls inside the wagon. No one paid him any mind when he swung up onto the horse’s bare back and kicked it into a run. With any luck, he’d put some distance between himself and that wagon before the Crow found his trail.

The boy yelled at the same moment a shot reverberated through the air. Nathaniel cursed and kicked the horse into a faster run, steering it into the trees. Damn stupid fool of a woman! A gunshot could be heard for miles. At least she wasn’t a very good shot. He urged the horse forward. Hopefully her next shot wouldn’t find its mark, either. It never came. Her yell grew faint as he put some distance between the wagon and himself.

Backtracking the way he’d come, there was no sign of his Crow pursuers. If they had given up the chase, they must have found his horses and supplies. Perhaps they didn’t think he was worth pursuing anymore. By the time he came to the creek where he’d laid the false trail, it became apparent that the warriors had followed it. Thankfully, it would have led them in the opposite direction from where the women were camped.

Nathaniel dismounted and allowed the horse to drink. He stepped into the water and splashed some of the cold liquid on his face. He straightened to stare off at the mountains. Uncertainty gripped him. He had a horse to ride, but his supplies were lost. He shook his head. He couldn’t return home until he found his own horses.

Then there was the matter of the women who were lost in the wilderness. He’d succeeded in keeping the Crow away from their camp, but for how long? Nathaniel gathered up the reins and was about to swing onto the horse’s back, when twigs snapped behind him and hooves clacked against the rocky riverbank.

Chapter Three


I
knew
he was a snake the moment I set eyes on him,” Cora shouted, reloading her rifle. She aimed at the man galloping away on her horse, but she didn’t pull the trigger. She’d missed her one shot already and the distance was too great. She might hit Gray.

Spinning on her heels, she ran back toward camp. She was not going to lose her only horse to another swindler.

“Patrick, fetch the saddle.” She didn’t wait for her little brother to carry out the order as she rushed to the picket line. Grabbing the halter to one of the mules, she dragged the animal along behind her closer to the wagon.

“What are you going to do?” Anna rushed up, her eyes wide as saucers.

Cora glared at her. Her body trembled. How did she allow yet another man to mislead her? “Going after that horse thief.”

“You’ll never catch up to him.”

Cora sucked in a deep breath. Her heart pounded as anger boiled the blood in her veins. Weren’t there any decent men left in this world? Her eyes darted to the back of the wagon, where Josie’s head was barely visible from inside. Her sister had scrambled for the wagon the moment that stranger had walked into camp. Caroline, always supportive, had gone with her sister. Josie had reason to be afraid of men, and as long as there was a breath in her, Cora would not let anyone harm her youngest sister again.

Why had she been so stupid and not listened to her inner voice when Nathaniel Wilder – if that was even his name – had swaggered into camp? She should have put a bullet in him right then and there, if for no other reason than to wipe that silly grin off his face.

His very handsome face.

Cora shook her head. Ted had been handsome, too, and had managed to convince her that the only way she was going to get to Oregon was to marry him. He’d turned out to be a liar and a cheat. Because of him, they were now stranded out in the wilderness, lost and with a broken wagon. When he’d told her two weeks ago at Fort Laramie that he was leaving, she’d sworn she would never trust or depend on another man again. Enough was enough.

First, her father had walked out on her mother. Remaining faithful to her had suddenly become too difficult for him, after almost twenty years of marriage. Mama had busted her back trying to keep their farm going, and bore four children for that ungrateful man, without ever complaining. Even after Papa left, Mama had kept the family together, and now it was up to Cora to keep her siblings safe.

She smiled when her little brother struggled to lift the heavy saddle onto the mule’s back.

“Let me help.” She propped her rifle against the wagon.

“Wish I was bigger,” Patrick said, hanging his head. “Then I could go after that man for you.”

Cora patted the top of his head. “Soon, you will be.”

“I didn’t think he’d steal our horse. He looked honest.” The boy stared up at her with an apologetic frown.

Cora tightened the cinch around the mule’s belly. She shot another smile at her brother to reassure him. “It’s not your fault. Looks can be deceiving,” she said. “We have to be careful with people we don’t know anything about.”

Patrick nodded. “Are you really going after him?”

“Of course.” Cora reached for her rifle. “You mind Anna while I’m gone.”

She’d barely spoken her friend’s name, when Anna came up beside her and placed her hand on Cora’s arm.

“How do you plan on finding him? Gray is much faster than a mule.”

Cora’s eyes widened. “I can’t stay here and let someone steal our horse. What’ll it be next? The mules? Our wagon?” She glanced at the canvas covering the rig. Pulling the mule a short distance away to be out of earshot of Josie and Caroline, she leaned toward her friend and whispered. “Or worse. We have to protect ourselves, no matter what, or we might as well just head back to Ohio.”

Anna nodded. She wrung her hands in front of her. “I’m just not sure if I’m cut out for this, Cora. Going to Oregon seemed like a fine idea months ago, but that was when we had a man to look after us, and we were with the other wagons. Perhaps getting married wouldn’t be such a bad idea.”

Cora reached for her friend’s hand and smiled. “If you want to get married, that’s your choice. I only advise you to make sure you don’t marry a man for the wrong reasons. Look where it got me with Ted.”

“Not every man out there can be bad,” Anna argued. “Just because your pa left, and now Ted, doesn’t mean you should hate all men.”

Cora pressed her lips together. Anna had apparently forgotten what had happened to Josie. Rather than remind her friend, she gathered the reins to the mule and lifted her foot into the stirrup. She was wasting time. That scoundrel was getting too much of a head start. Once she was seated in the saddle, she glanced down at Anna.

“I don’t hate men,” she said firmly. “I just have little cause to trust any of them.”

Cora blinked several times and swallowed past her reservation about giving chase. It was her responsibility to keep everyone safe, no matter what. Nodding to Anna, she kicked the balking mule into a gallop away from camp. She guided the beast in the direction in which her beloved horse, Gray, had disappeared. She’d already lost her other saddle horse to Ted. She couldn’t lose Gray, too.

Coming to the top of a rise, she slowed the ornery animal underneath her and scanned into the distance. Nothing but trees and mountains, as far as the eye could see. Looking to the east, the valley expanded into a wide meadow, while the forest grew dense toward the west. There was no sign of her horse.

Cora pressed her lips together and kicked the mule into a run, guiding him toward the forest. Even if he'd chosen to cut through the vast meadow, Nathaniel Wilder's head start wasn't so great that he could have disappeared. He must have thought it best to ride through the trees.

Forced to slow the mule once she reached the trees, Cora studied the ground as she rode and smiled in relief. Fresh hoof prints clearly led through this forest. Her forehead scrunched in puzzlement as she glanced in the direction from which she’d just come. The prints should have been visible sooner, but it was as if Gray had simply materialized in this very spot. She shrugged. The ground must have simply been harder before, making it more difficult to see the prints.

That thief had thought wrong if he figured she wasn’t going to pursue him. For the better part of an hour, she followed the hoof prints through the forest. Sometimes the tracks would lead out in the open, then back into the trees, until she lost them again completely.

“Damn,” she swore under her breath. She’d already backtracked to see where she could have missed the tracks, but just as they had suddenly appeared earlier, it was as if Gray had once again disappeared into thin air.

Cora shifted in the saddle. She glanced around. Everything looked the same here. What if she got lost? She inhaled a deep breath to stay calm, and nudged the mule forward. She couldn’t think about that now.

The wind rushed through the trees, making some of the taller trunks groan. The refreshing sound of a creek gurgled nearby. Cora swiped a hand across her forehead. She dismounted and led the mule toward the sound of the water, then stopped abruptly at the sight before her.

Nathaniel Wilder stood in the creek, splashing water onto his face. Her heart sped up in surprise as she fumbled to pull her rifle from the saddle scabbard. Luck must be on her side for once. She sucked in a quick breath for courage, then stepped out into the open.

“If you really thought you’d get away with stealing my horse, you’re sadly mistaken.” Cora pointed the rifle at him. She’d never raised a gun to anyone before, and this was the second time in one day she’d threatened this man with her rifle. Could she really shoot him if need be?

He slowly raised himself to his full height, water dripping between his fingers. The wind whipped his long, dark hair into his face. His eyes traveled over her, unhurried and appraising. Cora blinked. Her skin tingled at his outright perusal and her heart pounded in her chest.

“Remove your belt and toss it over to me.” Cora motioned with her rifle for emphasis.

“My belt?” Nathaniel’s lips widened in a grin. “Lady, we hardly know each other.”

Cora glared at him for his lewd insinuations. She’d had to put up with plenty of similar remarks from unkempt men at Fort Laramie. This man’s eyes sparkled with mischief. “Don’t get any ideas. I will shoot you if you make one wrong move.”

His eyes narrowed. Cora swallowed. She squared her shoulders in an effort the keep the rifle as steady as possible. This man in front of her was no different than any of the others. Slow and calculating, he continued to stare at her. He snickered.

“I have no doubt you will. The question is, are you a better shot when your target isn’t moving?”

“There’s only one way to find out, isn’t there?” Cora challenged, raising her voice to sound convincing.

He chuckled as his hands moved slowly to the belt around his waist. For a second, he moved his eyes away from her and seemed to be looking for something behind her, further along the creek.

“Without my belt and weapons, you’re going to leave me all defenseless.”

Cora narrowed her eyes at the smugness in his tone. He didn’t sound concerned at all. If anything, his grin widened.

“I’ll leave it hanging in a tree somewhere up ahead. You can collect it once I’m gone.”

She raised her rifle a little higher when he just stood there. He shook his head and his eyes shimmered with amusement. With dramatic, deliberate slowness, he unstrapped his belt. He held it up and splashed through the water toward her.

“Just toss it over here,” she warned. “Don’t come any closer.”

“No need to take another shot,” he said, returning his gaze to her. He sighed dramatically. “You’ve got the upper hand.”

The leather belt, which held his knife and hatchet, landed with a thud by the mule’s hooves.

“Now bring Gray out of the creek, ten paces from me, and then get back in the water.” Cora cleared her throat. Hopefully, he hadn’t detected the slight hitch in her voice. She adjusted her grip on the rifle to steady her hands.

Without argument, he did as she ordered. When he stepped back into the knee-deep water, Cora bent quickly to pick up Nathaniel’s belt, which she tossed into a nearby bush, then rushed to her horse. She grabbed Gray’s reins and backed up.

“Don’t move,” she warned. She raised her foot to mount the mule. She would have preferred to ride Gray, but with her skirt, she’d never get onto his bare back.

“I wasn’t stealing your horse.”

Cora seated herself in the saddle, looping the reins of Gray’s bridle around the saddle horn while trying to keep her rifle pointed at Nathaniel. She glared at the man’s blatant lie.

“Truly?” Her eyebrows shot up. “You were just borrowing him? Taking him for a quick ride and were going to bring him back, I assume.”

“I was going to bring him back.”

Cora smirked. She couldn’t afford to trust a complete stranger, least of all someone like this man. She’d seen plenty of woodsmen, or mountain men, back at Fort Laramie, and that’s exactly how Nathaniel Wilder was dressed. Buckskin britches hugged his legs, while moccasins were laced up well past his ankles. His fringed leather hunting jacket hung from his upper body, no longer bunched around his waist without the belt. His dark hair hung past his shoulders, and water droplets glistened off the dark stubble on his face.

Although he was dressed like a backwoodsman, he spoke with more refinement than the trappers at the fort; men who preferred the Indians to white society and the solitude of the mountains. Most of them were barely civilized. No, Nathaniel Wilder sounded fairly well educated, belying his outward appearance.

Cora blinked and mentally shook her head. She scoffed silently. She’d learned her lesson with men. It was going to take more than a handsome face or an intelligent word to earn her trust. It was up to her to take care of her sisters and brother, and this man had already proven to be a thief. She pointed the rifle toward his chest the best she could while tugging on the mule’s reins to maneuver the animal away from the creek bank.

“Don’t even think of following me. If I catch so much as a glimpse of you near our camp again, I will shoot you. That’s a promise.”

Nathaniel took a step toward her, then stopped, apparently thinking better of it. He continued to stare at her, as if he was trying to make up his mind about something.

“Cora, there’s a party of Crow nearby. I was trying to outrun them when I stumbled across your camp.”

“That’s of no concern to me.” Cora stopped the mule, looking at the man in the water. A tingling sensation passed down her spine at the familiar way in which he spoke her name. She blinked, and brushed away the feeling.

Apprehension passed through her at his mention of Indians. Thoughts of Indians or bandits had entered her mind on more than one occasion. Talk at Fort Laramie had been that the Indians were mostly friendly, but there had been rumors of a few incidents with some of the wagon trains. The cavalry had assured them that they were safe. She raised her chin.

The man ran a hand through his hair. “Well it sure as hell should be of concern to you,” he scoffed. “My tracks lead directly to your camp. I took your horse to come back here so I could pick up their trail and lead them away from your wagon. It was faster than backtracking on foot.”

Cora studied the man. His stare, even from a distance of twenty paces, bore straight into her. Her jaw muscles tightened. She knew nothing about him. Why then, was there a twinge of doubt in her mind? She couldn’t afford to trust him. No doubt he was a well-practiced, smooth-talking liar, as well as a thief.

“You could have told us of your intentions, and not simply stolen my horse,” she challenged.

He laughed. “Lady, if I was trying to steal your horse, why would I walk into your camp in plain sight? Believe me, if I truly wanted to steal him, you’d have never even seen me, and I’d have been long gone before you even found your horse missing.”

“Don’t be so sure about that. Honest people make their intentions known.”

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