Read Heart of Texas Series Volume 1: Lonesome Cowboy\Texas Two-Step\Caroline's Child Online
Authors: Debbie Macomber
Maggie hurried back into the old store and sat down on the lone chair. When it grew dark, she ventured over to the stable where he'd parked the truck. There was enough moonlight to find her way, but she walked very carefully, afraid of holes in the road and snakesâ¦and Richard. Climbing into the bed of the pickup, she curled up with the sleeping bag she'd found earlier. She was cold and hungry and more afraid than she'd ever been in her whole life.
Every once in a while she could hear Richard singing. He played his guitar and sang, but his voice didn't sound right. It was like he'd mashed all the words together. She used to think he had a good voice; she didn't think so anymore.
Soon she fell asleep and didn't awake until light peeked through a crack in the stable door. She was so hungry her stomach hurt.
She clambered out of the truck and walked back to the main street. The early morning was very still.
Richard was asleep in the rocker. His guitar lay on the wooden sidewalk, and he'd slouched down in the chair with his feet stretched out. His arms dangled over the edges of the rocker until his fingertips touched the ground close to the empty bottle. His head lolled to one side.
“Richard,” she whispered. “I'm hungry.”
He opened his eyes and blinked a couple of times.
“I'm hungry,” she repeated, louder this time.
“Get out of here, kid.”
“I want my mommy,” she said, and her lower lip wobbled. “I don't like it here. I want to go home.”
Richard slowly sat up and rubbed his face. “Get lost, will ya?”
Maggie didn't mean to, but she started to cry. She'd always thought Richard was her friend, and now she knew he wasn't.
“Stop it!” he shouted and scowled at her.
Sobbing, Maggie ran away from him.
“Maggie,” he called after her, but she didn't stop, running between two of the buildings.
“Damn it.”
Maggie pretended not to hear him and, thinking he might try to follow her, she crept down the side of a building, then slipped inside another store.
The town was old. Really, really old. Older than any place she'd ever been. It smelled old. None of the buildings had paint, either. It sure seemed like no one had lived here for a long time. Some of the places had stuff inside. The store had a table and chair and shelves. But there were only a few cans sitting aroundâthey looked kind of strange, like they might burst. Plus a cash register. She'd tried to get it to work, but it wouldn't open for her.
Maggie wasn't sure what kind of shop this had been, but it had a big cupboard. Maybe she could hide from Richard there. She opened the door and saw that it had shelves. On one of the shelves was a doll. A really old one, with a cotton dress and apron and bonnet. The doll's face had been stitched on. It wasn't like any doll she'd ever seen. The only one she owned with cloth arms and legs was Raggedy Ann, but her clothes were bright and pretty. This doll's clothes were all faded.
“Are you scared, too?” she asked the doll.
The stitched red mouth seemed to quaver a bit.
Suddenly she heard Richard's footsteps outside.
“Maggie, damn it! You could get hurt racing around this old town.”
Maggie didn't care what Richard saidâshe didn't like him. She crouched down inside the cupboard and shut the door, leaving it open just a crack so she could see out.
“Are you hungry?” he called. She watched him stop in the doorway, staring into the building. Maggie's heart pounded hard and she bit her lower lip, afraid he might see her.
“Come on, kid,” he growled.
Maggie clutched the old doll to her chest and closed her eyes. She wanted Richard to go away.
“I'm going to cook breakfast now,” he said, moving away. He continued down the sidewalk with heavy footsteps. “When you're ready, you can come and eat, too.”
Maggie waited a long time and didn't move until she smelled bacon frying. Her stomach growled again. It'd been hours and hours since she'd eaten.
Her grip on the doll loosened and she looked into its face again. It was a sad face, Maggie realized, as if the doll was about to cry. Maggie felt like crying, too. She missed her mommy.
Slipping her backpack off her shoulders, Maggie opened it and carefully tucked the sad doll inside.
“I cooked you some bacon and eggs,” Richard called.
This time Maggie couldn't resist. She pushed open the cupboard door and slowly walked out of the old building.
“There you are,” Richard said, holding out a plate to her.
Maggie didn't trust Richard anymore and moved cautiously toward him. If he said something mean, she was prepared to run.
“I'm sorry I yelled at you,” Richard told her.
“What about the bad words?”
“I'm sorry about those, too.”
“Will you take me home now?” she asked, standing in the middle of the dirt street.
Richard stood by the post where people used to hitch their horses. He didn't look like he was sorry, even if he said he was.
Maggie's stomach was empty and making funny noises.
“You really want to go home now?” Richard asked. He sounded surprised that she'd want to leave. He made it seem like she was supposed to be having fun.
“I want to see my mommy.”
“Okay, okay, but we need to talk about it first.” He set the plate of food aside and sat down on the steps leading to the raised sidewalk.
“Why?”
He scratched his head. “Do you remember Grady getting mad at Savannah about coming to the ghost town?” he asked.
Maggie nodded. Grady had been real upset with Savannah when he found out she'd been to the town. Savannah had come to look for special roses, and Grady had stomped around the house for days. Even Laredo wasn't happy when Savannah wanted to come back and look for more roses.
“Now, this is very important,” Richard said, his voice low and serious. “You mustn't let anyone know where you've been, understand?”
Her chin came up a little. “Why not?”
“You love your mommy, don't you?”
Maggie nodded.
“If anyone finds out you've been here⦔ He stopped and glanced in both directions as if he was afraid someone might be listening. “If anyone finds out, then something really bad will happen to your mother.”
Maggie's eyes grew big.
“Do you know what ghosts are?” Richard asked.
“Melissa Washington dressed up in a sheet and said she was a ghost last Halloween,” Maggie told him.
“There are good ghosts and bad ghosts.”
“Which kind live here?” Maggie whispered.
“Bad ones,” he whispered back. His voice was spooky. She wondered if he was trying to scare her on purpose.
“Bad ones?” she repeated faintly.
“Very bad ones, and if you tell anyone, even your best friend, then the bad ghosts will find out and hurt your mother.”
“Howâ¦how will they hurt Mommy?”
“You don't want to know, kid.” He squeezed his eyes shut and made an ugly face, as if just telling her about it would upset him.
Maggie blinked, not sure she should believe him.
“Remember when Wiley cut his hand and Savannah had to wrap it up for him?”
“Yes⦔
“That's what bad ghosts will do to your mommy, only it wouldn't just be her hand.”
Maggie forgot all about the smell of bacon. Wiley's hand had bled and bled. Blood had gotten everywhere, and she could remember being surprised that one hand had so much blood in it. Just looking at it had made her feel sick to her stomach.
“You wouldn't want anything bad like that to happen to your mommy, would you?”
Maggie shook her head.
“I didn't think so.”
“Can I go home now?”
He studied her for a long time. “You won't tell anyone?”
“No.”
“Cross your heart?”
“Cross my heart.” She made a big X over her heart.
“I'd hate to see your mommy hurt, wouldn't you?”
Maggie nodded.
“Then maybe it'd be all right if I took you home.”
Maggie sighed with relief. She was tired and hungry, and all she wanted was to see her mother again.
Richard helped her into the cab of Grady's truck. He made her curl up on the seat and keep her head down so she couldn't see as they drove away. Every time she closed her eyes she thought about a bad ghost and what might happen to her mother if she told anyone where she'd been. She still wasn't sure if Richard was lying, but she couldn't take any chances. She remembered how angry Grady had been with Savannah. When she asked her mother about it, Caroline had explained that Savannah had gone to a dangerous place. Now Maggie understood why Grady was so upset. That town was really creepy, and the more she thought about it, the more she believed there were bad things in those buildings.
The ride was bumpy and she was tossed about, but Richard wouldn't let her sit up and look out the window until they were on the real road.
“Remember, kid, you never saw me. Got that?”
“I never saw you,” she repeated solemnly.
“Your mother's life depends on you keeping your trap shut. You wouldn't want your mother dead, would you?”
“No.”
“Good. Just remember that the first time you're tempted to tell someone where you were.”
“I'll remember. I won't tell.” Maggie didn't want her mommy to die. Not like her grandmother. Or Savannah's parents. Or Emma Bishop's daddy.
Richard didn't drive her all the way back to the Yellow Rose. He stopped at the top of the driveway, leaned across her and opened the truck door.
“Remember what I said,” he told her again. His eyes were mean.
“I'll remember,” she promised, and before he could change his mind, she climbed out of the truck. She stumbled as she jumped down and fell, scraping her elbows. She began to cry, hardly noticing that Richard had driven off, tires squealing.
With her backpack hitting her shoulder blades, Maggie raced toward the ranch house. The driveway was long and her legs felt like they were on fire before the house finally came into view.
Grady stood on the porch with a cup of coffee, but the moment he saw her, he gave a loud shout and flung the cup away. Then he leaped off the porch without using any of the steps and ran toward her.
Almost immediately afterward, her mother threw open the screen door and placed both hands over her mouth. Then she started running, too. Maggie had never been so happy to see her mother. She was even glad to see Grady. He waited for Caroline and let her go to Maggie first. Maggie liked that.
Her mother caught her in her arms and held her tight, then started to cry. She was worried about the bad ghosts, Maggie reasoned. She didn't need to be afraid, because Maggie wouldn't tell. Not anyone. Not ever.
Grady wrapped his arms around them both. He closed his eyes the way people did in church when they prayed. When he opened them again, he smiled at her. Maggie liked the way he smiled. It was a nice smile, not mean.
“Boy, we're glad to see you,” he said.
* * *
S
AVANNAH WIPED
the tears from her face as she strolled along the pathway in her rose garden. But this morning she didn't appreciate the beauty of the roses. Nor did she find the solace she normally did here. If she lived to be a hundred years old, she didn't want to go through another day like the past one.
Although Caroline had repeatedly told her it wasn't her fault that Maggie had turned up missing, Savannah blamed herself. She'd been preoccupied with baking bread, her head full of the romance developing between her brother and her best friend. What she
should
have been doing was keeping careful watch over her best friend's child.
“I thought I'd find you here.” Laredo walked up from behind her.
She didn't want him to know she'd been crying, but wasn't sure she could hide it.
“Sweetheart, why are you still upset? Maggie's home safe and sound.”
“I know.”
“Then what's bothering you?”
Her chest tightened, and she waited until the ache eased before she answered. “My brother.”
Laredo clasped her shoulders. “Richard?”
She nodded. “He was involved in Maggie's disappearance. I know it.”
“I have to admit it's mighty suspicious.”
“Maggie won't say a word. Everyone's tried to get her to say where she was, but she refuses. Even Frank Hennessey can't get her to budge.”
“It doesn't matter. She's home now.”