Only My Love (30 page)

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Authors: Jo Goodman

BOOK: Only My Love
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"I'm surprised you do it at all. They must pay you well enough at the mines... and then there's your other, more lucrative career."

Ethan paused in buttering a slice of bread. "I don't take any money from Emily. Helping her is the least I can do."

The faint furrow between Michael's brows appeared as she raised a question with her eyes. "The least you can do? I don't think I understand."

He looked at Michael steadily, prepared to measure her response. "I killed her husband."

Michael didn't blink. She lowered her cup and set it firmly in its saucer. She thought she had learned just enough about Ethan to know she couldn't assume anything. He seemed to be waiting for her to do just that. "How did it happen?" she asked instead.

Ethan finished buttering his bread. There was part of him that wanted to tell her a lie, make up some story about gunning down Georgie Johnson on the street. It was precisely the sort of thing he wanted her to believe about him. Then he remembered how she had felt against him, her arms and legs curved around him, cradling him against her breasts. He was too selfish to lie. He wanted her there again. He told her the truth. It was a little less ugly.

"I was setting explosives in the mines. It was just after I came to Madison. I picked Georgie to help me out because he'd had a little experience handling dynamite. We were down pretty deep. There was no light save for what lanterns we carried in ourselves. Georgie and I had finished packing the crevices with the sticks and fixed the blasting caps. I was laying down a powder fuse through the tunnel because we'd run out of cord. Georgie was carrying what we didn't need to safe ground."

Ethan took a drink of his coffee, staring off a point beyond Michael's shoulder. "I don't know what really happened then, don't know what went through Georgie's mind. I figure he remembered something he left behind in the blast area and went back for it. I'm sure he thought I saw him go back. I didn't though. I swear to God I didn't see him go back."

Michael reached across the table. The very tips of her fingers touched Ethan's wrist. He didn't pull away and she didn't offer anything more intrusive or demanding.

"I set the fuse all the way back to the clear area. Georgie wasn't there. I yelled for him. The tunnels play tricks sometimes with sound. I thought I heard him calling me from another level above me. I thought it was safe. I lit the powder."

"Oh, dear God."

Ethan pushed abruptly away from the table and poured himself another cup of coffee at the stove. "Emily was pregnant at the time it happened. She miscarried."

Michael blanched a little.

"It was ruled an accident. Everyone knew Georgie had no business going back in the blasting area after I started to set the fuse. There were other men around who heard the same trick of sound that I did and thought he was safe."

"It
was
an accident."

Ethan said nothing. He raised the pot of coffee, offering some to Michael. She shook her head. He returned to the table and sat down. "I work alone now."

And take risks, Michael thought, remembering the bruise on his back from setting the fuse too short. "Mrs. Johnson doesn't blame you," she said. When his flint-colored eyes narrowed in question she added, "She couldn't have you around otherwise."

"She says the same thing. She tells me I'm doing unnecessary penance because there's nothing to forgive."

"She's right."

Ethan wasn't so certain. "Maybe I'll feel different after she's married again and I'll know she's happy and well cared for, with someone to look out for her."

"All the things a woman could want," she said. She heard her own sarcasm and was immediately sorry. "I apologize. That wasn't meant as a snipe at Emily or at you. I don't know why I said it. I wish her every happiness."

Ethan studied Michael's face, saw that she was earnest. "John Gibbs does too."

"That's the man who's helping her when you're not?"

He nodded. "John's been a good friend to her. He'll be a good husband."

Michael pushed her eggs around on her plate. Outside clouds separated in the sun's path. Light slanted in from the window behind Ethan and laid across the corner of the table. "What about you, Ethan? Do you ever think about not robbing trains and being someone's good husband?"

Glancing toward the doors to make certain they were alone, Ethan said, "One doesn't necessarily preclude the other. All I have to do is find a woman who doesn't particularly care that I like blasting safes more than I like blasting tunnels."

"I see," she said coldly.

He laughed. "Don't worry. I don't think you're that woman."

"You're damned right I'm not."

"But I'll wager you think you can change me." Though she tried to hide it, he saw his remark had struck a chord with her. She was still trying desperately to justify her attraction to him. "You'll realize soon enough that you can't force people to be what you want. I used to think I could stop you from swearing."

Before Michael could think of a suitable reply, Ethan was gone from the room.

* * *

Houston found Michael in the saloon in the afternoon, picking out a ditty on the piano. There were only seven customers at the bar and few more back in the dining room. Kitty was tending bar and carrying on an animated conversation with her brother and one of his friends.

He leaned against the upright and watched her for a few minutes. "Head still ache?" he asked. "Ethan says it was throbbing this morning."

She glanced up once then continued playing. "It's better." She hit a sour note and winced with exaggerated expressiveness. "Unless I do that."

"Dee might have some powders back in her apartment. Do you want me to get something for you?"

"Powders from Detra's cupboards?" Michael raised one brow skeptically. "No, thank you. I don't think so."

"I take it you've heard about Mr. Kelly."

"I've heard. Is it true?"

Houston shrugged. "Doctor here in town says it was a heart attack. I don't know any different."

"Is there something in particular you want, Houston? Dee's in her office if you're looking for her."

"I wasn't," he said. "I cleared my desk of paperwork, made my rounds, and left the next crisis for my deputy to handle."

"Jake will do fine, I'm sure."

"So I thought you might like to go for a buggy ride with me. I got one at the livery for a few hours. I can take you to the mines, show you where most of the town is when they're not sleeping or in this saloon." He took off his hat, threaded his hair with his fingers, pushing it back at the temples, then replaced the hat. He looked at her expectantly.

"I don't know, Houston. Dee doesn't—"

"Let me worry about Dee."

"But Ethan-"

"You said yourself there's no love lost between you and Ethan. Last night proved it as far as I'm concerned. He's being a dog in a manger when it comes to you. He doesn't want you but he doesn't want anyone else to have you either."

"I make my own decisions."

"Prove it. Come with me. You know you want to. The fresh air will do wonders for your head."

Michael wasn't sure about that, but she did want to see the mines. Against her better judgment she continued to be intensely interested in anything connected to Ethan Stone. If Houston could help her, then she would use him. He didn't need to know they were at cross-purposes.

She stood up. "I'll get my coat."

Ethan was in the room, reading in the wing chair, his feet propped on the footstool, when she went in. He marked his place with his finger, closed the book over it, and looked up. "Going someplace?"

"With Houston. For a buggy ride. Are you going to stop me?"

"You really don't understand, do you? The only way to stop you is to stop Houston. I told you early on that I wasn't going to kill a man over you. I should have added:
or get myself killed.
Is he forcing you to go with him?"

"No."

"Then I'm not forcing you
not
to. Mind yourself though. He's after more than just that kiss you shared yesterday."

"You saw that?"

Ethan nodded. His blue-gray eyes studied her carefully, grazing her face, her throat, her breasts, and sliding down the long folds of her hunter green gown as if he could see what lay beneath. "Now that you have a taste for what happens between a man and woman in bed, perhaps you've decided to try some feminine wiles after all."

"He's a murderer."

"You'll forget that after a while. You did with me."

Michael slammed the door on her way out.

"Ready?" Houston asked as she came quickly down the stairs. "The buggy's outside."

That gave Michael pause. "You were terribly certain of my answer."

"I was merely hopeful."

Out of the corner of her eye Michael caught Kitty's worried expression as they passed the bar. She smiled back with a reassurance she didn't feel.

Houston helped Michael into the buggy and laid a blanket across their laps. "Here, take my gloves," he said. "The sun's deceiving. It's still plenty cold out here and it'll be worse once we start moving. I'll take it slow."

Michael put on the gloves. "What about you?"

"I'll drive with one hand. You keep the other warm." He thrust it toward Michael. "Go on. Take it." He snapped the reins at the same moment she accepted his hand in her gloved ones. He grinned at her sideways. "That's not so bad, is it?"

She held his hand on her lap. The sun's brightness
was
deceiving. The sky was cloudless. The mountain peaks were crisply outlined against a blue background that seemed too uniformly perfect to be quite real. Even when she tried to breathe in sunshine Michael felt nothing but cold air fill her lungs.

Houston pointed out the frozen lake, the fast running streams that rushed over small dams of ice, the empty nests that were wedged in the crooks of spindly barren trees. After a while he slipped his hand out of hers, transferred the reins, and gave her the cold one to warm.

Michael turned slightly. Her knees bumped his. "I thought you would be more respectful of my marriage to Ethan."

"I might... if you were really married to him."

She felt a rush of panic. Unconsciously she squeezed his hand a little tighter. What did Houston know? Had she said something, done something to give herself away? Had Ethan been merely setting her up and told the truth behind her back? "I don't understand. What do you mean if I were really married to him?"

"Except for the chance meeting on the train, you and Ethan haven't been together as man and wife for four years. My understanding is that your actual marriage only lasted a few months before he left you. There's not a great deal to respect there, wouldn't you say?"

The first rush of panic subsided and Michael began to breath more easily. It was then she was aware of holding Houston's hand too tightly. She eased her grip and rubbed his hand, pretending her intent all along was merely to warm it. "I
am
married to him, though."

Houston was thoughtful. "But you're holding
my
hand. Tell me, what did Ethan say he did for a living when he first met you?"

Michael was thankful for the conversation she and Ethan had had to share information. She remembered precisely what he'd been doing in New York during the spring they supposedly were married. "He worked in a bank."

Grinning, Houston gave her a sideways glance. "I'll wager he did. More than one of them. Though I doubt he was officially employed."

Michael didn't have to pretend to be shocked. She was. She hadn't suspected the information Ethan had given her was only part of the truth. "You're wrong!" she said quickly. "Ethan wasn't robbing banks then."

"He didn't start after he met me. He didn't find us here in Madison. We found
him.
He'd worked on his own in places like St. Louis and Denver."

"Oh, but-"

"You see, there are things you don't know about Ethan. Things you've never known. Makes it kind of difficult to know who to trust, doesn't it?"

"I thought Ethan was your friend."

"I like him well enough, I suppose. I don't know that I trust him." His black eyes left the road again and studied Michael's face briefly. "I don't know that I trust many people at all. It's always been safer not to."

Feeling his interest was somehow cold and detached, Michael barely was able to suppress a shiver. She was grateful for the silence that fell between them.

The silver mines at Madison had more than a dozen different entrances. Some shafts went down hundreds of feet, others only a few score. Inside the mountain a veritable warren of tunnels and passages had been carved out to pursue the path of the precious metal. Ore was taken from the bowels of the mountain by small dumper cars riding on tracks laid through most of the tunnels. After being refined as much as possible locally, it was carried by mule to Stillwater, the nearest community with access to the railroad. It was not the most efficient operation for the town—some thought there should be a rail spur to Madison—but slowing down the process also meant the treasure would be there for years to come.

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