Authors: Maureen McKade
“I got a job to do before I can even think about settling down.”
“Good luck to you, then, Beaudry.” Atwater held out his hand and the two men exchanged a firm handshake.
“Thanks, Sheriff.”
After sitting for so long, Clint's side had stiffened. Grasping the saddle horn, he clenched his teeth as he mounted his horse. He should stay at Mattie's at least another week to heal completely, but time had already gotten away from him.
It was only a quarter of a mile to Mattie's, and Clint kept Dakota to a walk. When the mare caught the scent of the familiar place, she wanted to stretch out into a canter. He held her back, though he wanted to hurry back himself. In the short time he'd been there, it had become the first home he'd truly had since leaving his ma and pa's place over fifteen years ago. As much as he tried, he couldn't call the place he'd shared with Emily for two years home.
Clint reined in Dakota at the corral and unsaddled the horse, carrying the tack into the barn. He returned to curry and brush the horse, and found Mattie, her back to him, petting the mare.
Clint paused to enjoy the view. She stroked Dakota with a gentle hand and whispered something Clint couldn't hear. Mattie was a ball of contradictions rolled into a fetching package: gun hater and tender healer of bullet wounds; hard worker and spoiler of her young son; straitlaced lady and passionate woman who'd tumbled into bed with a hotheaded charmer.
She intrigued and frustrated him.
As if sensing his presence, she turned and gave him a reprimanding look. “I thought I'd have to go looking for you.”
“Worried about me?” He grinnedâthere was something about her that made him want to get under her self-assured shell.
She crossed her arms and glared at him. “I was worried about Dakotaâshe could've stepped in a hole or gotten a rock in her hoof.”
Stifling his laughter, he crossed the few yards separating them. “I like it when you worry”âhe pausedâ“about Dakota.”
She snorted and her cheeks pinkened, but her eyes danced with humor.
Clint chuckled. He admired her courage and backbone, but he especially liked her unselfconsciousness.
“You caught me. I was worried about you, too.” She held her thumb and forefinger about half an inch apart. “About this much.”
Clint wanted to wrap his arms around her, but it was safer to curry Dakota. “You be careful you don't worry too muchâI'd hate to see you strain yourself.”
She laughed lightly, the melody weaving itself inside Clint's chest and holding him captive.
“Okay, so I was afraid you'd been thrown and your wound had reopened,” she admitted.
“I would've been back an hour ago, but I stopped by the saloon. Talked with the sheriff for a while.”
Mattie's body tensed. “About what?”
Her defensive reaction surprised him. Was there something she didn't want him to know? “This'n that.”
“Like what this'n that?”
Clint paused in his task. “Are you afraid we talked about you?”
She drew back as if affronted. “Of course not. I'm sure you and Walt had more important things to discuss than me.” She paused, watching him closely. “Didn't you?”
He smiled innocently and continued grooming Dakota.
Mattie stamped her foot. “Sometimes you're impossible.”
“You already called me that once today.”
As Mattie built up another head of steam, Clint glanced over her shoulder to see Herman coming toward them at a staggering run, waving his arms.
“What's wrong with Herman?” Clint asked.
Mattie turned her head, puzzled. “I don't know.” She raised her skirt and ran toward the old man.
Clint dropped the curry brush and followed her, apprehension ballooning in him. Something was obviously wrong.
Mattie reached him first and grabbed his arms. “Herman, are you all right?”
Panting, with sweat rolling down his face, the old man nodded weakly. “IâI'm all ⦠right. It's⦠Andy.”
Mattie's eyes widened. “What happened?” Herman tried to answer, but couldn't get enough air to speak. “Where's Andy?”
Clint laid his hands on her tense shoulders. “Let him catch his breath, Mattie.”
“He⦠he fell ⦠in ⦠the well,” Herman finally got out.
Mattie's face lost all color and Clint thought she was about to faint. He tightened his grip on her.
She covered her mouth. “Oh, God. Is heâ?”
Herman shook his head. “On an old board. But if he ⦠falls, he's gonna drown.”
“Can't he swim?” Clint asked.
Mattie shook her head. “We have to get him out of there,” she said in a near-hysterical voice.
Clint glanced at Dakota, but there was no time to resaddle the mare. “Where's a rope?”
“In the barn, by the door,” Herman replied.
Clint dashed to the barn and time seemed to stretch into forever as he searched for the rope. His eyes adjusted to the dim light and he spotted it on a nail to the right of the door. He grabbed it and raced back to join Herman and Mattie.
They were gone.
He spotted them zigzagging through the brush and quickly followed them, his heart pounding in his chest. The taste of fear filled his mouth, just as it had when he was in a gun battle. Only this battle was much worseâClint had no control in this situation.
Catching up to them, he clasped Mattie's elbow just as she stumbled. She glanced at him and the terror in her white face punched Clint in the belly. If something happened to the boy, Clint didn't know what Mattie would do.
“He'll be all right.” Clint knew he shouldn't offer empty reassurances, but that was all he had to give. If he could have traded places with Andy, he would have gladly done it to erase the fear in Mattie's face.
They arrived in a small clearing where there was a gaping hole in the earth. Mattie tried to rush toward it, but Clint held her back. “The soil around it may give way. Call out to him.”
“Andy, honey. Andy, can you hear me?” Mattie's voice trembled only slightly, though her body shuddered like a leaf in the wind.
“Ma,” came his faint reply.
Mattie closed her eyes momentarily and the relief in her features made Clint's heart skip a beat. “Andy, are you all right?” she shouted with more strength.
“Yeah, but I hurt my ankle.”
With an injured ankle, Andy wouldn't be able to climb out himself. That left only one other option.
“I have to get down there,” Clint said. “Keep him talking, Mattie. Reassure him.”
She nodded with a jerky motion.
Clint looked at Herman. “Help me tie off this rope so I can use it to climb down the shaft.”
Mattie grabbed his arm. “But you're not strong enough yet.”
“I'll be fine,” Clint said impatiently. “Besides, we don't have time to wait for help. That board could go at any minute.”
He hated to be so blunt with her, but he didn't have time to argue.
“Be careful,” she said softly.
Clint gave her slender hands a gentle squeeze, but couldn't grant her any more empty promises.
Clint ran over to a tree about twelve feet from the hole and wrapped one end of the rope around it as he listened to Mattie's soothing voice reassure her son. He jerked on the rope, testing the strength of the knot. It held.
“I'm going down there to get Andy and climb back out with him. If I can't do that, you and Mattie are going to have to pull him upâcan you do that?” Clint asked Herman grimly.
“I ain't that old yet, Beaudry. Get your ass down there and save that little boy,” Herman said. “And don't go killin' yourself in the bargain.”
“I don't plan to.” Clint slapped the man's bony shoulder and quickly removed his gunbelt.
Then, carefully, he inched toward the edge of the well. “I'm going to throw a rope down there, Andy, so cover your head with your hands,” he called.
“All right,” he answered. Though the boy's voice was muffled, Clint could hear the fear in it.
Clint tossed the looped rope down the well. “Are you okay?”
“Yep. And I got the rope, too.”
“Good. I'm going to climb down. Once I reach you, I'll tie the rope around you, then your ma and Herman will pull you up, okay?”
“'Kay.”
Clint could feel Mattie's and Herman's anxious gazes on him. He neared the well's entrance, the rope in his hands. Some soil near the lip crumbled beneath his toes. Knowing he had little time, Clint took a tighter hold on the line and squatted by the shaft.
Taking a deep breath, he eased himself down the rope until only his head was aboveground. He saw a single tear roll down Mattie's cheek as her lips moved in silent prayer.
He lowered himself deeper, trying not to use the sides of the well too much. The more he did, the more dirt would fall on Andy.
“It's dark,” the boy said, his voice sounding small and anxious.
“That's just me blocking the light,” Clint called down. “Don't look up or you'll get dirt in your eyes.”
The muscles in Clint's arms and shoulders protested the strain. He'd been inactive for too long. Inch by exhausting inch, he traveled downward. He glanced up once and dirt spilled across his face, reminding him to follow his own advice. Sweat rolled down his brow and dripped onto his grimy shirt.
How far down was Andy?
Clint's arms trembled with fatigue and he had to brace his boots against the side for a few moments to regain his breath and strength.
“Clint? Are you all right?” Mattie yelled down.
Her concern brushed across him like an angel's wings and gave him the energy to continue. “I'm all right.”
A minute later, his foot nudged something soft.
“You made it.” Andy's voice was very close.
“I'm going to put my feet on the sides of the board you're on.”
“You'll break it.”
“No, I won't,” Clint said calmly, though he wasn't nearly as certain as he sounded. “I'll keep my weight against the sides.”
In the blackness, he used his boot toes to find the ends of the board and lowered himself. The wood creaked menacingly, and Andy jerked against Clint's leg.
“It's gonna break!” Andy hollered.
“Relax, Andy.” Clint paused a moment. “I need you to stand up very slowlyâno sudden movements. Can you do that?”
A moment of tense silence.
“Yeah.”
Clint could feel the boy move against his legs. He reached down and hooked a hand beneath the boy's arm, then helped him rise. There was barely enough room for them side by side. Clint had thought he might be able to scale the rope with Andy clinging to his back, but the well was too narrow.
“Ow,” Andy muttered. “My ankle.”
“Your ma'll look at it once you're out of here.”
He drew the rope around the boy's back and under his arms. Almost blind, Clint had to rely on his sense of touch to secure a knot at Andy's chest. Clint's legs grew shaky from bracing himself against the well's sides, but he didn't dare add any more weight to the board.
“How does that feel?” Clint asked.
“All right.”
Clint placed his hands on the boy's thin shoulders. “Herman and your ma are gonna pull you up. If you can help them by climbing up the wall some, go ahead and do it. Are you ready?”
He felt more than saw Andy's nod.
Clint tilted his face upward and cupped a hand to his mouth. “Pull him up!”
The rope grew taut and Clint put his hands around the boy's waist to lift him. As the boy was drawn upward, Clint leaned back against the dirt wall so Andy could squeeze past him. He helped raise the boy, taking some of the burden off Herman and Mattie. Then Andy was out of reach.
Clint could see the boy's silhouette as Andy was hauled steadily upward. He dislodged some soil as he climbed, and Clint dropped his head so the dirt fell in his hair and down his back, mingling with the sweat.
He listened to Andy's harsh breathing and the shuffle of the kid's feet against the well to distract himself from the cramping in his own legs. Keeping his weight pressed to the sides instead of on the board was harder than he'd figured. His knees trembled from the stress and the hot, clammy air sent sweat rolling down his face in steady rivulets. His shirt grew damp and sticky.
Clint flattened his palms against the sides to try to take some pressure off his legs, but it wasn't enough. If only he could put one boot flat on the board â¦
The cramps spread from his calves to his thighs, and his muscles trembled like he had palsy. He wasn't going to make itâhe had to chance some of his weight on the wooden ledge. Shifting cautiously, Clint eased his toe onto the board first. The wood protested and he paused a moment, then continued lowering his foot. Finally, he reached a point where it took some of the strain off his screaming muscles.