Wild Ecstasy (25 page)

Read Wild Ecstasy Online

Authors: Cassie Edwards

BOOK: Wild Ecstasy
3.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
“Only because it was you teaching me,” Mariah said. She sucked in a wild breath as he lowered his head to her nipple and circled it with his tongue, then trailed his lips wetly downward, stopping at the juncture of her thighs. As he thrust his tongue against that part of her that still throbbed from his lovemaking, she closed her eyes and let herself enjoy it all over again.
This man
, she marveled to herself.
Ah, this delicious, heavenly, wonderful man
.
Because of Echohawk, she had been transformed into a woman, and felt blessed that it had not been too late for her.
Chapter 25
A girl with eager eyes . . .
waits me there . . . Oh heart . . . !
—Browning
 
 
 
Several Days Later
 
For the first several days the riverboat had moved calmly through the waters of the Mississippi. But on the seventh day, the day planned for the arrival to Saint Louis, snow had begun to fall, the wind blowing with tremendous violence.
Mariah and Echohawk were in their cabin waiting out the storm, uneasy as they could feel the boat pitching to and fro in the water. They could hear the pounding of the waves, beating like thunder against the sides of the boat. The splash of the great paddle wheel seemed puny as it struggled through the fevered water. Oh, how the noise grated against Mariah's nerves!
“Perhaps we shouldn't have boarded this . . . this monstrosity,” Mariah said, gladly accepting Echohawk's arms around her. “At first I thought the boat was beautiful with its lacy latticework trim and fancy spindles, but now I feel as though it is nothing more than a toy.” She clung more strongly to him. “I'm afraid, Echohawk. What if the boat suddenly gets swallowed whole by the angry river?”
“Without people manning the paddles, I do not see how the boat is maneuvered anywhere,” Echohawk grumbled. “It is not at all like the canoes of my people.”
Mariah clung a moment longer, then eased out of his embrace when she became aware of a lessening of the howling winds and the steadying position of the boat as it moved more smoothly through the water.
She went to the small window and gazed outside through the muck and mire of the glass. She felt much relieved when she saw that the snow was no longer whirling about, so obscuring the atmosphere that objects could not be distinguished at a distance of one hundred yards. It had been one of those tremendous storms called
poudries
, in which neither the Indians nor white people normally dared to stir abroad and when even the wolves flew to the woods for shelter.
“It's finally stopped snowing,” she sighed heavily. She turned and gazed eagerly at Echohawk. “We haven't left the cabin much since we've been aboard. I would like to now, before arriving at Saint Louis. Would you go with me, Echohawk, to take one last look?”
“If you can stand the cold,” he said, going to her, taking her hands. “No-din, living with the Chippewa, you will
have
to learn to accept the cold temperatures of winter better than you did living the life of a white woman. There are always duties for both men and women outside the wigwam. After the lakes are frozen, it is required that all men and women be strong enough to ward off such temperatures, to be able to get wood for warmth and water for drinking. The winter months require more stamina than the summer months.”
“And I won't disappoint you,” Mariah said, smiling. She eyed the door, then looked up at him again. “Let's go. Let's explore.”
She had not encouraged much exploring after boarding the boat. She could not help but see an uneasiness creep into Echohawk's eyes, even though only moments ago he was trying to convince her of so many things. Earlier, as they had boarded the boat, and the few times they had mingled with the others, she had seen how the other travelers gaped openly at him, then had looked at her with disgust when they recognized that she was with him, a woman whose skin was white.
She understood quite well that to most people it was a forbidden thing—the union of an Indian man and a white woman. She herself had feared ugly comments while traveling the full week to Saint Louis. But she had prepared herself for any and all snide remarks. She would defend her right to be with Echohawk to the end, if necessary.
She would defend Echohawk with her life, if need be!
Echohawk helped Mariah into her bearskin coat and then slipped into his own. Together they stepped out onto the deck. The temperature was not much below the freezing point, but the wind pierced their garments like a knife. The snow had finally stopped, and Mariah went to the rail and peered over the side, seeing that the riverboat was following close to the banks, partially sheltering it from the blast of the wind.
At times during the journey the boat had struggled, grating upon snags, and hanging for two or three hours at a time on sandbars. The weather had now cleared, showing distinctly the broad and turbulent river with its eddies, sandbars, ragged islands, and forest-covered shores.
Mariah had read in her studies that the Mississippi River was constantly changing its course, wearing away its banks on one side while it formed new ones on the other. At present the river was low, and it was almost frightful to see dead and broken trees firmly embedded in the sand, all pointing upstream, ready to impale any riverboat that at high water should pass over them.
Shivering, Mariah looked up at Echohawk. “I've seen enough,” she said, laughing softly. “Let us return to our cabin. I plan to place much more wood in the small stove. I am ready to be toasty warm again.”
Echohawk swept an arm around Mariah and led her across the deck past several cabins before reaching their own, the passengers consisting of traders, gamblers, soldiers and their wives from Fort Snelling, and Oregon emigrants and “mountain men.”
Just as they reached their cabin, Mariah and Echohawk were stopped when suddenly a man in a black cape blocked their way as he quickly exited the cabin on their left side. Mariah stiffened when his dark eyes shone with mockery as he glanced from her to Echohawk. He looked like the villains that she had read about in books, his mustache as black as the hair that was partially exposed at the edges of the top hat he was clutching with one hand, a cigar between the fingers of his other.
“What do we have here?” the man said in a snarl, his eyes still roaming over Mariah and then Echohawk. “I've seen you once or twice these past several days. A white woman and an Injun. Now, ain't that an interesting combination?”
Echohawk's eyes lit with fire, yet he willed himself not to show the anger he was feeling. “Step aside, white man,” he said, his voice smooth and even. “No-din is cold.”
The man's dark eyes widened and his mustache quivered as he smiled wryly down at Mariah. “No-din?” he said mockingly. “It wasn't enough that you chose a damn savage as a travelin' companion, but you let the Injun give you the name of a squaw?” He reached a hand out for Mariah. “Come on. Let me show you the real world.”
Before Echohawk could stop him, the man had jerked Mariah into a cabin filled with laughing, raucous men sitting around a table, cards scattered across the top, along with many coins, and bottles of whiskey.
Frightened, not only for her own safety, but also for Echohawk's should he do anything to antagonize these men, Mariah did not attempt jerking herself free. She scarcely breathed when Echohawk moved stealthily into the room, illuminated by one lantern, smoke hanging low over the table like billows of fog.
“Men, look what I've brought you. A little plaything,” the man said, shoving Mariah further into the room, close to the table. “We have us a little squaw here.” He jerked Mariah's coat off, revealing her buckskin dress. “She ain't only travelin' with an Injun, she has an Injun name and she's dressed like one.”
The men cocked their eyes up at the man and gave him annoyed stares. “Blackie, goddammit,” one of the gamblers said exasperatedly. “What do you think you're doin'? Let her go. Do you hear? We don't want no trouble. We just want to sit here peaceful-like, playin' poker. The last thing we need is Injun trouble.”
“It's only one Injun,” Blackie said, turning glaring eyes at Echohawk. He took a step toward Echohawk and stared up at the eyeglasses. “And I can't figure this one out. He's wearin' spectacles.” He laughed throatily as he grabbed the eyeglasses from Echohawk's nose and dropped them to the floor, crushing them with the heel of his boot. “Now. Should you decide to defend your little whore, I can fight you fair and square, since you don't have spectacles on to hide behind.”
Goaded beyond human endurance, Echohawk could not hold back his rage any longer. He reached a hand out to Blackie and locked it behind his neck, forcing him quickly to the floor, on his stomach. Echohawk straddled him, and leaned his mouth close to his ear. “Hear me now, white man,” he warned, his voice a low hiss. “You push me too far and you will regret it.”
“All right, all right,” Blackie said, his eyes wild, one cheek pressed hard against the floor. “I apologize. Just let me up. I won't bother you no more.”
Believing him, Echohawk let his hold on the man grow slack. And just as Echohawk started to rise away from Blackie, Echohawk found himself at the disadvantage and on the floor. A knife was quickly drawn from a sheath at Blackie's waist and held close to Echohawk's throat.
“Now who is threatening who?” Blackie said, laughing boisterously.
Her heart pounding, and seeing that the other men were not going to intervene, even though they apparently did not approve of Blackie's tactics, Mariah knew that she must be the one to make the next move. Eyeing a whiskey bottle on the poker table, she inched her hand toward it. She was surprised that the men allowed even this, for when she picked the bottle up by its slender neck, they did not shout out a warning to Blackie.
Her knees weak with fear that she might cause Blackie to plunge the knife into Echohawk's flesh, she crept closer to the man, then stopped and said his name—sweetly and seductively.
“Blackie? Why bother with him when you can have me?” Mariah said tauntingly.
Seemingly stunned by her flirting, Blackie forgot his concentration and eased the knife aside as he turned to look up at Mariah. She grabbed this opportunity to bring the whiskey bottle down on his head, the knife in his hand no longer a threat to Echohawk.
Glass shattered and Blackie's body lurched from the blow, his eyes wild as they locked with Mariah's, and then he tumbled over sideways onto the floor, unconscious, the knife at his side.
One of the gamblers scrambled to his feet. Mariah was expecting to be assaulted for what she had done, but instead found kind arms propelling her away from the unconscious man, allowing Echohawk to rise from the floor.
“We apologize, ma'am,” the gambler said, his blue eyes soft and kind as he gazed down at Mariah from his six-foot-four height. “Blackie ain't nothin' but a troublemaker. And rest assured we'll keep him away from you and your friend until you are safely off the boat.”
“That is kind of you,” Mariah said. “Thank you ever so much.”
Echohawk came to her, brushing his hair back from his eyes. He grabbed up Mariah's coat, took her by the hand, and whisked her out of the cabin, embarrassed that it was she, a woman, who had defended him, the man, again!
Yet by doing so she had demonstrated her intense love for him, and that made his heart swell with pride.
“Your eyeglassess,” Mariah said, going into their cabin beside Echohawk, closing the door behind them. “Echohawk, that evil man broke your eyeglasses. Now what are you doing to do?”
“I will do well without the white man's magic,” Echohawk grumbled. “I can see nearly as well as I did before.”
Relieved to be back in the privacy of their cabin, Mariah held her hands over the stove and rubbed them together, warming them. “You don't have to be inconvenienced for long,” she said, glancing at him over her shoulder. “While we are in Saint Louis we can use some of my money to fit you with new eyeglasses.”
“The man did me a favor,” Echohawk said, tossing his coat aside. “I am glad the eyeglasses are gone.”
When someone knocked on the door, Mariah turned with a start and her face paled, wondering if Blackie had come to finish what he had started. She stifled a gasp behind her hand when Echohawk went to his belongings and grabbed a rifle in his large hand.
He turned to Mariah. “You step out of the way,” he whispered harshly. “I don't want you taking a bullet that was meant for me.”
“Oh, Echohawk, I hope we're wrong,” Mariah said, moving around to stand beside the bunk. “I hope that man doesn't ever wake up!”
“You hit him hard enough,” Echohawk said, moving stealthily toward the door when someone continued to knock. “But it always seems that an evil man's head is harder than that of one born with kindness in his heart.”
Aiming the rifle with his right hand, Echohawk moved his left slowly to the door latch. He opened the door quickly and found himself aiming the barrel of his firearm directly into the eyes of the riverboat captain, whose color drained instantly from his face.
“Please . . . ?” Captain Johns muttered, his eyes frozen wide. “I've only come to apologize for the inconvenience you encountered at the hands of . . . of that damnable gambler Blackie. I've forbidden him on my ship in the past. So shall I now, in the future!”
Echohawk turned the barrel of the rifle away from the captain, holding the firearm at his side. “Your apologies are accepted,” he said, feeling Mariah's presence at his side as she came quickly to him.
“Also, I have come to tell you that Saint Louis is within range should you wish to view it,” Captain Johns said, lifting his hat, wiping beads of perspiration from his pale brow.
“Let's go and watch as the boat is moored, can we, Echohawk?” Mariah said, looking anxiously up at him.
Echohawk inhaled a nervous breath, then stood the rifle against the wall and stepped outside with Mariah and the captain.
Mariah's breath was taken away when she saw the size of the city set back from the waterfront. The buildings were quite impressive, some even four stories high! And the roads! They were filled with many horses and buggies and fancy carriages!

Other books

Blood Trails by Sharon Sala
Apocalypse Dawn by Mel Odom
The Map of Chaos by Félix J. Palma
The Dance by Alison G. Bailey
Wanderville by Wendy McClure
Playing Dead in Dixie by Graves, Paula
An Affair For the Baron by John Creasey
Falling From Grace by Ann Eriksson
Under the Dome: A Novel by Stephen King