Western Romance Collection: Rugged Cowboys - Part 30
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Part 30

"No, you're not," she agreed. She kept the hurt and the anger out of her voice as best she could.

"So since you and Rod was so close and all, he figured he might as well let me go."

"We weren't close." She hadn't wanted the edge in her voice. She'd wanted to be calm, collected. Sound cool. But she didn't. She sounded angry, because she was angry. "You say you're not my husband, and you aren't."

Catherine looked at the twins. They didn't need to be hearing this, but she needed to say it. "Billy Howell was the worst no-good scoundrel this side of the Mississippi. He was the worst gambler, too, and when he finally ran out of my money to play around with he figured out another way he could pay off his debts. Or-a way his wife could, at least."

The anger in her voice seeped out more with every word until she couldn't hide the bitterness any more.

Glen looked at her, that inscrutable expression back on his face. The face he used at the table, she knew, and the face that he used most of the time when he was with her.

"So fine. You feel free to think what you want to think, but Rodney Dawson is a creep, and cattle rustler or not I wouldn't have a thing to do with him."

"Did you-"

"I did what I had to do, for a man who didn't deserve one tenth of what I did to support him."

Glen was still watching her. His hand came up, traced a line on her face.

"I'm sorry."

Twenty Six Glen wasn't sure what the h.e.l.l to think. She was defiant, that much he knew. As if she was daring him to doubt what she was saying. As if it were a serious concern.

"Have there been others?"

"What do you mean?"

"Since... you know."

"Since he left?"

Glen nodded. He didn't like asking these questions, and she clearly didn't like being asked them, but he had to know. It was pulling at him, taunting him.

"Not before..." She looked over her shoulder again at the children. "Go on, kids. Go to your room."

"Why?" Cole asked.

Glen wanted to tell him to listen to his mother. He didn't, because that would have been something that the boy's father should have said to him. Not only did he not have a father, but the father he might have had might not have cared too much about that sort of thing.

After all, the man seemed to have skewed morals in every other regard. Why not let a boy talk back to his mother? Catherine didn't seem to give his lack of support a second thought.

"Go on, now, I said. Get!"

They picked up the toys they'd spread out on the floor and headed for their room. Grace went first, and then Cole shut the door after.

"I'm sorry about that-they're good children, it's just-"

"There's no need to apologize. I understand."

"Thank you, then," she said. He wasn't sure if she meant it.

The thought was running through his head, over and over. She had offered, that first time he had gone to ask for help dealing with the cattle. She'd offered, and he had refused. She'd offered him money, too, and he refused that.

What if she was just doing this so he wouldn't kick her off the ranch? The thought hadn't crossed his mind before. That she might have done it with him just because she wanted to have a hold over him.

"That night, up in Caspar." She looked at him. He could see how distressed she was looking, how worried she was about what he was going to ask next. "Was that, all that, because you..."

He couldn't finish the sentence. A twinge in his side exploded in pain, and it gave him a good excuse not to ask the question he suddenly realized he didn't want answered. Glen didn't want to find out if the answer was yes.

She finished it for him. "To get you on the hook? Keep me on the ranch?"

He opened his eyes just enough to see that she was angry that he had asked. He couldn't deny that he'd meant to ask that very question.

"Well? Did you?"

He could see the hurt in her eyes. "No, Glen Riley. No I did not."

He was silent for a moment, trying to ignore the pain in his side, trying to ignore how bad his face hurt. Trying to ignore the doubt that he was feeling about all of this. She could have told him the sky was green and he'd have believed her right now. Because he wanted to.

"Tell me it's not true. Tell me you never had nothin' to do with that man. With anything like that."

"I can't," she said softly. He fought to open his eyes. She was crying, now. Like she had before.

Glen forced himself up, trying to ignore the screaming pain that racked his body. He wrapped one arm around her and pulled her head into his chest. She didn't fight him.

"It's alright."

She leaned into him and cried. It wasn't alright, he knew. He would get over it. Things for him, they weren't too bad. The knowledge didn't change him. As much as it hurt, it didn't change how he felt about her, neither. But for Catherine...

He pressed his lips into her forehead.

For Catherine, it might not be alright at all.

Twenty Seven Catherine looked in on Glen. He couldn't see her, and that was what made it alright for her to ignore him telling her to leave him be. She couldn't let him be-he was hurt, and bad. She could see a worrying glint in his eyes, one that she wasn't sure the source of, but it made her feel like she barely knew him.

She let herself go inside the front room. He jumped when he saw her, like he'd been too deep in thought to believe anyone would come in.

"Y'alright?"

He scowled for a moment. "Yeah, I'm alright."

"You look tired."

"I'm fine." He laid his head back against the arm of the sofa, though, and she realized exactly how tired he looked. Glen looked like he might not be able to keep himself upright too much longer if he didn't get some sleep.

"You need to rest, Glen."

"And I will." They'd already gone through all this, she knew. But that didn't mean that she could just ignore the fact that he wasn't sleeping and didn't seem to have any intention of doing so any time soon. "Once you stop fussin' over me."

"Does it hurt?"

"No." He was lying, but she wasn't going to call him on it.

"Do you need anything before I go to sleep?"

"No," he said again. She didn't believe him this time, either, but she let it go.

"I'll just get you a cup of water and head to bed."

She dipped the cup in and pulled it out most of the way full, walked it across the room, and handed it over.

"Good night, Glen."

Then she left him to his own problems and his own devices. Whatever he was worried about, he didn't want to talk to her about it. She understood not wanting to discuss something. Their conversation earlier had been one she'd hoped to avoid forever. But it hadn't worked out that way.

Having her privacy ripped away had a way of making Catherine feel like it was more important.

Glen watched her retreat into the bedroom, heard the door close, and set his head back. His eyes ached, and all he wanted to do was sleep. It was what he should have been doing an hour ago. And it wasn't as if it were for a lack of trying.

He closed his eyes again, and again he felt the burning inside. Remembering what had happened earlier. Getting his a.s.s kicked in. Two wasn't enough. He'd known that, but he had gone along with too few in spite of that. Because it had been necessary.

But what the h.e.l.l did that even mean? Why was he getting beat half to death to back up a man who he barely even met? Justice? Revenge? What was it?

There had been a time that the reasons didn't matter so much. He'd been good at something, so he did it. The truth was, the orders didn't matter much. They gave him direction, sure. It wasn't patriotism, either.

He joined the Army because it would be steady pay. He'd learned to be quick with a gun, and more than that, though it upset him now to think about it, he didn't have much trouble pulling the trigger.

So many folks do. It's hard, once you realize what you're doing. What you're taking away. If you think about it too much. But not for Glen. When he wanted the doubt to go away, it was gone. No problemo.

Was he still that man? If anyone was going to deal with Dawson and his thugs, it would have to be him. But could he still be the person he was ten years ago? A guy who could just sit there and pick off a dozen men, snuff their lives like candles?

It would be a tough job, regardless of whether or not he'd be able to bring himself to it. Twenty men, maybe more, if he took them in a frontal a.s.sault. He'd have to have a plan, and a d.a.m.n good one.

Then again... there were other choices, as well. Things that weren't twenty-to-one odds that had to be evened out as best they could by trapping them like rats.

Glen let out a breath.

Why was he even considering this? If he wanted to shoot a few men, he could have stayed with the Army. He had promised himself that wasn't his life any more. Had mustered out, to get away from fighting. To get away clean.

Now that he was truly on the straight-and-narrow, all he could see to move forward was going right back. Back to the killer he had decided he couldn't keep on being.

Glen reached down for his gun-belt, undid the strap, and set it aside on the ground. He could pick it back up, sure as sin. But that was a choice he'd have to make in the morning. He closed his eyes again and forced his mind to quiet itself.

The only thing he knew for sure, the only decision he had to make in truth, was whether or not he was going to let that lawman die for nothing.

And as much as he didn't like it, as much as he wanted to get away from shooting men down, he already knew the answer to that. There was no way he was going to do that. He didn't want to get involved in any of this.

Now that he was here, though, they were going to have to deal with him one way or the other. The thought wasn't one that he liked, but it was all he could do. After all, he had only ever really been good at one thing. Now that he was being dealt into the game, they would have to deal with him.

The question was, how was he going to close down Dawson's numbers advantage? Glen thought for a moment, still feeling the tug of sleep. Still hoping that any moment, he would succ.u.mb to it and then he would be able to rest.

It would be easy. Find one of them, alone. Getting a man to talk wasn't too hard. All you had to do, was do something he desperately hoped you didn't. And make it so he couldn't stop you-except, perhaps, if they tell you what they know.

Making sure they knew it, that was the hard part, because men lie about as easy as they tell the truth. Easier, even. But in this case, that wasn't going to be a problem. After all, he'd seen the perfect man already. Gotten a real good look at him.

He was broad-shouldered, with a wide, flat nose and short-cropped blonde hair, and he answered the door at Dawson's Brewery. The doorman thought he was tough. That would make it that much easier to break him, in the end.

If there was one thing he had learned, time and time again, it was that n.o.body was that tough. Not Glen, sure. Not Rod Dawson. And definitely not a man watching the door at a brewery. Not even a rough brewery like Rod Dawson's.

By the time the man learned his lesson, it would already be too late. Poor guy. He didn't have any idea what was about to come down on his head, all because of who he worked for. Glen didn't like how little he was bothered by what he was about to do.

He'd already given that life up. The man who did things like this wasn't him any more.

But it could be.

Twenty Eight Catherine was halfway surprised to see Glen still lying on the couch in the morning. He was as stubborn as anything, sure, but more than that, he had always seemed independent. He couldn't have felt any better than he had the day before. Likely he felt worse.

But even still, he pushed himself up from the sofa when she entered the room, as if he had been awake the whole time, just waiting for her.

"You think I can get one of those cups of coffee?"

She noticed the pistol belt lying on the floor beside him, unsure what to think about it. It didn't have a weapon in it, but the whole thing seemed to have some strange symbolism to him. When Glen saw her looking, he shrugged and stood up, groaning out his discomfort but following her into the kitchen.

"I don't need help, you can stay down a bit. Let me treat you."

"I need to be on my feet. I've been staying down too long already."

Catherine didn't argue with him. She had a feeling that it wouldn't much change his mind if she did, and there was no reason to waste her time. Then again, she didn't have the feeling that she had any right to tell him what to do, either. If he wanted to be up, then he was allowed that.

"What are you going to do now?"

She didn't want an answer. The answer she was hoping for was 'there's nothing to be done.' Glen Riley wasn't a 'nothing to be done' kind of man, though. She knew that as well as anything.

"First, I'm going to have a cup of your coffee."

She smiled without turning to look at him. "I meant after that, smart a.s.s."

"I know what you meant."

"Don't get yourself hurt again."

Glen nodded. "I won't."

"Promise me."

"I promise."

She turned and leaned into him, nestling her face into the crook of his shoulder. "I don't want you to get hurt."