Read the following excerpt of this great book:
*excerpt below posted with permission from Pam Hillman
Wisdom, Wyoming TerriToryLaTe spring, 1882
Dust swirled as the two riders approached the house.
They stopped a few feet shy of the steps, and Mariah
Malone eyed the men from the shadowy recesses of the
porch. Both were sun-bronzed and looked weary but tough,
as if they made their living punching cows and riding fences.
One man hung back; the other rode closer and touched
his thumb and forefinger to the brim of his hat. “Afternoon,
ma’am.”
“Afternoon.” Wavy brown hair brushed the frayed collar
of his work shirt. A film of dust covered his faded jeans, and
the stubble on his jaw hinted at a long, hard trip. “May I
help you?”
I’m here to see Seth Malone.” His voice sounded husky
as if he needed a drink of water to clear the trail dust from
his throat.
At the mention of her father, a pang of sorrow mixed with
longing swept over her. “I’m sorry; he passed away in January.
I’m his daughter. Mariah Malone.”
The cowboy swung down from his horse and sauntered
toward the porch. He rested one worn boot on the bottom step
before tilting his hat back, revealing fathomless dark-blue eyes.
“I’m Slade Donovan. And that’s my brother, Buck.” He
jerked his head in the direction of the other man. His intense
gaze bored into hers. “Jack Donovan was our father.”
Oh no, Jack Donovan’s sons.
A shaft of apprehension shot through her, and Mariah
grasped the railing for support. Unable to look Mr. Donovan
in the eye, she focused on his shadowed jaw. A muscle jumped
in his cheek, keeping time with her thudding heart.
When her father died, she hadn’t given another thought
to the letter she’d sent Jack Donovan. She’d been too worried
about her grandmother, her sister, and the ranch to think
about the consequences of the past.
“Where is . . . your father?” Mariah asked.
“He died from broken dreams and whiskey.”
“I’m sorry for your loss,” she murmured, knowing her
own father’s sins had contributed to Jack Donovan’s troubles,
maybe even to his death. How much sorrow had her father’s
greed caused? How much heartache? And how much did his
son know of their fathers’ shared past?
The accusation on Slade Donovan’s face told her, and the
heat of fresh shame flooded her cheeks.
“My pa wanted what was rightfully his,” he ground out.
“I promised him I would find the man who took that gold
and make him pay.”
Tension filled the air, and she found it difficult to breathe.
“Take it easy, Slade.” His brother’s soft voice wafted
between them.
Mariah caught a glimpse of Cookie hovering at the edge
of the bunkhouse. “Miss Mariah, you need any help?”
Her attention swung between Cookie and the Donovan
brothers, the taste of fear mounting in the back of her throat.
An old man past his prime, Cookie would be no match for
them. “No,” she said, swallowing her apprehension. “No
thank you, Cookie. Mr. Donovan is here to talk business.”
She turned back to the man before her. Hard eyes searched
her face, and she looked away, praying for guidance. “Mr.
Donovan, I think we need to continue this discussion in my
father’s office.”
She moistened her lips, her gaze drawn to the clenched
tightness of his jaw. After a tense moment, he nodded.
* * *
Malone was dead?
Leaving Buck to care for the horses, Slade followed the
daughter into the house. She’d swept her golden-brown hair
to the top of her head and twisted it into a serene coil. A few
curls escaped the loose bun and flirted with the stand-up lace
of her white shirtwaist. She sure looked dressed up out here
in the middle of nowhere.
Then he remembered the empty streets and the hand-
ful of wagons still gathered around the church when they’d
passed through Wisdom at noon. He snorted under his
breath. Under other circumstances, a woman like Mariah
Malone wouldn’t even deem him worthy to wipe her dainty
boots on, let alone agree to talk to him in private. He couldn’t
count the times the girls from the “right” side of town had
snubbed their noses at him, their starched pinafores in sharp
contrast to his torn, patched clothes. At least his younger
brother and sisters hadn’t been treated like outcasts. He’d
made sure of that.
He trailed the Malone woman down the hall, catching a
glimpse of a sitting room with worn but polished furniture
on his right, a tidy kitchen on his left. A water stain from a
leaky roof marred the faded wallpaper at the end of the wide
hallway. While neat and clean, the house and outbuildings
looked run-down. He scowled. Surely Seth Malone could
have kept the place in better repair with his ill-gotten gain.
Miss Malone led the way into a small office that smelled
of leather, ink, and turpentine. She turned, and he caught a
glimpse of eyes the color of deep-brown leather polished to
a shine. The state of affairs around the house slid into the
dark recesses of his mind as he regarded the slender young
woman before him.
“Mr. Donovan,” she began, “I take it you received my
letter.”
He nodded but kept silent. Uneasiness wormed its way
into his gut. Did Miss Malone have brothers or other family
to turn to? Who was in charge of the ranch?
“I’m sorry for what my father did. I wish it had never hap-
pened.” She toyed with a granite paperweight, the distress on
her face tugging at his conscience.
He wished it had never happened too. Would his father
have given up if Seth Malone hadn’t taken off with all the
gold? Would they have had a better life—a ranch of their
own maybe, instead of a dilapidated shack on the edge of
Galveston—if his father hadn’t needed to fight the demons
from the bullet lodged in his head?
He wanted to ask all the questions that had plagued him
over the years, questions his father had shouted during his
drunken rages. Instead, he asked another question, one he’d
asked himself many times over the last several months. “Why
did you send that letter?”
Pain turned her eyes to ebony. “My father wanted to ask
forgiveness for what he had done, but by that time he was
unable to write the letter himself. I didn’t know Mr. Donovan
had a family or that he’d died.” She shrugged, the pity on her
face unmistakable.
Slade clenched his jaw. He didn’t want her pity. He’d had
enough of that to last a lifetime.
She strolled to the window, arms hugging her waist. She
looked too slight to have ever done a day’s work. She’d prob-
ably been pampered all her life, while his own mother and
sisters struggled for survival.
“I hoped Mr. Donovan might write while my father was
still alive, and they could resolve their differences.” Her soft
voice wafted on the still air. “I prayed he might forgive Papa.
And that Papa could forgive himself.”
“Forgiveness is too little, too late,” Slade gritted out, sat-
isfaction welling within him when her back stiffened and her
shoulders squared.
She turned, regarding him with caution. “I’m willing to
make restitution for what my father did.”
“Restitution?”
“A few hundred head of cattle should be sufficient.”
“A few hundred?” Surely she didn’t think a handful of
cattle would make up for what her father had done.
“What more do you want? I’ve already apologized. What
good will it do to keep the bitterness alive?”
“It’s not bitterness I want, Miss Malone. It’s the land.”
“The land?” Her eyes widened.
He nodded, a stiff, curt jerk of his head. “All of it.”
“Only a portion of the land should go to your family, if
any. Half of that gold belonged to my father.” Two spots of
angry color bloomed in her cheeks, and her eyes sparked like
sun off brown bottle glass. “And besides, he worked the land
all these years and made this ranch into something.”
Slade frowned. What did she mean, half of the gold
belonged to her father? Disgust filled him. Either the woman
was a good actress, or Malone had lied to his family even on
his deathbed.
“All of it.”
She blinked, and for a moment, he thought she might
give in. Then she lifted her chin. “And if I refuse?”
“One trip to the sheriff with your letter and the wanted
poster from twenty-five years ago would convince any law-
abiding judge that this ranch belongs to me and my family.”
He paused. “As well as the deed to the gold mine in California
that has my father’s name on it—not your father’s.”
“What deed?” She glared at him, suspicion glinting in her
eyes. “And what wanted poster?”
Did she really not know the truth? Slade pulled out the
papers and handed them to her, watching as she read the
proof that gave him the right to the land they stood on.
All color left her face as she read, and Slade braced himself
in case she fainted clean away. If he’d had any doubt that she
didn’t know the full story, her reaction to the wanted poster
proved otherwise.
“It says . . .” Her voice wavered. “It says Papa shot your
father. Left him for dead. I don’t believe it. It . . . it’s a mis-
take.” She sank into the nearest chair, the starch wilted out of
her. The condemning poster fluttered to the floor.
A sudden desire to give in swept over him. He could
accept her offer of a few hundred head, walk out the door,
and ride away, leaving her on the land that legally, morally,
belonged to him. To his mother.
No! He wanted Seth Malone to pay for turning his father
into a drunk and making his mother old before her time. But
Seth Malone was dead, and this woman wouldn’t cheat him
of his revenge.
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