Author Elizabeth Lane
Book Excerpt
"The Countess and the Cowboy"
by Elizabeth Lane
Excerpt from "The Countess and the Cowboy"
Northern Wyoming, August 1888
The stagecoach, a canvas-covered mud wagon that had seen better days, rattled
over the washboard road. The final leg of the run from Casper to Lodgepole was
blessedly short, but the horses were already lathered from the afternoon heat.
Dust billowed from under the wheels to settle like fine brown velvet on the
driver, the guard and the three passengers inside—two women and a man.
Clint Lonigan sat directly across from the veiled woman. Pretending to doze, he
studied her through slitted eyes. He’d already guessed who—and what—she was. Ten
days ago, when he’d left Lodgepole to sit with a dying friend, the town had been
abuzz with the news that an honest-to-God countess, the widow of an English
earl, was coming to live with her sister, Margaret Hanford.
Clint had paid scant attention to the gossip. Mrs. Hanford seemed like a nice
enough woman, but her husband, Roderick, was the most arrogant, pretentious
piece of cow manure in the whole county. Clint wouldn’t have been impressed to
hear that Queen Victoria herself planned on dropping by the Hanford ranch for a
damned spot of tea.
But here was the countess in the flesh. And now that he’d seen her, damned if he
wasn’t intrigued. The Dowager Countess of Manderfield—Hanford had made sure
folks knew her full title. No question that this woman was the real thing. Who
but an upper-class foreigner would travel on a sweltering day dressed head to
toe in widow’s weeds? She had to be sweating like a mule under that heavy black
silk.
If the woman’s costume left any question of her status, the engraved signet ring
on her left hand erased all doubt. It was heavy gold with a ruby the size of a
black-eyed pea. He couldn’t help but marvel that some plug-ugly hadn’t hacked
off her finger to steal it.
A widow’s bonnet, black with a dusty silk veil, concealed her hair and face.
Apart from her slender frame, Clint couldn’t tell whether she was young or old,
plain or pretty. Even her lace-mitted hands gave no clue. The “Dowager” in her
title suggested a woman past middle age. But that didn’t make a bean’s worth of
difference, because there was one thing Clint knew for sure.
If the countess was planning to move in with Roderick Hanford, she was already
one of the enemy.
Eve Townsend, Dowager Countess of Manderfield, braced her boots against the
floor of the coach, shifting on the seat in an attempt to ease her tortured
buttocks. She’d lowered her veil against the dust, but there was nothing to be
done for the constant jarring.
Or the heat. Eve felt as if her body was being baked in treacle. She’d worn her
mourning clothes to prompt some deference on the journey and discourage any
strange men who might otherwise accost her. To that extent the costume had
worked. But she was not at all certain that the benefits outweighed the unending
discomfort. Traveling in black silk bombazine had been like sitting in a Turkish
bath.
But enough complaints! This was the American West, and Margaret had warned her
to expect some rough conditions. The stormy, sickness-fraught ocean voyage,
followed by the jostling train ride from New York to the railhead at Casper, had
drained Eve in body and spirit. But this was the last leg of a journey that
would soon be over. With Margaret and her children she would have a roof over
her head and family around her. She could hardly wait to hold Margaret’s baby,
due to be born this very month.
“Will your sister’s family be meeting the stage, Countess?” Plump, middle-aged
and chatty, Mrs. Etta Simpkins had already introduced herself. She ran a bakery
in Lodgepole and appeared to know the business of everyone in town.
“I certainly hope so,” Eve answered politely. “And you needn’t call me Countess.
This is America, after all. Mrs. Townsend will do.”
“Very well.” The woman sounded a trifle disappointed. “But don’t count on
Margaret being there when you arrive. When I saw her two weeks ago, she was as
big around the waist as a fifty-pound pumpkin. I’d wager she’s had that baby by
now. From the look of her, it could even be twins.”
“Twins! Goodness, wouldn’t that be wonderful? That’s why I’ve come, you know, to
help Margaret with the children.”
It was enough truth for now, Eve reasoned. There was no need to spread the word
that, upon her husband’s death, her grown stepson, Albert, had burned his
father’s updated will—which would have left her generously provided for—and
booted her off the Manderfield estate with little more than her title and her
wedding ring. If not for her sister’s invitation, she could be languishing in
the poorhouse.
Eve brushed a blowfly off her skirt, its movement drawing her eye to the man who
sat on the opposite bench, his knees almost touching hers. At the moment, he
appeared to be sleeping. But the glimmer beneath his lowered eyelids told her he
was fully alert, like a dozing panther.
He’d muttered an introduction before taking his seat. Lonigan—that was the
surname, she remembered. Irish, of course, having the name and the look of that
wretched race, though his speech sounded American. She’d acknowledged him with
an icy nod. He’d seemed not to care or even to notice her disdain. Perversely,
his utter indifference piqued her interest.
She studied him through her veil—a lanky frame, long denim-covered legs, dusty
Mexican-style riding boots, a faded shirt and a well-worn leather vest. His
sun-burnished hands were callused—a workingman’s hands. His proud bearing
suggested he might be a landholder. But he didn’t appear to be wealthy like
Margaret’s husband, Roderick, who, according to her letters, owned more than
twenty thousand head of cattle and a house as big as an English manor.
Eve’s eyes lingered on the man’s face. He had features like chiseled granite,
framed by unruly chestnut hair that curled over the tops of his ears. The scar
that slashed across his cleft chin lent him a subtle aura of danger. He struck
her as the sort of man no proper lady should have anything to do with.
Still, she caught herself trying to imagine the color of his mostly closed eyes.
A sudden pistol shot whanged from behind the coach. The bullet pierced the
canvas cover, splintering the wooden framework overhead. Eve jerked upright,
paralyzed by disbelief. Why would anybody be shooting at them?
“Damn it, get down!” Lonigan was out of his seat in an instant, shoving both
women onto the floor and flattening himself on top of them. Eve struggled under
his weight, eating dust as the coach lurched and picked up speed. He refused to
move, his solid chest pressing down on her back. Beneath his leather vest, she
could feel the distinct outline of a small holstered pistol.
The coach swayed crazily as it thundered along the rutted road. Bullets sang
overhead like angry wasps. Mrs. Simpkins was shrieking in terror.
A hump in the road launched the coach into an instant’s flight, then dropped it
with a sickening crunch. The vehicle careened to one side, shuddered and came to
rest on one broken wheel. Eve bit back a whimper. Clearly, they’d been run down
by highwaymen and their lives were in grave danger. But her late father, who’d
served his country during the great Indian mutiny, had schooled her to hide her
fear.
“Everybody outside!” The male voice sounded young and nervous. “Do as you’re
told and nobody gets hurt.”
Lonigan muttered a string of curses. Eve gulped dusty air as his rock-hard
weight eased off her. “Give me your ring!” he growled in her ear.
“And why, pray tell, should I do that?”
“They’ll take it if they see it. Might even cut your finger off to get at it if
you don’t cooperate. Give me the damned ring!” Without waiting for a reply, he
seized Eve’s hand and yanked the ring off her finger. It vanished into a vest
pocket as he rose to his knees and unlatched the door of the coach.
“We’re coming out,” he shouted. “But mind your manners. There are ladies in
here.”
Eve scrambled onto the seat as he opened the door and stepped out. Mrs. Simpkins
appeared to have fainted. Eve found her smelling salts in her reticule and waved
the vial under the woman’s nose. She flinched, snorted and opened her eyes.
“What’s happened?” she gasped.
“We’re being robbed. They want us to get out.”
“Oh, dear!” She looked as if she were going to faint again.
“Come on—and keep still. The less we say the better.” Eve helped the woman rise.
Passing her ahead to Lonigan, Eve took a breath to collect herself and then
climbed out of the coach and into the sunbaked air. Her legs felt as unsteady as
a newborn lamb’s, but she straightened her spine to hide her nerves and anxiety.
Through the haze of settling dust she surveyed the chaos—the lathered horses and
the coach sagging onto its shattered wheel. The grizzled driver’s hands were in
the air. The guard clutched his bleeding arm but didn’t appear badly hurt. Eve
saw no sign of the double-barreled shotgun he’d carried.
There were just two robbers, their hats pulled low and their faces masked with
bandannas. Slim and erect on their mounts, they could’ve been schoolboys. But
there was nothing childish about their weapons—heavy pistols, cocked and aimed.
“Is everybody out?” Eve recognized the nervous voice of the robber who’d ordered
them from the coach.
“We are.” Lonigan faced him boldly. Eve remembered the gun under his vest. Did
he plan to use it? “As you see, boys, it’s just me and these two good widow
ladies. None of us has anything worth stealing. So pack your pistols and go home
before somebody else gets hurt.” His eyes flickered toward the wounded guard.
“Damned lucky you didn’t kill that man. You could end up swinging by your fool
necks.”
Eve glanced at him from beneath her veil. Something didn’t seem right, and
suddenly she knew what it was. Lonigan didn’t seem the least bit afraid. He was
lecturing the robbers like a stern uncle.
He knew them!
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