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Lord of Misrule
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LORD OF MISRULE
A Behind the Ranges Novel Byte
By
Judith B. Glad
Something hidden. Go and find it.
Go and look behind the ranges--
Something lost behind the Ranges.
Lost and waiting for you. Go.
Rudyard Kipling: The Explorer
Uncial Press Aloha, Oregon
2011
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and events described herein are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locations, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
ISBN 13: 978-1-60174-127-1
ISBN 10: 1-60174-127-8
Lord of Misrule
Copyright © 2003, 2011 by Judith B. Glad
Cover art and design
Copyright © 2011 by Judith B. Glad
Previously published by AweStruck eBooks, 2003; Fictionwise 2005
All rights reserved. Except for use in review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means now known or hereafter invented, is forbidden without the written permission of the author or publisher.
Published by Uncial Press,
an imprint of GCT, Inc.
Visit us at http://www.uncialpress.com
Chapter One
"I'm ready to be home." Katie slid off Salome's back and leaned against her warm shoulder. The donkey lipped her collar, snuffled. "Now don't you bite me, darn you," Katie told her, "or I'll ride your sister."
Salome caught the collar with strong yellow teeth and pulled.
Laughing, Katie swatted at her cheek. "You ornery little dickens! Turn loose!"
Luke reached past her and gave the donkey a harder swat. "You're too easy on her. She thinks it's a game."
When Salome let go of her collar, Katie stepped closer to her husband. Husband! What a nice ring that has to it! "Luke, she saved my life because she likes to bite. I'll be doggoned if I'll try to break her of it." She wrapped her arms around him, enjoying the feel of his hard body, even through the layers of heavy clothing they both wore.
He hugged her back. "How much farther?"
Katie pointed. "Down the trail there, and along the river for about six miles. Our first house was a little east of the fort. The new place is farther out, but in her last letter Ma said it's a lot closer in than it used to be. The town's growing by leaps and bounds."
"Well, let's get moving, then. I'd like to be there before sundown." He mounted Idjit, the big, rawboned hinny that had been the only riding animal they could find in Evanston, and tugged on the leadline to the pack mule. "Move it, Lafayette. We're almost home, the lady says."
The tone of his voice told Katie he was still fretting about his reception at her parents' home. She hadn't been able to convince him that Pa wouldn't have gone home and told everyone how he'd seduced Katie. If she knew her Pa, the only person he'd ever tell about the entire circumstances of their wedding was Ma. And she wouldn't tell a soul.
Ma had a fine sense of what was proper. She would lambaste Katie proper for giving herself to a man before they were wed, but she'd never, never say a word to Luke. Ma would figure that was Pa's place, and she'd simply make him welcome as she would any family member.
"I hope everyone will be here for Christmas," Katie said, once they were at the bottom of the rocky trail. It was deeply rutted from the hundreds of wagons that traveled it each summer, and slippery from melting snow. Angular rocks that had fallen from the rimrock above littered the ruts and made footing chancy for man and beast. "I want you to meet the whole family."
"I thought your brother was in Europe." Luke didn't sound too excited about meeting the Lachlan clan all at once.
"Well, he is, but everybody else could be here. Silas almost always comes home for Christmas, and Ma said she'd try to persuade William and Flower to come down."
"You're sure about us staying at your folks' place? They've got room?"
"Oh, Luke, stop fretting. Ma says there are eight bedrooms in the house, and her sewing room has a daybed in it. And the littles can always double up if need be."
"I ain't fretting. I just want to make sure of our welcome."
"This is my home, you suspicious man. I grew up here. Of course we'll be welcome."
"I thought you said you grew up in a cabin in the mountains."
Katie knew him well enough now to know that he was trying to start an argument. Well, this was one topic she wasn't about to argue on. "You know good and well we moved to town when I was fifteen. I was speaking figuratively."
"Well, say what you mean, then. How am I to know what you mean?"
"He's just tired," Katie told Salome. "Pay him no mind. When we get home, he can have a hot bath and relax. Then he'll see just how welcome we'll be."
The trees along the river had mostly been cut, Katie saw, as they got close to town. Only shrubby willows and cottonwood saplings lined the banks now. The light skiff of snow made the torn new earth stand out in dark contrast. "Ma says the new house is the first one you see from the river, but I don't really know where--"
"There," Luke said, pointing. "Is it that one?"
Katie could only stare. Ma hadn't told her they were building a castle.
Luke hadn't expected a log cabin. The Lachlan's new house was in a town, after all, even if that town was a long ways from anywhere. He'd seen grand stone houses in frontier towns in Kansas, so he knew that Boise City would have its share of impressive homes. But somehow he had expected the Lachlans to have something...well, homey.
Almost everything Katie had told him was about her childhood in a mountain valley with only one other family within a day's ride. Folks who'd chosen to live like that wouldn't worry about putting on the dog. He'd sort of expected their new house to be a big, rambling place, with a wide, welcoming front porch. Like the house his pa had wanted to build in Kansas.
This house came as close to a mansion as anything he'd seen since Chicago. Or it looked that way from here. He couldn't see a lot of it, because the barn was in the way, but what he could see was impressive.
As they rode up the narrow, rutted road from the river, he got a better look. Three stories, with a square turret on one corner, built of red brick and dark wood. Mullioned windows sparked in the pale winter sun. Lines of young trees, bare of leaf and spindly, bordered the property on all sides. He reckoned there was about five acres thus enclosed, half of it a fenced pasture. Off in one corner of the lot was a small cottage, its siding looking fresh from the sawmill.
Prime land. Just like he wanted for himself.
"Oh, my," Katie said.
"What?" He was shorter with her than he'd intended, simply because he was still speechless.
"Ma told me they were building a place big enough for us all to have bedrooms of our own, but I never expected..." Her gesture took in the big yard, the rows of young trees, the three small evergreens on what might be a lawn in the summer.
Feeling like he'd rather turn tail and run than face her family, Luke waved her ahead of him toward the barn. "Let's take care of the stock first."
The back half of the barn's interior was lined with horse stalls. No folks were about, but the big buckskin Emmet Lachlan had been riding in Evanston poked his head over a stall door and whuffled a welcome. As Luke dismounted, a door opened at the back. "About time you got here," a raspy voice called. "The missus has been waiting for them...oh, can I help you folks?"
Before Luke could answer, his wife did. "I'm Katie Lachlan...ah, Katie Savage," She slid off of Salome's back, stumbled, and caught herself with a handful of mane. "This is the Lachlan
place, isn't it?"
"You must be the sister. They've been expecting you for a couple of days. I'm Abel Greene, hostler, gardener, and all 'round man of work." He held out his left hand, and Luke saw that his right arm ended just below the elbow. The man's accent was familiar to Luke. It placed him from somewhere in the Confederacy.
"Pleased to meet you, Mr. Greene." Katie took his left hand as if she'd been shaking hands that way all her life. Luke was proud of her. He'd seen too many battle-scarred veterans treated like dirt because they didn't have a full complement of hands and feet.
"Luke Savage." He held out his own left hand. "Late of the Seventh Kansas Cavalry."
"I was with the 14th Mississippi, but I don't reckon that matters much any more. Not out here."
Having dismounted, Luke pulled the saddle from Idjit and swung it across a saddle horse. He led the big hinny into a stall. I'll be back, old lady," he said, giving her a gentle swat on the rump. Let me get everyone settled."
Abel and Katie were just emerging from two other stalls, where, Luke surmised, they'd put the asses. Luke went to Lafayette, who was standing patiently.
The big mule looked gaunt, as well he should. He'd walked halfway across the West in the last couple of months, and had carried a good load most of the time. Scratching under Lafe's chin, Luke said, "Time to rest, fella. We ain't going much of anywhere for awhile."
Lafe nodded vigorously, as if in understanding. He let his head droop while Luke rubbed him down, and then followed Luke into the stall Abel pointed out. Luke made sure there was an ample supply of grain, before he gave Lafe one last pat. "You got us here, fella. Now rest."
"You treat that mule like he was your best friend," Katie teased. She was grooming Salome, dodging the ass's teeth with the ease of two months' practice.
"At least I don't spoil him with sugar," he said. "And he never tries to take a piece out of me, either."
Abel helped Katie groom the asses while Luke took care of Idjit. When they were done, they sorted through their belongings and took only the fiddle case and Luke's bedroll to the house.
"Abel says they all took off early today," Katie said, as if in answer to Luke's curiosity about why no one had come to meet them. "Ma's in a tizzy, with all the folks coming for Christmas, and she's off to the grocer and the butcher and whatever. Pa and the littles are out looking for a Christmas tree. They'll not be back until tomorrow, so you won't have to get everyone straight at one time."
"Did he say how many folks are coming for Christmas?" Luke felt his belly clench. Meeting all of Katie's family at one time was bad enough. Facing a house full of strangers was about as welcome to him as riding head-on into a herd of stampeding longhorns.
Katie held the back door open for him. "My godparents and their three, Uncle Silas and Aunt Soomey." She paused, staring around the enormous kitchen. "Good grief! This is as big as the whole cabin at Cherry Vale." She turned to look at Luke. "Our kitchen there was also the parlor, the playroom, and Pa's study."
Luke had a feeling he'd have felt a lot more at home in the cabin than he ever would here. He'd known the Lachlans were well-off, but this house cried rich.
"...not going to be here," Katie was saying when he paid attention. He asked her to repeat herself.
"I said, it's too bad Buff's not coming for Christmas. Neither's Ellen. But I suppose Charles won't hear of her traveling all the way across country with a new baby. It just won't seem like Christmas without them."
As she spoke, she was opening doors on either side of the long hall that led to a wide front door with stained glass sidelights. "Breakfast room. Study, a real one, with bookshelves. Sewing room... Good heavens, Ma's got herself a sewing machine!" She went on to the next door. "Here's the dining room. My, isn't it elegant?"
Luke looked through the archway. Yes, the room was indeed elegant, with a heavy-legged mahogany table standing in the center, surrounded by ten fancy chairs. He grimaced. A far cry from his own ma's cobbled-together table with one short leg. The glass-fronted cabinet along one wall, filled with sparkling crystal and stacks of china plates and dishes, spoke of a life style he'd only glimpsed on his two visits to Washington DC.
Kate went on down the hall. "Here's the parlor," she said, sliding a pair of pocket doors open. "Oh, my. Will you look at that chandelier!"
Luke would just as soon not. He was spared the need to reply when the front door flew open and a small woman entered. "Katie? Is that you?"
"Ma!" Katie ran into her open arms. "Oh, Ma! I've missed you so."
Luke stood patiently while the women embraced. He was afraid to move, for fear he'd start running and never stop until he was a long ways from town.
Chapter Two
"Welcome to our family, Luke," Ma said. She hesitated, held out her hand. "And to our home."
"Thank you, Mrs. Lachlan. I'm happy to be here."
Katie could tell he was lying. What on earth was the matter with him? "Well," she said, brightly, "I've been promising Luke a hot bath for two hundred miles. Didn't you tell me you had real bathrooms?"
"Oh, yes, and wait 'til you see them." Ma sounded like a kid with a new toy. She gestured them toward the stairs, and then stopped and gave them both a good looking over. "Land sakes, you both need baths. What have you been doing, sleeping with your horses?" She reached out and plucked a straw from Katie's shoulder.
"We didn't know you'd be bringing home a husband, Katie," Ma said as they climbed to the second floor, "but I put a big bed in your room anyhow. I reckoned it would be a guest room if you decided to go Back East. Knowing how you like the mountains, I gave you one of the north rooms. The other girls are on this floor too, and the boys are upstairs."
The stairs opened into a wide hall running the length of the house. Two doors opened on either side of it, and a fifth at the far end. "That's the bathroom," Ma said, pointing to it. "It's got a pump and a pipe from the kitchen reservoir, so we don't have to carry water."
"What a luxury. Even Ellen doesn't have anything like that. I'll bet if you tell her about it, Charles will want to build her one, though."
Ma laughed. "Oh, he's already planning to, come spring." Opening a door, she motioned them inside. "I didn't do much decorating, not knowing if your taste had changed. I remember how you always wanted a lavender canopy and a purple bedspread."
The room was big enough that the wide canopy bed didn't crowd it. Sheer white curtains hung at the tall windows and a colorful tufted quilt covered the bed. There was no fabric on the canopy frame, but someone had tied a cluster of silk flowers high on one of the posts, with lavender ribbons trailing almost to the floor. "My rug," Katie said, with delight. "You brought my rug!"
She turned to Luke, who was still standing in the doorway. "I made this when I was about ten, I guess. Flower showed me how to build a waist loom, and helped me get started. There's material there from all my old dresses, and some of the boys' shirts." She ran a toe across the now-faded woven rug, seeing that some of the warp threads were almost worn through. "Ma wouldn't let me take it to school."
"And didn't she argue, too," Ma said to Luke. "Come in, please. I hope you'll be comfortable here. I'll have Abel bring up an easy chair when he gets time. That rocker's way too little for you."
"Don't go to any trouble for me," Luke said, as he edged inside. He set his bedroll on the floor next to the door.
Katie wondered what was making him so uncomfortable.
"Pish, as if family's any trouble. Now I'll just go on and let you two get settled. Supper's at five." She left them alone.
"Let's go look at the bathroom," Kate suggested, when Luke just stood there by the door. She caught his hand and pulled him with her down the hall.
"Good heavens! That's almost big enough to swim in," she marveled when they'd opened the door to the big bathroom. The copper tub was enclosed in a mahogany cabinet. On the adjacent wall was a pump with two spigots. The room was warm, heated by a radiator in the brick chimney that extended from floor to ceilin
g.
She looked at him, and wondered again what was bothering him. Shyly she said, "Or for two people to bathe together?"
"You go ahead. I'll bring the rest of our gear up." He turned and walked away.
So mad she stamped her foot, Katie yelled, "Luke Savage! You come right back here!"
He ignored her. Before she could decide to go after him, or just throw something, he was halfway downstairs.
"Honestly," she muttered, as she went back to the bedroom, "you'd think I'd asked him to crawl into an icy creek with me." She looked around again. A plaid wool robe was hanging on a hook behind the door. Soft linen towels were draped on a rack in the corner. And in a soap dish, there was an oval bar, creamy white. She picked it up, sniffed. Lilac. Oh, now I feel at home.
She poked into the cupboard and found another bar of soap, one without a floral odor. Luke would never want to smell of flowers. Would he be willing to bathe with her? They'd been married a month, and had been alone together almost twice that long, but they'd had mighty few opportunities for that sort of romantic play.
"Well, if he wants to pass up the opportunity, he can just go right ahead." She quickly figured out how to bring up the hot water from the kitchen. In a few minutes, a steaming bath was ready for her.
Thankfully Luke didn't encounter anyone on his way to the barn. Nor was Abel anywhere about. He sorted through the saddlebags, pulling out his other shirt and spare longjohns. One of Katie's scarves had made its way in among his clothing. It was filthy and stained, but it still smelled of lilac.
Come to think of it, her ma smelled the same way.
Lately Katie had smelled more strongly of donkey and woodsmoke than anything else. "I should've insisted she come on ahead with her pa. I could have brought the stock along without help." They would have saved the price of the hinny, too. He could have rode one or the other of the asses.
"What's done is done," he told himself. How long, he wondered, would it be before one of Katie's kin started asking why she hadn't found herself a better man, one who could give her the sort of life she deserved?