Twenty
Stevie sat silently by the fire.
She didn’t really know why she had reacted so negatively when Heath gave Black Coyote the rifle. Fact is, if the men who had stolen the Indians’ horses were standing in front of her, or the men tracking them were within sight, she would shoot them herself. So why did it bother her that Heath provided Black Coyote the means to do so?
She sighed heavily. As always, she found her feelings regarding her mother’s people confusing.
Heath joined her on the blanket. “Well?”
“Well what?”
“Are you going to tell me what that was all about?”
She turned away from him, resting her chin on her updrawn knees. “What was what all about?”
Grasping her shoulders, he turned her toward him. “You know what I’m talking about. The way you behaved around Black Coyote and his friends. If I’ve ever seen an ambivalent attitude . . .” he trailed off.
She jerked out of his grasp. “I can’t dispute that since I don’t know what ambivalent means. Remember, I’m just a dumb Indian.”
Purposefully, he responded to her in Comanche. “That last remark was beneath you.”
She shrugged as if she wasn’t particularly interested in his opinion. “Why didn’t you tell me you could speak Comanche?”
“’Cause you didn’t ask. Now, are you going to answer my original question?”
“I forgot what it was.”
“Somehow I don’t think you forget much of anything,” he scoffed. “What I want to know is why you acted as if you were ashamed of your cousin. And seemed to love him at the same time.”
“I’m not ashamed of Black Coyote.” She appeared truly horrified at the notion. Being ashamed of the violent acts committed by Comanches was one thing. Being ashamed of her family was quite another. It occurred to Stevie that the line separating the two was uncomfortably thin. “I do love him. He’s one of the few men in this world who has been good to me.”
“So what was wrong with you?” he asked quietly. “You were as tight as a bow string. It was almost as if there were two of you, one who wanted to welcome Black Coyote and one who wanted to run from him.”
Self-disgust made her queasy. It was bad enough to wrestle with her own conflicting emotions, quite another to hear them verbalized. Feelings of inferiority, of not belonging, of loneliness, isolation, they were all part of being from two different worlds. Who wouldn’t be—what did he call it—ambivalent?
“I’m not ashamed of him, or any of them,” she said finally, gazing at him in the dim firelight. “Actually, I haven’t seen them since I was little.” Silver beams of moonlight glinted off her stygian-dark eyes. “But I love my mother’s people. What’s left of them.” At that, her voice broke. “What they represent . . . the things they’re forced to do . . .” She trailed off, realizing how vague she sounded. “It’s hard to explain.”
His heart was strangely warmed at the anguish in her eyes. He touched her cheek lightly. “I’ve been told I’m a good listener.”
She was surprised to realize how much she wanted to open up to someone, needed to share her burden. “I’m half Indian.”
“And?”
“And it’s hard not having a people to belong to.” She gestured vaguely, searching her mind and heart for the words to explain. “When you’re half white and half Indian, you’re not a whole anything. You don’t belong to white society, if for no other reason than you’re not welcome. And I can’t really blame them.” This last was muttered to herself. “And you’re not really an Indian. Not if you can’t condone the things they do. And no matter how much they love you, they can’t understand why you disapprove of their . . . their hunger for revenge.”
“You don’t approve of the Comanche protecting their ancestral lands?”
“It’s what they do to protect it that I can’t bear.”
“They do what they have to.”
“You just don’t know what they’re capable of.” She shivered involuntarily, looking over Heath’s shoulder in the distance, as if she were thinking back in time. “When I was four years old I overheard Sully telling Pa about an Indian raid. The things my people”—her voice softened—“did to those settlers were inhuman.” A wealth of pain could be found in the depths of her eyes. She lowered her lids.
Heath wrapped his arms around her. He caressed her shoulders gently. Such small, fragile shoulders to carry such an enormous burden of guilt. Misplaced guilt, granted, but guilt nonetheless.
The Comanches were being systematically destroyed, their way of life annihilated, their culture decimated. And why? Greed, prejudice, and hatred. Stevie and thousands more like her would be innocent casualties.
He wished he knew how to help them, how to help the woman he held in his arms. But he was ill equipped to deal with her problems; their lives had been so different. He, who had known nothing but a life of wealth and acceptance, could do little more than comfort her.
True, during the war, during his incarceration at Libby Prison, he had been mistreated and despised for being a Yankee. But that wasn’t the same as enduring a lifetime of racial prejudice.
Taking her hand, he rubbed her dusky palm and listened to the fire crackling and the steady rhythm of her breathing. “Your skin’s so soft,” he marveled.
“And dark.”
Her bitterness disturbed him. “It’s beautiful. You shouldn’t be ashamed of it.”
“I shouldn’t?” She jerked her hand back, suddenly angry. “I suppose I should be glad that I’m half Comanche. Never mind that because of my Indian ancestry I will never have a life like other girls. I’ll never have babies of my own.” She blinked back tears. “I’ll never have a husband of my own or a home. I’m twenty years old and this is as good as my life’s gonna be.”
Heath was taken aback. “Of course you’ll marry.”
“Oh, really?” she scoffed. “Who? A white man? Sure! When we left town, I saw them lining up around the block. Hoping I would consent to bear their children.”
Heath knew she was striking out at him because she hurt. “Not all white men are prejudiced. You sell them . . . and yourself short.”
Her laughter was not a pleasant thing. “But you assume I want to marry a white man. I don’t. Wouldn’t have one on a silver platter. Nor an Indian. I would die first before I would marry an Indian and bring more Indian children into this world. More children to be spat upon and ridiculed for their ancestry.” Tears streamed down her cheeks. She was unaware of this sign of weakness, so distraught was she. “I couldn’t bear seeing my children treated like that,” she finished in a whisper, dropping her forehead to her knees. “I just pray I can shield Winter from the worst of it.”
Heath suspected that she was telling him things she had never told another living soul. Some, he imagined, she had never fully admitted to herself.
He didn’t know quite how to respond. All he could think to do was pull her into his arms. She struggled at first, turning her back on him again. He pulled her against his chest and buried his face in her hair. “Shhh. Just be still and let me hold you.” His voice was husky, gentle, filled with something that sounded awfully like affection.
She was silent long enough to rein in her emotions. That’s when she noticed that he was caressing her jaw, his thumb coming closer to her bottom lip with each stroke. Her heart accelerated. She wanted him with an intensity that frightened her. And she could tell that he wanted her.
“I won’t lie with you,” she blurted out defensively. “If you want an Indian whore, you’ll have to go to one of the saloons.”
Heath stiffened, angered that she would cheapen what was passing between them. It was not just lust they were feeling for each other, but genuine affection. Surely she could sense the difference. She was just too damn stubborn to acknowledge it. He released her abruptly. “You overlook one very important fact, Miss Johns. I have not asked you to lie with me.”
She spun around, gazing up at him. Her eyes sparkled with indignation. “What’s wrong with me? Am I not good enough for you?”
Her change of heart was so abrupt, the look of righteous indignation so misplaced, all Heath could do was laugh. That was definitely the wrong thing to do.
“Don’t you laugh at me, you green-horned, yellow-bellied, sap-sucking, toad-brained cardsharp!” She swung her fist and connected with his wounded shoulder.
He groaned, grasping his wound. Crimson oozed between his fingers as he fell back onto the blankets in agony.
She leaned over him. “I’m sorry, Lucky. I didn’t mean to hurt you.”
She looked so worried, so adorable that Heath reckoned the pain shooting down his arm was worth it. He chuckled wryly. “You’re a crazy woman, you know that?”
“Here, let me check it.” She unbuttoned his shirt.
He winced when she brushed against his throbbing flesh. “Dammit, be careful.”
“There’s no call for you to curse at me, Lucky Diamond.” He scoffed, this from the foul-mouthed angel of Mustang Mesa.
“Be still. I can’t get to it with you floppin’ around like a fish out of water.”
“Owww. You’re nursing skills are going to be the death of me yet.”
“You’re such a baby.” She shook her head, but her examination was quick and rather gentle. She soaked the area of the dressing that had dried to his torn skin and eased the bandage back. His wound didn’t look as bad as she expected. She wiped the oozing blood away, then applied light pressure until the bleeding stopped.
She sat on her knees at his side and peered down into his face. “It looks okay. But if you have to move, move slowly.”
He covered her hands where they rested on the open buttons of his shirt. “I will if you don’t hit me anymore.”
“Well, don’t laugh at me and I won’t hit you.” She fingered his top shirt button, careful to avoid eye contact.
He rubbed the back of her hand gently. “Deal.”
The air around them crackled with sensual heat. With trembling hands she rebandaged his wound. The task complete, she started to rise.
He stilled her with a hand to her wrist. She kept her eyes riveted on the fire. “Sugar, look at me.” She obeyed. “Despite what I said earlier, I can’t think of anything I’d rather do than lie with you.”
Her cheeks flamed, her heart accelerated, her mouth grew dry, while her innermost recesses grew moist. In spite of it all, her voice was fairly steady when she tossed her head and quipped, “If that’s an offer to share your bedroll, no thank you very kindly. As shot up as you are, you’d probably just bleed all over me. Then blame me for hurting you afterward.”
He smiled crookedly. “Care to give it a test?”
Her legs a bit wobbly, she moved to the other side of the fire, lay on her pallet, and wrapped herself in the blanket. “Good night, Lucky.” As an afterthought she said, “Button your shirt against the evening chill.”
“Yes, ma’am.” He did as he was bid, still smiling. They lay in companionable silence, inordinately aware of the other’s breathing.
“Sugar . . .”
“Hmmm?”
“If you change your mind, about . . . you know . . . I’m right here.”
She threw a small pebble in his general direction and missed. “Don’t hold your breath.”
His deep chuckle raised the hair on her arms. She shivered delightfully. Turning over onto her back, she snuggled deeper beneath the blanket.
All of her senses were heightened. The stars overhead shone bright in a black velvet sky. The night sounds seemed unusually loud in the stillness. She was incredibly aware of the man cloaked in golden starlight. It was as if they were the only two people in the world. And she couldn’t remember experiencing such a sense of peacefulness.
Ever.