Page 19 of Come the Spring (Claybornes' Brides (Rose Hill) 5)
Jessica turned her attention to her son. She moved the glass toward him and told him to show Josey how he could manage a glass. She was bragging about his ability when he spilled the milk.
Josey chuckled. âItâs usually my Tom who does that,â she commented. She mopped up the milk with a dishcloth and then held Jessicaâs glass while Caleb took a drink.
Caleb was finally ready to get down and explore the kitchen. Jessica followed him and held the drawers closed so he couldnât empty them.
âSit back down and let him play,â Josey suggested.
âHeâll destroy your kitchen,â she warned. âCalebâs a very curious child.â
Josey opened the doors under the counters. âMy nieces and nephews like to play with my pots and pans. Thatâs the way,â she said when Caleb squatted down and reached for one of the wooden spoons.
Jessica sat down next to Josey once again, and while they got to know one another, Caleb made a fine mess banging on the pots and pans. Within ten minutes he had warmed up to Josey enough to let her pick him up and kiss him.
Cole and Tom came back into the kitchen then, and Cole gave Jessica a quick nod.
âJosey, you and I are going to be keeping this little boy a spell,â Tom announced.
Josey patted the baby and looked at Jessica. âNo wonder you were asking those questions. Iâll be proud to watch him for you,â she added. âAnd Tom and I wonât let anything happen to him.â
âJessicaâs a witness, and sheâs got to go to Texas to testify,â Tom said. âCole doesnât think itâs a good idea to take the baby with them.â
âWhen do you think youâll be back?â Josey asked Cole.
âI donât know,â he answered. âMaybe two weeks ⦠or longer.â
âHe wonât remember me.â
Everyone turned to Jessica.
âOf course heâll remember you,â Josey said. âWe wonât let him forget.â
Tom suggested Jessica and Cole spend the night with them so that the adjustment for Caleb would be easier on him. Jessica let Josey bathe Caleb but hovered over her like a mother hen. Josey did know her way around babies. She filled a basin in the sink and let Caleb splash water everywhere while she lathered him up.
âYouâre very good with him,â Jessica told her.
She followed Josey up the stairs to the guest room. Caleb, wrapped in a thick towel, was peeking at his mother over Joseyâs shoulder.
âHe always sleeps with a rag doll. Itâs in his valise,â Jessica said. âOh, and he hates carrots. Heâll spit them out if you try to force them on him.â
âI wouldnât do that,â Josey said. âI hate carrots too. I know youâre gonna worry, no matter what assurances I give you, but I promise you Iâm gonna love this boy like he was my own. Why donât you go on downstairs for a bit and let Caleb get used to me. Iâll call out if I need help.â
âYes, thatâs a good idea,â Jessica said. It was also a test. Putting Caleb to bed required stamina and patience. Every once in a while, if he was overly tired, Caleb would throw a tantrum. The baby was all wound up now, and that was a sure indication that trouble was coming. Jessica left the valise on the bed and closed the door behind her.
When she came downstairs, she found Cole in the living room standing by the window, looking out. She glared at him before turning her back on him.
âWhat was that all about?â
She began to pace. âThis is all your fault,â she whispered. âCanât you see that this is breaking my heart?â
He started toward her, but she put her hand out to keep him at bay. âI canât leave him. Iâm sorry, but thatâs the way it is. Heâll be lost without me, and heâll be afraid and heâll be miserable and â¦â
As if to mock her, Calebâs peal of laughter echoed down the stairs. Cole shook his head. âHe sure doesnât sound miserable.â
âIâm not going to go through with this. My mindâs made up,â she whispered.
She turned to go back up the stairs, but Cole grabbed hold of her hand and pulled her up against him.
âTom?â he called out. âJessica and I are going for a walk.â
The way he was squeezing her hand told her not to argue. She let him drag her out the back door and into the yard. He didnât stop pulling her along until he reached a cluster of trees that shielded them from the street and gave them privacy.
âNow you listen to meââ he began.
She cut him off. âDonât you dare take that tone of voice with me. I will not leave my baby with strangers. Iâm sorry, Cole, but thatâs the way itâs going to be.â
She tried to jerk her hand away, but he tightened his hold and pulled her close until she was pressed against his chest. His face was inches away from hers. He was going to give her a hard lecture because she was being so stubborn, but then he saw her tears and relented. Now wasnât the time to lecture.
âI know how hard this isâ¦â
âNo, you donât know. You arenât a mother.â
âNo, Iâm not,â he agreed. âYouâre going to have to be sensible. I know Tom Norton, and Iâm telling you heâs trustworthy. When Luke MacFarland and his wife were killed, Tom and Josey wanted to raise their children.â
âWhy didnât they?â
âLukeâs relatives wouldnât let them. They farmed the children out among them.â
âThey separated brothers?â she whispered.
âYes, but Tom tried to keep them all together. Iâm telling you heâs a good man. So is his wife. Josey took care of me when I got sick. I was a stranger to her, but she still nursed me back to health. The Nortons arenât going to let anything bad happen to your baby. Theyâll love him, Jessie, and we canât take Caleb with us. You know that, donât you?â
âIâm not going to go to Texas.â
âMust you be so stubborn about this? Itâs out of your hands. You have to go, and Caleb has to stay.â
âI hate this,â she cried out.
He wrapped his arms around her and held her tight. âI know you do.â
âIâm beginning to hate you too, Cole Clayborne. This is all your fault.â
âAll right. Itâs all my fault,â he whispered. His chin dropped down on top of her head, and he continued to hold her and stroke her back for several minutes until she had calmed down. He couldnât help but notice how good she felt in his arms.
She couldnât stop thinking about the danger Caleb had been in when that monster had killed her guard. Her son could have been killed too.
The Nortons would keep him safe. In her heart she knew that to be true. She suddenly pulled away from Cole. âNone of this is your fault. Youâre only doing your job. Youâre right too. Caleb should stay out of harmâs way.â
She straightened her shoulders, turned around, and walked back inside.
Josey was waiting at the kitchen table. She wanted to tell Jessica that Caleb had gone right to sleep, but when she saw the heartache on the poor motherâs face, she got up and went to her. âIâm going to take good care of your boy. I promise you, Jessica. Tom and I will treat him like he was our own son.â
âI want to thank you for agreeing to watch him, and I know I donât have the right to askâ¦â
âYou can ask anything you want to ask. If I can do it, I will.â
âIf I donât come backâ¦â
âDonât talk like that,â Josey interrupted.
âYouâre coming back,â Cole said from behind. Jessica ignored both protests. âIf I donât come back, Josey, will you raise my son?â
Josey looked over Jessicaâs head at Cole. He gave a quick nod. âYes, Tom and I will raise him. Youâve got my word.â
âThank you,â Jessica said, her voice flat. âI would also like you to change his name legally so that he wonât feel like an outsider. I want him to belong to a family.â
âJessica, for Godâs sake, stop talking like that. Nothingâs going to happen to you.â
âI have to make arrangements just in case. I o
we it to Caleb.â
Josey understood. âWeâll make it legal,â she promised. âI give you my word.â
Jessica grabbed hold of her hand. âOne last promise, Josey, and Iâll be able to go. Please, donât ever leave him.â
Twenty-Six
Daniel was torn between responsibilities. His primary obligation was to escort Grace to Texas, and he was doing exactly that, but he also wanted to head over to the small town of Clarkston, where the latest robbery had occurred, to look for evidence that might help him in his investigation.
He couldnât send Cooper to the bank in his place, as he was with Rebecca, making certain she got to Texas alive and unharmed. The two of them had left for the depot an hour ago, but not before Cooper had dispatched his two young and inexperienced deputies to Clarkston to help the sheriff there. Rebecca had insisted on sending a telegram to the hotel in Salt Lake City to cancel the reservation sheâd made the day before and to alert her friends that her plans had been changed, and as soon as she came out of the telegraph office, she was put in a coach with Cooper and sent on her way.
Cooper had suggested that he and Rebecca wait until Grace could travel so that he could take both women with him and Daniel could go to Clarkston, but Daniel refused. Each of the women believed herself to be the only one claiming to have witnessed the robbery, and he was determined to keep all three of them separated on the trip to Red Arrow because he didnât want them making any more joint plans. Although he personally believed that Rebecca was the real witnessâshe had given descriptions and details to prove she had been thereâhe would let the judge in Blackwater decide for himself which one of the three was telling the truth.
He hadnât seen Cole before he left town with Jessica and Caleb. They had taken off an hour or so after the gunman had tried to kill her. Daniel still didnât know the name of the dead man, but he was certain he was one of the Blackwater gang. Past reports told him that there were seven men in the gang. One was in jail in Blackwater, another was dead now, thanks to Coleâs expertise, and five were still out there somewhere ⦠waiting for an opportunity, Daniel believed, to silence all three women.
There was also another reason he didnât want Cooper to take Grace with him, but one Daniel would never admit. While he trusted Cooper to do his job, he didnât want to let Grace out of his sight. In his mind, no one could protect her as diligently as he could. There was also the fact that he was drawn to her, and it was his hope that by the time they reached the stopping point in Red Arrow, he would have gotten over his bizarre and unexplainable infatuation.
Daniel stayed in Rockford Falls that night and slept in a chair outside of Graceâs door. He went downstairs early the next morning, but didnât plan to leave the town until late that afternoon when the coach arrived.
Grace had other ideas. Daniel had just returned from the bathhouse, where heâd washed and changed into clean clothes, and was standing on the veranda talking to Dr. Lawrence when Grace came down the stairs. Dressed in a pale pink skirt and matching blouse, she carried her white gloves and hat in her hands, and went directly to the managerâs desk to inform him that she was leaving. Sloan trailed behind her, carrying her valise.
Daniel didnât like the crowd in the lobby. Folks were checking out of the hotel, and it was chaotic. He quickly went to Graceâs side and ordered her back upstairs.
âYou can rest until this afternoon when the coach arrives.â
âI donât wish to rest any longer. I feel fine,â she insisted. âHave you changed your mind about taking me to Texas?â
âNo.â
âI didnât think so, but I was compelled to ask. We need to talk, Daniel.â
âUpstairs.â
âNo, not upstairs. Now, right this minute, then I expect youâll take me off to jail.â
âIâm taking you to Texas,â he whispered as he half dragged her into a corner.
âSheriff Sloan just told me theyâre holding a man in Blackwater and they think heâs one of the gang. Is that true?â
âYes.â
âThen why didnât you tell me?â she demanded. âI never would haveâ¦â
âYou never would have what?â
âI lied to you,â she cried out. âIâm not your witness. I only said that I was to protect Rebecca and Jessica. It was wrong and Iâm sorry. Please donât be angry with me. Will I have to stay in jail long?â
âYou arenât going to jail,â he muttered.
âBut I lied to an officer of the law.â
âThe three of you have done nothing but lie,â he said. âI honestly donât know who to believe.â
âIâm telling you the truth now. I wasnât there.â
âAt this point I donât care if you were there or not. The judge has ordered all three of you to Blackwater, and thatâs where weâre going as soon as the coach arrives.â
âWhy are the others going?â
âI just explained that Judge Rafferty wants all of you there.â
âWill he put me in jail for lying?â
The thought of her behind bars was so outrageous, he lost some of his anger.
âYouâve got bigger things to worry about than jail. Come on. Youâre going back upstairs to wait in your room until the coach gets here.â
She shook her head. âIf I must goâ¦â
âYou must.â
âI donât want to wait for a coach. Canât we go by horseback? The sheriff told me it would be quicker because we could take some cut throughs.â
He smiled. âShortcuts,â he corrected.
A stout, elderly woman was pushing her way through the crowd toward Grace. Daniel noticed her out of the corner of his eye and moved to put himself in front of Grace.
âI beg your pardon,â the woman said. âPlease get out of my way. I wish to speak to Lady Winthrop.â
Grace gave Daniel a little nudge and stepped forward. âGood morning,â she said.
The woman made an attempt at a curtsy. âItâs an honor to meet you,â she said. âMy name is Winifred Larson,â she added with a blush. âAnd I couldnât help but notice your lovely hat. Could you tell me where you purchased it? I would like to get one just like it. Would you mind if I looked at it more closely?â
Grace smiled and handed the hat to Winifred. The straw brim was covered in lace and flowers, and there were two purple plumes feathering up and out on one side.
âItâs exquisite,â Winifred declared. âI must have one just like it. I have a purple dress, you see, and it would be lovely with it.â
A tall, thin man with a receding hairline came over to join them. She quickly introduced him. âThis is my husband, Lionel,â she said. In a loud whisper she told her husband to bow to Lady Winthrop.
âThat isnât necessary,â Grace said.
âDo you mind telling me where you purchased this divine creation?â Winifred asked again.
Grace explained. âI purchased the basic straw hat, but I decorated it.â
âThen thereâs not another one in all the world like it?â
âI know where this is headed,â her husband interjected with a chuckle.
Grace didnât understand. âExcuse me?â
âWhen Winifred gets a notion she wants somethingâ¦â
âMay I buy it from you?â Winifred blurted out. âTo own a Lady Winthrop creation would be so thrilling for me. I simply must have it. How much will you take for it? Will five dollars do?â
Grace was incredulous. She glanced at Daniel to see how he was reacting and smiled because he looked genuinely puzzled.
âActually, Mrs. Larson, I hadnât considered sellingâ¦â
âIf itâs an original, Mother,â Lionel whispered loudly, âyouâve got to offer more.â
âYes, yes, youâre right. Ten dollars then. Will that do?â
Daniel decided it was time for him to interfere. Graceâs face was turning pink, and he figured she was embarrassed.
âI donât think the lady wantsââ
??
?Sold,â Grace blurted out. âFor ten dollars.â Lionel quickly paid her. She tucked the money into her pocket, told Winifred she hoped she enjoyed the hat, and then bid them good-bye.
âShouldnât we go to the stables now?â she asked Daniel.
From the glint in her eyes, Daniel knew she was determined to get her way. âYouâre in no condition to ride a horse. You should sit inside a coach and try to rest.â
âI donât need to rest.â
He still felt compelled to argue with her for several more minutes before giving in. In the back of his mind, he kept thinking that if they took the shortcuts and didnât follow the winding roads, they could possibly reach the train station in time to board the late afternoon train. If they didnât make it in time, the next train wouldnât come through until the following morning.
He stood there, hesitating, as he studied her. Her hair was down around the sides of her face, and he gently lifted a silky strand away to look at the bruise near her temple. It didnât look as bad as it had last night.
His fingers trailed down the side of her face. âAre you sure, Grace?â
She gently removed his hand. âIâm sure.â
He was staring intently at her, and she thought he might be looking for a sign of weakness from her. She straightened her shoulders, smiled, and suggested once again that they get going.
âIs there time for me to stop by the wagon? I must get another hat,â she explained. âA lady should never appear in public without her head covered. It just isnât done.â
âThen why did you sell the one you had?â
âDaniel, it was ten whole dollars.â
He grinned. âIt took you by surprise, didnât it?â
âNot really,â she admitted. âItâs the third hat Iâve sold since I arrived, and I didnât even try,â she added. âThe poor ladies here donât have the shops we have in London. They must order through the catalog, but quite often what they think theyâre buying and what they get are two different things. It can be very disappointing.â
âIâm sure it can be,â he said dryly.
She laughed. âHats are important to ladies, but not to men. Isnât that right?â