ice-bath of torpid bad mancy. He collided with the scarecrow, and the thin man threw out an arm. The blow tossed Jack Gabriel aside, against the cave wall, and he slid down with red pain tearing a hole in his side.
But the thought cut off, midstream, and a black curtain descended.
“I think he’s waking up.” Hushed, a woman’s voice. Very soft, its cultured tones a brush of velvet against his skin.
Jack blinked, or tried to. There was something crusted in his eyes. A damp, cold, clammy touch brushed against the crust, but not hard enough. You had to scrub to get dried blood out of crevices.
“Just keep him over there.” Harsh, a man’s voice, but oddly familiar. “I can smell it on him.”
“Ah, yes. You were saying?” Another tentative brush. She was touching him, and his head was pillowed on something soft but damp. There was a living warmth underneath it, and he tried to clear his eyelids of the crust. Sound of running water, thunder rattling above a roof of stone and earth. Hard ground under his hip, he was half on his side, and his hands were flung out, empty.
“He buried me in consecrated ground, Cat. So…here I am.”
“The consecration kept you whole. So you’re…dead. And…not dead.”
“Well, yes. You keep
“Pardon me for having a tiny amount of trouble with the idea, Robbie. It is rather unholy.”
“Mother would just…” A heavy sigh. “But she has, hasn’t she. I’m sorry, Sis.”
Catherine shifted slightly. “Well, what are we to
“I don’t know. I didn’t think much beyond keeping
Tension invading her. “I am
Jack tried blinking again. It was no use; his eyes were crusted shut, and if he could get hold of whatever rag she was using, he could scrub the crust free. But that would tell her that he
And listening.
“I swear, I will carry you into town and throw you on the stagecoach myself. You should go back to Boston.”
“
A shuffling sound, and a sigh. “Have I told you lately how deadly annoying your stubbornness is? It’s unladylike, Kittycat.”
“I would curse you, darling brother, but I suspect you have heard worse. And he
He cleared his throat, harshly, felt new tension invade the chill air. “It’s
“Yes sir, Sheriff sir.” The same edge of mockery, the same irritating
Yes. It was most
Her stiffness now was
The prickly tone cheered him immensely. At least she was well enough to bristle at him. “You’re the one who asked me to get rid of a corpse, sweetheart.” He found his arms would work, and his hands were clumsy but obedient. Scrubbing at his eyes rid them of crusted blood, and he blinked furiously several times before his vision cleared and he was treated to the sight of a pale, fever-cheeked Catherine Barrowe, her hat knocked most definitely askew and her curls all a-tumble, hovering above him. Her dark eyes glowed, the sleeve of her jacket was torn, and she was so beautiful it made his heart threaten to stop.
“He seems quite familiar with you, Kittycat.” The boy sounded like he was enjoying himself immensely, for a dead man. “I don’t know about his family, though.”
“Robbie, if you do not cease irritating me, I shall
Unfortunately, his guns were missing. One of them was in Robert Browne’s skeletal white hands. The boy was so thin his bones were working out through his dead-white flesh, but he was remarkably steady as he pointed the six-shooter steadily in Gabe’s direction.
“Move away from him, Sis.” Robert Barrowe grinned, his lips skinned back from very white, pearl-glowing teeth. His canines were longer than they had been, and wickedly pointed. “I think it’s safest.”
Catherine, her riding habit sadly torn and her curls damp with rain, still on her knees on the sandy floor, gazed steadily at her brother. “There’s no need for that. If he promises to—”
“You’d
“He?
“Yes.” Catherine tilted her head. Two curls fell across her wan little face, and he saw how thin and tired she was. She winced as she moved, as if her ribs were paining her as well. “I was waiting to hear
Robbie Browne’s laugh was a marvel of bitterness. “Can’t you
The schoolmarm rose slowly, brushing off her skirts. “Then,” she said briskly, as the thunder receded, “we shall have to find a priest. Come now, Robbie, don’t be a dolt.”
And she stepped toward her brother, whose finger tightened on the trigger.
Chapter 28
Cat was never quite sure afterward what happened. There was a flash, golden instead of blue-white like lightning, and a roar of rage. She fell,