Chapter One
December 1887
Kasota
Springs,
TexasSam Thompson stood in the blackened corner of the alley
silently watching the mercantile across the street. Wind
blew against his back as if trying to force him to move
from
the shadows. He needed to be heading home, but the woman
inside the store kept him rooted in place.
She moved now and then past the windows, sometimes
looking
out as though hoping to see someone coming to shop. Her
slender form drew him now just as her green eyes had the
first day they met.
Sam shoved his hands farther into the pockets of his worn
coat and prayed no one walked through her doors tonight.
Margaret Allison had no idea of the danger she was in,
and
he had the feeling if he walked across the street to tell
her, she wouldn't believe him.
He was a Thompson, and in this town that usually meant he
was one step above the wolves who came down from the
north
on cold nights like this to hunt. Thompsons lived out
along
the southern breaks near the Palo Duro Canyon, not here
in
town among the civilized folks. Thompsons kept to
themselves
and minded their own business.
If Sam walked into the mercantile, Maggie Allison would
be
more likely to think he'd come to rob her than help her.
He
didn't much care about whether she lost money or not.
Everyone knew that her parents always had money. After
all,
they sent her to a big school back East to grow up. They
must have left it all to their only daughter. She could
weather a robbery, but he didn't like to think about what
the drunken gang of outlaws, now building courage by the
mug, would do to her when they found her alone.
She had no one to protect her, but Sam was a man who
didn't
have the time to be her hero. If she'd just lock the door
and go up to bed, he could get home before it started
snowing. He stomped his feet to keep them from freezing
and
tried to talk himself into leaving. Maggie Allison hadn't
said more than a few words to him in twenty years. He
didn't
even think she remembered meeting him when they'd been
six.
It wasn't his job to worry about her. The town had a
sheriff
and plenty of upstanding men. She didn't need him. So why
didn't he get on home to his responsibilities and leave
her
to her fate?
The memory of Maggie in pigtails crossed his mind. Even
at
six she'd been prim and proper in her starched dresses
covered with a white apron, her red hair always in place,
her manners perfect, her green eyes wide open as if she
was
afraid she'd miss one moment of life if she wasn't alert.
"I'll never tell you a lie, Sam Thompson," she'd said the
day they'd met. "And I promise never to be mean to you,
if
you promise never to be mean to me."
He'd been six, but he swore she'd won his heart that
first
day of school.
When the teacher told her to sit next to him, she didn't
hesitate. However, she did spend the morning telling him
he
smelled bad and his fingernails were dirty and he needed
new
shoes and she didn't like the color orange.
Sam smiled remembering how she'd split her sandwich in
half
and shared with him that first day. Maggie Allison was
different from anyone he'd ever met, and she fascinated
him.
She did everything right, learned everything first, said
exactly what the teacher expected her to say. The only
thing
he had in common with the proper little red-haired girl
was
that no one liked her either. She didn't seem to mind.
She
read or stayed in with the teacher while other kids
played,
but Sam tried to join in and he'd been given more than
one
black eye to show for it.
It had taken him three years of walking four miles to
school
to figure out what his grandfather had told him all
along:
he didn't belong in town. Only, unlike his relatives, Sam
had learned to read, and he'd impressed the teacher
enough
that she always packaged a few books for him and left
them
by the schoolhouse door. He'd walk to town on the first
of
every month and drop off the last books before he picked
up
the next set. Then, in the midnight hours, he'd sit by
the
fire and read. Over the years he sometimes thought of
Maggie
sitting beside him that first year encouraging him as she
pointed out the words with her thin little finger.
In the shadow's cold, Sam saw her step near the window
once
more. Proper as ever, with her hair now pulled back in a
knot behind her head. Her parents had sent her away to
school after that first year. Folks said it was because
she
was too bright to stay here. Most said she'd probably
never
come back to a small town in the middle of nowhere, but
she
had. She came back to bury her parents last year, and to
Sam's surprise, she took over the mercantile.
He studied her now, knowing he needed to go home, but not
being able to stomach the thought of her being hurt or
killed. The drunks he'd overheard talked of what they'd
do
to her, how they'd make her scream even after they'd
taken
all her valuables. They'd joked about how she was
probably a
virgin, and virgins don't tell what happens, so they
could
probably use her the next time they passed through town.
Sam forgot about the cold. He'd wait until she locked the
door.