* * *
“Mister, wake up.”
Seth squinted against the blare of light assaulting his eyes. Awareness of his surroundings came slowly, reluctantly. First, pain. Then thirst. Then the persistent questions of the man kneeling at his side.
How long had he been lying on the ground? Asleep? Unconscious? Either way, he’d wasted precious time. He tried to sit up but the world spun and he decided against the idea. “Who are you?” he managed to croak.
“Eddie Gardiner. Who are you?”
Gardiner? The name seemed familiar but Seth couldn’t place it. “Water,” he croaked.
The man held a canteen to Seth’s lips and he drank greedily before he gave his name. “Seth Collins.”
“Let’s get you on your horse. I’ll take you where you can get help for that leg.”
Seth wanted to argue. Needed to. He had to get to his pa. But his leg hurt like twelve kinds of torture. A little tending wouldn’t go amiss so he let Eddie Gardiner push him onto his horse and lead him away.
He clung to the saddle, which took far more effort than he would normally exert. He managed to tell Eddie about someone shooting him. “Didn’t see them.”
They approached a ranch. A pretty place with a big house on a hill overlooking the outbuildings. Among the structures below the house were a couple of two-story buildings, a cluster of red shacks all alike, a log cabin and a barn. All laid out nice and neat. A bridge spanned a river on one side, leading to more pens and small buildings beyond.
They approached the big house. “This is where I live,” Eddie said. “You’ll get help here.”
Seth managed to swing himself off his horse but didn’t protest when Eddie grabbed his arm and steadied him.
A young woman opened the door.
Seth’s vision was clouded with pain but he was alive enough to note the brown eyes that seemed to smile even when her mouth didn’t, a thick braid of rich brown hair coiled at the back of her head and a flawless complexion. Peaches and cream, his ma used to say.
“This man is injured. He needs our help.”
Someone shoved a chair under him and he sat. Several women clustered around him.
Eddie answered their questions. “His name is Seth Collins. He’s been shot. I found him a few miles to the south.” He gave a wave in that direction. “He didn’t see who did it.”
One of the women addressed Seth. “You’re welcome here. My name is Mrs. Gardiner. This is my sister-in-law, Jayne Gardiner.” She indicated the young woman who had answered the door. Again, the Gardiner name seemed familiar but his brain couldn’t find any more information.
“These are her friends, Mercy Newell and Sybil Bannerman.”
He noted Mercy had reddish-brown hair and brown eyes. Sybil was a pretty thing with blue eyes and blond curls. He hadn’t seen any white women in days and now he was surrounded by them. And him in such a sorry state.
“I wish the circumstances of your visit were different,” Mrs. Gardiner said.
The other three women had been whispering together and now Miss Jayne Gardiner cleared her throat. “I think I might have been the one who shot you.”
Seth stared at this sweet, young thing. His mind couldn’t make sense of her confession. “Why would you shoot me?” How would she know about the money he carried? He pushed aside the remnants of his fatigue. Refused to acknowledge it was pain that clouded his mind. Had someone at the ranch heard he’d collected his wages and ridden south? Were they all in this together?
“It was an accident. I wanted—” she swallowed hard “—I wanted to learn how to shoot a gun so I could protect myself and the ones I care about.”
Eddie jammed his fists on his hips. “I warned you about messing around with guns. I told you to leave them alone. Now do you see why?” He glowered at his sister.
Jayne tipped her chin up and faced her brother. “I must learn how to defend myself. I refuse to be a helpless female.”
Eddie sputtered but before he could get out a word, his wife intervened. “Let’s get this man upstairs so I can look at his wound.”
Jayne brought her attention back to Seth. “It’s my fault. I’ll take care of him.”
Mrs. Gardiner made a protesting sound that ended abruptly. “That would be fine.”
Eddie helped Seth regain his feet and steered him up the stairs that swept to the second story. At the top, he turned them right and into the first bedroom. Seth settled himself on the edge of the bed.
For the first time he gave his leg a good, hard study. It throbbed clear to the top of his head. His trousers were blood-and dirt-caked. He didn’t anticipate the skin beneath looked any prettier.
Mrs. Gardiner and Jayne had followed into the room.
“Eddie, he’ll need to remove those trousers so we can get at the wound,” Mrs. Gardiner said.
“Not my pants.” Seth’s protest sounded weak and he clamped his teeth together. Weakness was not something he cared to reveal.
“We’ll wait outside until you’re decent,” Mrs. Gardiner said as the ladies left the room. He heard them murmur in the hallway, Mrs. Gardiner asking Miss Jayne about the shooting.
Eddie knelt at Seth’s feet. “I’ll help you with your boots and pants.” He tugged at a boot.
Seth would have protested but had to bite back a groan. Cold sweat beaded his forehead.
“Can’t you simply roll up my pant leg?” Seth asked through his clenched teeth.
“Seems to me you’d welcome a clean outfit. Do you have another pair in your saddlebags?”
He grunted in the affirmative.
“I’ll get them later. First, let’s get you cleaned up.” Eddie helped remove the second boot and the soiled trousers then eased Seth to the bed and covered him with a sheet, but not before Seth saw the dirty, bloody wound.
“I’ll send the ladies in to tend that.” Eddie piled Seth’s boots and pants beside the door. Good. So long as the boots were where he could see them.
Jayne and Mrs. Gardiner again entered the room, Jayne carrying a basin of water.
He closed his eyes knowing he must endure having the wound cleansed. Ironic that it was at the hands of the same woman who had inflicted it.
Mrs. Gardiner eased back the sheet to expose his leg. “This doesn’t look good.”
Seth nodded. “I saw it.”
“It’s very dirty.” She shifted her gaze to Jayne. “When did you shoot him?”
She swallowed hard. “It was yesterday.”
Yesterday? He hadn’t realized he’d slept through the night. The urgency of his task struck him. He could not afford this delay. He half sat then fell back. Wouldn’t hurt none to have the wound cleaned up before he moved on.
Jayne pressed to Mrs. Gardiner’s side. She gasped as she saw the wound. She looked at Seth, her eyes wide as she met his gaze. Whether he saw distress, regret or something else entirely, he couldn’t hazard a guess.
“It was unintentional.” She sounded so defensive that in spite of his pain and the awkwardness of being flat on his back with two women in the room, he grinned.
“Seems you should have tended it a little sooner,” Mrs. Gardiner offered.
“Got someplace to be.” Again urgency gripped his innards. The last letter from the caregiver, that one Seth picked up a few days ago at the ranch headquarters, had been dated three weeks ago and gave little information to ease Seth’s concern about Pa’s well-being. Expecting you soon with necessary wages. Job here done.
How could a man give so little assurance in his few words? Seth needed to get to Pa before Crawford left. Might be he was already gone. He’d signed up for three months and no more. If he wasn’t there, who would be looking after Pa? The uncertainty burned the inside of Seth’s stomach.
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