he one of
the customers from Danny J's? Had he followed her last
night?
All of a sudden the blanket was snatched from her face.
She caught the edges before they fell below her chin and
exposed her lack of clothing.
"Randilynn, how dare you!" Belinda screeched, reaching
for another handful of the covers.
Mid-air, the man caught Belinda's hand, kept it from
yanking the blanket away. His eyes narrowed as he gave her
step-mother a menacing stare while his other hand tugged
the wool from Belinda's fingers.
Startled, Belinda took a step back and twisted her neck
about. "Thurston!"
The man resettled the covers below Randi's chin, and his
arm, still looped around her shoulders, tightened a touch. The
friendly gesture made her want to fold into his shelter. Randi
26
Boot Hill Bride
by Lauri Robinson
fought the urge and glanced to her father. His angry frown
made tears well in her eyes. She hung her head, wished again
she could just disappear.
"Thurston, this is terrible. Absolutely the worst thing
possible," Belinda said. "It's all your fault."
"My fault?" Aunt Corrine questioned with disbelief.
Randi glanced up to see the two women furiously flaying
their index fingers at each other.
"I'd say it's all your fault. You're the reason she has no
home." Corrine took a step closer, poked Belinda in the chest
with her finger.
Belinda thrust her finger below Corrine's nose. "We've
given her everything! Everything!" Belinda screeched, as she
twisted her long neck. "Thurston!"
Corrine didn't miss a beat. She turned her gaze and finger
to her father. "And you! You know what I think of you. You
slimy—"
Her father's voice mingled with Corrine's and Belinda's and
soon shouts filled the tent. The man's hold on her shoulder
tightened. No longer able to control her urge, and as if it was
the most natural thing in the world, she turned and buried her
face in his shoulder. His cool flesh felt heavenly to her
burning skin.
The yelling increased, and she quit listening, stopped
trying to decipher who said what to whom, until, above the
rest, a deep rumbling voice growled, "Get out! All of you get
the hell out of here."
An invisible board jutted up her spine, made her head snap
up when she realized it had been the man who shouted.
27
Boot Hill Bride
by Lauri Robinson
The tent went silent for a moment before her father said,
"I will not get out! That's my daughter in bed beside you."
"We need to get the sheriff, Thurston," Belinda said.
"No need for the sheriff, I got the preacher coming," the
woman named Stephanie Quinter insisted.
"The preacher?" Aunt Corrine twisted about to stare at the
bed.
Shocked? Embarrassed? Randi had no idea what she felt
and gave up trying to decipher it. Bowing her head, she
moaned.
"This is my tent, and I'm telling you all to get the hell out
of here," the man insisted.
She tugged up the blankets, used them to cover both ears
as the shouts renewed. They came from all directions. Male,
female, screeches, sobs. Her mind swirled. There were so
many topics, not one settled long enough to form a solid
thought. The bellowing and bawling was enough to wake the
dead. She squeezed her lids shut again, blocked out red faces
and crying eyes, and wished she could do the same with her
ears.
A loud blast ripped through the chaos.
Instinctually trying to hide from the gunshot, her body
jolted, and her fingers searched to grab something solid. They
latched onto warm muscled flesh, and she twisted, burrowing
into the body beside her.
Silence hung in the air. After a few quiet seconds, Randi
realized the bare flesh of her breasts was pressed against
something warm and solid. She lifted her head from the crook
of the man's neck and peeked down.
28
Boot Hill Bride
by Lauri Robinson
Lord! She was sitting on his lap, well almost on his lap,
and her hands were wrapped around his bare torso. One of
his hands held the blanket snugly across her shoulders,