The Lawman. Patricia Potter

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The Lawman - Patricia Potter Mills & Boon Blaze

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a U.S. Marshal looking for Cal Thornton. He might be going by the name of MacDonald these days,” the lawman continued. “I don’t have a quarrel with anyone else.” His voice suddenly hardened as he added, “Unless they interfere.”

      “Don’t know no Thornton,” she said. “Or MacDonald, either. And that badge don’t mean nothing to me.”

      His gaze didn’t leave her face. “That old man in the livery said the owner of the horse there was in the saloon. Thornton rode that horse. There aren’t many pintos like it.”

      “He’s crazy. I won that horse in a wager.”

      “Then I’ll just take a look and move on.”

      “No,” she said flatly.

      Something about her answer made his lips twist into a smile.

      “Where is he, kid?”

      She realized with a sick feeling that she’d confirmed the fact that Mac was here. It didn’t make any difference, though. She’d seen him talk to old Burley, then start in the direction of the saloon without hesitation. If he’d ridden this far to find Mac, he wouldn’t be stopped by a denial. Only a bullet could do that.

      She held her ground as he took another step. His gaze met hers, weighing her. Watching her every move.

      “No closer,” she said. “I’ll shoot.”

      “Are you sure, kid?” His voice was steady. “I bet you never shot a man before.”

      Her eyes didn’t leave the marshal’s face. It looked carved from a rock. Lines were etched around his eyes, and she sensed they weren’t caused by laughter but by harsher emotions. He studied her with a cool perusal.

      Then he started to turn away from her. “I’m going to look in that saloon,” he said.

      Now. She had to make her move now.

      Her heart pounded hard, and her throat was so dry she could barely breathe. She shifted and concentrated. She was good with a gun. As good as any man, Mac said. But he had taught her to shoot only for self-protection. In her heart, she knew he would not approve of this.

      “One more step, and I’ll kill you,” she said.

      He turned back to her.

      “Go away,” she tried one last time. “No one here but a few ghosts.”

      “And you.” His dark gaze seemed to search her soul. “What’s he to you?” He was trying to disarm her. She knew it, even as she realized it might be working. She widened her stance slightly and didn’t bother to answer. Instead, her fingers inched closer to her holster. Don’t stand there talking, Mac had taught her. Some gunmen will try to distract you with talk.

      “Don’t know what you mean.”

      “Why isn’t he here? Why is he letting a kid protect him?”

      She didn’t reply. She had the terrible feeling that every time she did, she revealed more than she intended, that he saw under the disguise she’d so carefully assembled.

      “I just want to take Thornton to trial. It will be fair.”

      “Not bloody likely.”

      He raised an eyebrow at that. “Then Thornton is here.”

      Blazes. She’d said too much.

      She hadn’t had much time to plan after a friend of Mac’s from the old days had ridden in three hours earlier to warn him that a marshal named Evans was on the way. He’d moved on after issuing the warning. The man had a price on his head, as well.

      Evans. She’d known that name. He’d been dogging Mac for years. A vendetta, Archie said once.

      She tried to keep her hand from shaking as she stared into the marshal’s eyes. She didn’t want to kill him. Blazes, she didn’t want to shoot him at all. But she could. She knew she could. She was fast. As fast as Mac had been in his heyday, and she’d beaten him to the draw more than once.

      But this was no game between teacher and student.

      The lawman took a step toward her, his arms at ease. He obviously didn’t believe she would really draw.

      Her heart quaked. If he reached her, he could easily disarm her. She was strong for a woman, but he was well over six feet and she suspected his lean body was all muscle.

      Now.

      “Draw!”

      Her hand dove to the butt of her Colt. She saw a change in his eyes. He believed her now. His hand started toward his pistol, as well. A gust of hot wind caught her coat and flung the other side open.

      Her finger pulled the trigger at the same second she realized his hand had stopped moving.

      She heard the shot echo down the dirt road and saw the surprise in his eyes as his body buckled and he went down.

      2

      THE IMPACT of the bullet took Jared Evans by surprise.

      Blood flowed from his right leg as it started to fold underneath him. The pain would follow. He knew that from too much experience. He prepared himself for it, even as he stared at the woman who had shot him.

      In that split second as she went for the gun, the wind brushed open the coat and outlined the slim body. A woman. God damn, a woman. He’d been distracted just long enough…

      He looked at her. She stood where she’d fired, gun firmly clutched in her hand.

      He still held his gun as he fell to one knee. Instinct. Never let go. His fingers tightened around the grip. He tried to stand again, but his leg was deadweight. The dirt beneath him seemed to move, or was it him? He looked at his leg. Blood. Too much blood. An artery must have been hit.

      He debated trying to return the shot. The woman still pointed her gun at him. He didn’t know her intentions. She might come in for the kill. But he’d never shot a woman. He dropped the weapon and reached for the bandanna around his neck. Tie off the leg….

      A woman, dammit….

      The sun beat down on him as pain hit him. Sudden, searing pain ripped through his thigh as blood continued to flow from the wound and puddle on the ground. He finally tore the bandanna from his neck when he saw the shadow of the woman. If she shot again…

      He looked up. She stood above him, her right hand still holding the Colt. He looked at his own gun. He could try to defend himself. But he’d seen enough wounds to know he didn’t stand a chance if he didn’t stop the bleeding. And his fingers didn’t want to work….

      She kicked his gun away and placed her own on the ground well out of his reach. Then she knelt beside him. She took the bandanna from his hands and without a word tied off his leg just above the wound and quickly twisted the cloth into a makeshift tourniquet. He noticed she did it expertly, as if she’d had more than a little practice.

      “Hold

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