Rebel Outlaw. Carol Arens
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“There’s a shop that says The Sweet Treat,” Grannie Rose exclaimed, nearly trembling with excitement. “It’s been an age since I had a sweet treat that I didn’t make for myself and a dozen others.”
“Past time you did, then, Grannie,” Colt answered. A sweet treat sounded just the thing before he settled the women into the hotel for the evening. They could set off for the ranch in the morning, fresh and rested.
Had it only been him traveling, he’d have been settled at the ranch weeks ago, but the old women had required a gentler pace.
Three doors down from the sweet shop he drew the buggy horses up sharp when a rolling ruckus broke out in front of them.
Two men lunged at each other, poking with balled-up fists and kicking at each other’s tender spot. Neither of the fools knew how to fight. They were just as likely to drown in the spring as to do the other in.
“Hand me my cane, Colt,” Aunt Tillie ordered after the men careened into a flowerpot and sent the orange mums flying.
“Let them be. It’s none of our concern... Besides the fools will give it up before anyone’s taken hard damage.”
One man got the better of his enemy and pinned him to the ground. The fellow on top balled his fist, aimed for the grounded man’s nose. Too bad for him that the combatant on the bottom turned his head. The balled fist slammed into dirt as hard as a rock.
A holler of pain shot about Friendship Spring’s spring.
“Ain’t no yellow-bellied, low-moraled Folsom going to wed Holly Jane,” one of them shouted.
“Any Broadhower puts a ring on her finger’s going to feel my bullet in his back!”
Colt grunted in disgust. With talk of a gun, things had taken a dangerous turn. Any rattlehead could kill from a distance.
Now, with the mention of Miss Holly Jane, things had suddenly become his business.
The only reason William Munroe had sold him the ranch was to keep his granddaughter from falling prey to the feud between the families. Had he left the land to the spinster, she would have become a pawn in the Folsoms’ and the Broadhowers’ lust for her property.
Through that prime ground flowed the river that fed water to the Folsom spread on the west and the Broadhower spread on the south.
Whoever controlled the water controlled their enemy.
Apparently, old William Munroe had been rightly worried about his granddaughter.
This was as good a time as any to set matters right. Colt drew his long, double-bladed knife from the sheath slung across his back. He let the weight of the Arkansas Toothpick balance across his palm, while he chose his target.
Since Broadhower stood up, he was it.
Colt watched the man’s boot twitch. If he didn’t get out of the way, Folsom would be caught between the boot and the back of a bench. It looked like Broadhower meant to crush a rib or two.
Colt threw the knife. The hiss of cold, sharp steel cut the air, barely disturbing the fair afternoon.
Broadhower gasped when he found his pant leg suddenly pinned to the bench.
Colt jumped from the buggy and strode slowly toward Broadhower, who glanced ogle-eyed at him, then the knife.
Colt plucked the blade from the bench, yanking it from his pant leg.
He glared at Broadhower, then at Folsom. “From now on, Saphead...and you, Featherbrain, Miss Munroe is off-limits.”
“Says who?” Folsom and Broadhower spoke together.
“Says the new owner of the Munroe place.”
In the face of a shocked expression and a furious one, Colt climbed back into the buggy and settled between the ladies.
“You boys have a nice day.” He flashed them a smug grin that was sure to make them steam.
“Why, will you look at that?” Grannie craned her neck to look behind as he led the team toward the bakery. “There’s mashed cake spread all over town square.”
* * *
Colt watched Grannie Rose’s grin crinkle while she sighed over each and every sweet treat in the display case. The three-week trip from the Broken Brand to Friendship Springs had been worth it for this moment alone.
Grannie’s mind wasn’t as clear as it had once been. Now and then she saw things that weren’t there. Still and all, she was his grandmother, and he meant to see that she enjoyed every year that she had left.
“I’ll take one of everything, except those chocolate hearts,” Grannie announced, and clapped her hands. “I’ll take two of those.”
“You’ll take two sweets and one chocolate heart,” Aunt Tillie said in the tone that she used on contrary toddlers.
Looked like his spoiling of Grannie might have to be done on the sly.
“Oh, Tillie, you need to loosen your corset strings on occasion.” Grannie nudged her sister in the ribs.
At that moment the curtain to the back room rustled and a young woman stepped through. For half a second he was stunned by her resemblance to a heavenly angel.
“Good afternoon,” she said, gazing at him with eyes as rich a brown as the fancy chocolates piled on the plate between them. “How can I help you?”
With a sugar sweet kiss was the first thought to pop into his mind, but clearly, this was not the kind of woman that a man casually canoodled.
“I’ll have one of everything,” Grannie Rose declared. “Except for the hearts, I’ll have three of those...and so will my sister.”
“Make yourself sick then, but don’t think I’ll be up all night caring for you,” Aunt Tillie huffed.
The woman smiled at Grannie, then Aunt Tillie. Hell if she didn’t look as sweet as the pastries covering the counter.
“May I make a suggestion?” she asked.
“Anything that will keep my sister from the sin of gluttony.”
“I’ll take your suggestion, dearie,” Grannie said. “As long as it comes with four hearts of chocolate.”
“As a matter of fact, it comes with a plateful of them to share among you. I guarantee no one will become sick from it.”
Colt tried not to stare at her, but the woman was damned pretty. He’d seen a pink rose once that was a match to the blush in her cheeks.
“As long as it’s not the whole contents of the display case, we’ll take it,” Aunt Tillie said.
“Just