Page 24 of And One Rode West


  “Sir—”

  “You mustn’t expect too much of her, Colonel. It was a long, bitter war. Few people understand that I bear no rancor toward our southern brethren. A ‘scorched earth’ policy is the fastest way I know to win a war. It gave me no pleasure to hurt people.”

  “I know that, sir.”

  “I’ll try to tell your wife,” he said lightly, and winked. “But, yes, I think it will be a lively night!” He walked out.

  You don’t know how lively, Jeremy thought with an inward groan.

  He hadn’t gone near her himself all through the day, but he had asked James to see to her whereabouts now and then, and he knew that she had spent the day with Celia. She was in camp. Presumably, she would at least show up at the dinner table. He thought that he had made his threat strong enough for that.

  When he returned to his tent to shave and change for the evening, she was nowhere in sight. She had been there recently, for the hip tub had been brought in for her use and the water in it was still tepid.

  Whatever she intended to do to Sherman, she intended to do it clean, he thought wryly.

  He hadn’t intended to bathe, but the water was there, and so he made use of it, shivering when he rose—it wasn’t quite as warm as he had thought and the night was growing chill. He dressed and shaved quickly, and came out in search of Christa.

  Sergeant Jaffe stopped him, presenting him the full menu for the evening. They would begin with a buffalo broth soup. There would be a mixed vegetable platter composed of the yams and fresh greens they had purchased from the peaceful group of Choctaw the week before. He’d arranged for the best buffalo steaks. And one of the messengers had brought with them some strawberries from St. Louis last week, so they would be able to have a fine dessert with fresh cream.

  “Very commendable, Sergeant.”

  “And we’ll be eating on your wife’s fine plates, sir,” Jaffe said happily. “I think we’ll do you proud, sir.”

  “I’m sure you will. She helped you today with her plates and silver?”

  “Oh no, sir. She trusted us with the boxes. She’s been busy with little Mrs. Preston all day. I’m sure they’re planning a delightful entertainment for you.”

  “I’m sure,” Jeremy agreed.

  When he came past Jaffe, he nearly tripped over a dozen of the hunting hounds that accompanied the troop. He swore beneath his breath, then realized she was definitely getting the best of him.

  He strode into the officers’ mess tent. Nathaniel was in the corner, softly playing the fiddle. Officers in their finery were standing by their ladies, definitely decked out in theirs.

  But there was no one there so striking or beautiful as his wife.

  Christa was engaged in conversation with Jimmy and Celia. A delicate champagne flute was in her fingers, and he imagined that the glass had traveled with them from Cameron Hall.

  Christa had eschewed her usual trail clothing for the most elegant wear. She was in a gown of rich blue taffeta with velvet and black lace trim. The gown had a slightly high collar at her nape, but the handsome edge work was cut low across the bosom. It hugged her upper body, and the skirt fell in elegant folds down to the ground, the rear caught up in a bustle at the back. Against the rich coloring of the gown her hair had never appeared more midnight black, nor her eyes so endlessly blue.

  She had dressed for the occasion, he thought uneasily. She had drawn out her plates, her silver—and her own finery. Magnanimous. And frightening.

  He strode across the tent, acknowledging the men and women as he did so. The company was not a large one. Tomorrow there would be an officers’ picnic to which all the officers and their wives would be invited to meet the newcomers. Tonight was a smaller grouping, just the general, the newcomers, Lieutenant and Mrs. Preston, and a few others.

  Christa’s eyes rose to his. She studied him for a moment, her eyes grave, and he wondered what went on within her head. He tried to convey his own warning to her through his eyes.

  Coolly, she looked away.

  He came beside her, slipping an arm through his. “Evening, Jimmy, Celia.”

  “Colonel!” Celia always had a smile for him, even when she was frightened of something and her smile was wavering.

  “Has he arrived yet?” he asked Jimmy.

  “Just coming in now, sir.”

  Freshened, smiling, Sherman came through the entry, Lieutenant Jennings and Clara right behind him. His eyes fell instantly upon Christa. Naturally. He was intrigued with her.

  Naturally. She was exquisite. Every man in the tent had looked her way.

  “Ah, the elusive Mrs. McCauley at last!” Sherman said. He strode to them, ignoring the salutes of his officers. “McCauley, so here she is. No wonder you hide her. She is a treasure.”

  He reached for her hand and kissed it. Jeremy saw the blood drain from her face. She snatched her hand back quickly. “General Sherman,” she murmured.

  “I know of your brother, madam,” Sherman said. “Men who should have died considered his skill a rare gift from God.”

  Her eyes narrowed. “Jesse is quite talented, sir. Have you heard of my other brother?”

  “Daniel Cameron? Indeed.” Jeremy waited. Every eye in the place was on the two of them. Tension rose. Sherman continued, “Time and again, Mrs. McCauley, we shook our heads at his exploits. Had he and his like but been on our side, the war might well have been won much earlier.”

  It was a gracious comment. Christa said nothing.

  “I believe myself, General, that had Christa but been on our side, the war might have been won much earlier.”

  A burst of laughter rose. Christa still didn’t reply, but the tension had been broken. Jeremy tightened his fingers around her arm. “Suggest we sit, madam!” he hissed to her.

  She freed herself from his touch. Short of creating a disturbance, he could hardly pull her back.

  “We need some dinner music,” she said, walking over to Nathaniel and whispering something to him. Jeremy grit his teeth.

  “Shall we sit?” he suggested himself.

  As it happened, Christa was on his right—and Sherman was on her right. He was sure that Christa hadn’t planned it that way—perhaps Sherman had. Sherman had been designated a seat beside Clara Jennings.

  Maybe that was why his seat had been changed so that he was placed beside Christa.

  Whatever the reason, Jeremy inwardly braced himself for the coming storm.

  It arrived within minutes.

  Sherman politely complimented the soup, and Christa assured him she’d had nothing to do with it. The subject of fine dining came up, and then the subject of dining on the trail.

  Wine was served. A Bordeaux that they had carefully packed with them for special occasions. To Jeremy’s surprise, Christa drained her glass immediately.

  It was refilled. The men were serving them without a flaw.

  “Mrs. McCauley,” Sherman complimented Christa, “you have done remarkably well with practically nothing to work with here in the wild.”

  She was sipping her wine again. She smiled sweetly. “Well, I’ve years of training! I am a southerner, sir, very accustomed to doing the best one can with nothing! And even that nothing was so easily snatched away!”

  “She should have been in the field,” Jeremy said pleasantly, his fingers curling tightly over hers. Their eyes met. Christa flushed, snatching her fingers away.

  Once again, silence fell over the table. Sergeant Jaffe and his crew served the main dish.

  Christa’s wineglass was refilled. She wanted to drain it once again. She was a Cameron. Southern belle or no, she had shared wine—and whiskey—with her brothers on plenty of occasions.

  Since the baby, it made her ill. She needed it tonight. She couldn’t do more than sip at it.

  Jeremy asked the general to join him in a whiskey, and it was brought.

  “Lord, but whiskey is in plenty out here in the wilderness! And to think it was not so long ago there were places we had none
and soldiers screamed beneath the amputation saws!” Christa said.

  It was shocking dinner conversation.

  “She’s so accustomed to her brother being a doctor!” Jeremy said, slipping an arm around her. His fingers threaded tightly into her hair. He smiled icily while turning her beautiful face toward his. “Beat you, eh?” he whispered softly. “I’m going to tan you to within an inch of your life!” he promised.

  She smiled, gritting her teeth against the pain of his hold.

  “Of course, it’s true,” she told Sherman sweetly. “We did survive much better in my part of Virginia than did those who lived off the land farther south. All of that deprivation, in comparison, makes the trail much, much easier to endure!”

  Jeremy started to step into the breach, but inadvertently Clara Jennings did so.

  “Well, I don’t think that I shall ever be happy on the trail. The bugs! The rain. The terror of the Indians!”

  “All trials the good Lord sends for us to endure, so that we see to the error of our ways!” Mrs. Brooks advised.

  “Ah, well. The good Lord seemed fond of sending us southerners many trials!” Christa murmured, with a smile that seemed to make light of her comment. “We were ever afraid of Yankees invading, especially after having heard that our good General Sherman was on the march. Having lived with that fear so very long, I cannot worry too much about simple heathens like Comanche!”

  “But as you said, you are a Virginian, Mrs. McCauley. I cut my path through Georgia and Carolina.”

  “We were ever in sympathy with our more southernly sisters!”

  Her eyes were wide. Her tone was innocent. Christa knew how to cut to the bone. Sherman might long to strike her, Jeremy thought.

  But apparently, the general had taken her on as a challenge. He leaned closer to her, speaking softly. “I swear to you, Mrs. McCauley, I fought a war the best, and oddly, the most merciful way I knew how. I offered generous terms of surrender. So generous that Secretary of War Stanton slandered me, calling me a traitor in numerous publications. I renegotiated with Joe Johnston as I was ordered, ma’am, but I was ever sorry that my original terms did not stand, for they were right, honest, and good.”

  Christa appeared just a little bit pale. Maybe Sherman had managed to touch something inside her.

  “I’m a soldier, Mrs. McCauley, not a politician. It’s to the politicians now to reconstruct state governments. It is to the sorrow of all good men when those chosen for such tasks do not prove themselves equal to them.”

  “Reconstruction is a bitter thing!” she said.

  Jeremy stood, thinking that this company would be fool enough to stop him if he did set his fingers around her throat. He dragged her to her feet nevertheless.

  “We’ve music. Shall we dance while the plates are cleared and dessert is served?”

  The suggestion was well met. He pulled Christa along with him over to Nathaniel. “Nat, how about a jig on that fiddle for me, please. A lively dance tune.”

  Nathaniel nodded. A private who had been standing in the shadows behind the spinet piano stepped forward and took a seat.

  The music was coming a little early. It didn’t matter. Nat and the private broke into a lively rendition of “Turkey in the Straw.”

  Jeremy held Christa in his arms, whirling her through the song. Beneath the cover of the music, he gave her fair warning once again.

  “One more thing, Christa. Just one.”

  Her eyes were blazing. The wine was giving her courage. She tossed her hair back. “And what?” she challenged. She didn’t let him answer but rushed on. “You had no right to do this! No right at all to expect me to meet that man—”

  “He’s been exceedingly gracious. He’s made every attempt to be pleasant—”

  “And that atones for what he did to my people?” she said incredulously.

  “Christa, the war is over!”

  He felt a tap on his shoulder.

  Sherman.

  There was nothing to do but relinquish his wife to the general.

  He did so, then stepped back, watching the pair. They talked animatedly throughout the dance. What was being said?

  The music ended. Sherman led Christa back to him. Just as she reached him, her back went very stiff.

  The men were playing a new tune in honor of their guest.

  It was called “Marching Through Georgia.”

  The company began to sit. Christa’s eyes were on his. He led her back to her chair, but she didn’t sit.

  “I think that I shall help with the entertainment,” she murmured, pulling away.

  He watched her walk to the spinet and speak with the private. He rose, and she sat.

  She started off gently. As strawberries and cream were served, Christa played and sang.

  She sang “When This Cruel War Is Over,” a song so heart-wrenching that many commanders had ordered that it not be played in camps, for desertions often followed its playing.

  It went well enough. Both troops embraced the song. She went on to “Amazing Grace.” She had a beautiful voice, crystal clear, sweet, and pure, and she played just as beautifully.

  Of course she played beautifully. She’d been bred and trained to play beautifully, to sing like a lark, to flutter her eyelashes, to rule like a queen. She’d spent years learning all the subtle arts so as to marry a man like Liam McCloskey, to supervise his household, to entrance his guests.

  Perhaps she had prepared more for a military life than she had ever intended. The whole tent seemed enraptured. They were seldom treated to such a lovely display in the wild. She was doing it all on purpose, he knew.

  She had them all!

  She slipped into a song called “Southern Girl,” a song in defiance of the Union, and went on to “I’m a Good Old Rebel,” a song for those Rebels determined to die in rebellion. To make absolutely sure that no one could miss just where her loyalties lay, she broke into a soft, heartrending edition of “Dixie.”

  A wondrous finale. He couldn’t say a word about it. Lincoln had ordered it played in honor of the South before that fateful night at Ford’s Theater. Jeremy’s own troops had played it before they left Richmond.

  While the last echoes of the music remained on the air, Christa rose from the spinet.

  Celia Preston began the applause.

  General Sherman seconded it mightily.

  Christa bowed low in a mocking curtsy. She rose and her eyes met Jeremy’s. He could have sworn that for a moment she was very still, and that a slight tremor swept through her.

  “Gentlemen, ladies, you will excuse me?” she pleaded politely, offering one of her beautiful smiles to the whole group. “I tire so easily!”

  They all tripped over themselves to excuse her!

  Jeremy awaited her at the exit from the tent, arms crossed over his shoulders. A flush suffused her cheeks as she looked up at him. Her lashes quickly lowered. “Excuse me.”

  He caught hold of her arm. To anyone viewing them, he might have been whispering the sweetest endearments.

  “They might have excused you, my love. But be forewarned. I most certainly do not! When I get my hands on you, Christa …”

  He let the warning trail away. She pulled away from him, her eyes blazing. She was flushed. Was it the wine, was it her temper, or the heat?

  “Good night, Colonel.” Her words were definite. Mistress of Cameron Hall definite.

  He smiled, his fingers itching to touch her. If she had been determined to single-handedly destroy his career, she was well on her way tonight. It was good that Sherman, remarkably, had a sense of humor.

  He still blocked Christa.

  “I said, good night, Colonel,” she enunciated carefully. “The night is over!”

  His smile deepened. “Oh no, Christa,” he assured her. “The night has just begun for you.”

  She pulled away from him and exited the tent. He let her go.

  He would find her in time.

  She had nowhere to go.

&n
bsp; Fourteen

  Christa did find somewhere to go.

  Jeremy remained with the company of officers and their wives while Nathaniel began the strains of “Beautiful Dreamer.” A number of the ladies patted their fans and assured him that they understood Christa’s exhaustion.

  He refrained from telling them that Christa had spent perhaps three weeks with some discomfort, but since then had seemed to feel more healthy than most of his men. He listened gravely to Sherman’s warnings about the Indians, and he danced with a number of the women including Clara Jennings, a feat that did not in the least ease his temper.

  By the time he left, he’d heard half the company cluck over what a beautiful and brave figure his wife was, poor child, always doing her best to make do.

  That didn’t improve his temper much either.

  He was not far from his own tent. When he had said good night to the last of the guests, he strode the few feet to it, angrily jerking open the flap.

  She wasn’t there.

  Fear drove into his heart, and while it did so he tried to assure himself that nothing could have happened to her. They were too large a camp, too well armed for the Comanche to attack.

  He spun around, nearly crashing into Robert Black Paw. “She is by the river, some distance from the tents. I left Private O’Malley to guard her. I didn’t know whether to bring her back or not. She is beyond the circle of our night guard. I’m afraid she strays too far.”

  “I’ll bring her back myself, Robert. Thank you.”

  The scout nodded and disappeared into the blackness of the night. Jeremy started the long walk down to the river. Near its edge, he found Private O’Malley and sent the young man back to camp. He walked through the trees himself, amazed that Christa would have come here, so far from the camp. He saw her, standing with one foot upon a log, staring into the cold black water. The folds of her skirt fell elegantly about her, her hair cascaded down her back like a wing of the night. If any young Comanche brave had come upon her so, he would have thanked the gods for his incredible good fortune.

  The thought spurred his anger, and he thrashed on through the trees, his eyes narrowed on her. She heard him coming and spun around, her eyes wide. The look on his face must have been as savage as his temper because she turned to run, when there was nowhere to run. She had barely taken a step before he was upon her, swinging her around and against a tree trunk.