Page 22 of The Littlest Cowboy


  The Baddest Virgin in Texas

  Prologue

  Little Lash Monroe sat in the hard wooden pew in the front row and listened to his foster father, the Reverend Ezekiel Stanton, pontificate in a loud, booming voice about the wages of sin and the wrath of the Almighty. Hellfire and damnation tended to be at the heart of most of the preacher’s sermons. And Lash, being only nine, supposed one day he’d understand why the bumper sticker on the back of the Reverend Mr. Stanton’s battered pickup truck read God Is Love when he talked about God as if He were a fire-breathing dragon from a horrific fairy tale. His words sent chills down Lash’s spine.

  And the light in the preacher’s eyes gleamed like...like that new gray-blue cat’s-eye marble Lash had won this morning from Gulliver Scuttle. Lash smiled and tucked his hand into his pocket to feel the cool, smooth marble he’d been gunning for all these weeks. His, at last. Then the smile leaped from his face when the preacher struck his fist hard on the podium in front of him to punctuate the word Vengeance in the quote Lash figured must be his favorite, “Vengeance is mine, sayeth the Lord.”

  Lash met the preacher’s piercing gaze and forced himself to stop thinking about the marble, and the shooting match this morning, and to pay attention. After all, the preacher wasn’t so bad. Strict, yes, but not mean. It wasn’t his fault Lash was miserable living with him and Missus Olive, who would have blown away in a strong wind or fainted at the sound of a cuss word. Yeah, they were wearing on him some. Especially her, being so helpless and delicate and requiring a houseful of men and boys just to take care of her every little need. Lash had never known a whinier, more dependent woman in his life. But still and all, she was better than his own mom, who’d been drunk most of the time, and even more helpless. So helpless she’d said she couldn’t take care of two boys all alone, and dumped Lash and Jimmy off at a shelter one night.

  Jimmy had been sent to live with a family in Texas. And Lash had been brought here, to the preacher who wanted plenty of sons, and his wife who was unable to give him any. And really, despite their shortcomings, they’d treated him just swell.

  It was the boys he couldn’t stand. They were the ones who made his life pure misery in every way they could think of. All older than him, all bigger, and every one of them way meaner. Especially Zane, the oldest, biggest, meanest of them all. Zane was twelve, Jack eleven, and Peter—who claimed his name was really Pedro and that he had a rich uncle in Mexico who would come for him one day—was ten. Peter made them all call him Pedro when the Stantons weren’t within earshot. And if they forgot, they were liable to get clubbed for it. Lash tended to call him Petey, despite the repercussions, just because it bugged the other boy so much. Rich relatives, indeed. The king of beef, Peter said they called his uncle. Sure. The kid was full of blue mud.

  In comparison to Lash’s measly nine years of age, the other boys were practically grown-ups. They didn’t act that way, though. Lash still had sore ribs from the minor beating they’d given him last week, when Zane ordered Lash to do his share of the chores, and Lash was foolish enough to refuse. He’d ended up doing Zane’s chores anyway, only doing them while hurting like crazy. Next time he’d just agree right off the bat.

  But he had a feeling that wouldn’t be enough to satisfy Zane. He thought Zane liked tormenting him.

  It was as this thought entered Lash’s mind that he first felt the itching, creeping sensation around his ankles and calves...and then higher. He dropped one hand to scratch his leg, all the while keeping his eyes respectfully focused on the preacher. But the itch didn’t go away. In fact, it spread higher. And then, all of a sudden, it became a pinching feeling. Lash slapped hard at his legs, jerking his gaze floorward at the same moment. Oddly, he noticed several other members of the congregation itching and slapping themselves, too.

  And then he saw them. Ants. There must have been a million of ‘em. It looked as if someone had scattered handfuls of them across the floor near the front pew. A hundred of the shiny black buggers—some the size of guinea pigs, Lash noted with alarm—were swarming over his shoes and disappearing beneath the hem of his pant legs. He jumped to his feet, howling out loud and hopping up and down like a Mexican jumping bean, slapping his legs as if they were on fire. And he barely noticed at least six other people doing a similar jig. They looked like Indians from a John Wayne movie doing a war dance before the big shoot-’em-up scene. Mrs. Potter threw her walker so high and so hard that it formed a perfect arch in the air before coming down hard on the three people in the pew behind her. Sally Kenyon was standing in her seat, screaming at the top of her lungs and tugging on her blond ringlets. Girls. Sheesh, did she really think all that fussin’ was going to help anything? Old Leroy LaRue just stood there, stooped as always, nailing ants one by one with his walking stick, just lifting it up and jamming it down, again and again. With his snow-white hair sticking up and his beak of a nose crinkling, he grinned toothlessly. “Gotcha, ya sneaky little buggers!” Bam, bam, bam. “There! Ha! Gotcha!” Bam-bam! “An’ you, too! I see ya sneaking away!” Bam-bam-bam-bam.

  Lash would’ve laughed at Leroy’s counterattack if he hadn’t been so busy trying to shake the entire ant army out of his pant legs. He managed to kick off his shoes in a frenzied effort to rid himself of the biting little demons. The shoes flew forward, and one hit the Reverend Mr. Stanton square dead center of his forehead. The second one landed on the podium, no doubt leaving a dirty mark all over the fire-and-brimstone sermon the preacher had spent all week composing. Lash barely noticed that the fire and brimstone from the sermon was becoming apparent in the Reverend Stanton’s face. He was too busy hopping on one foot to peel off the other sock and then reversing the procedure.

  It was only as Lash accomplished this and danced his bare feet away from the platoon of ants trooping over the church floor, that he noticed Zane, sitting safely two rows back. He was doubled over, clutching his spare-tire belly and laughing so hard his face was beet red and tears squeezed from the corners of his eyes.

  And then Lash’s view was blocked by the members of the congregation, all rising and making their way toward the exits to avoid being attacked by Zane’s killer ants.

  Safe for the moment, Lash stood there shaking his head. And then a heavy hand clapped down on his shoulder from behind, and he knew darn well whose hand it was. And he also knew he was in major trouble. Because of all the boys in the preacher’s household, Lash was the only one with an ant farm. And even if he denied responsibility for this, it wouldn’t hold water when Zane and Jack and Peter gave their version of things. They’d make sure their stories matched, and they’d make sure Lash was implicated. They always did.

  “I think,” said the Reverend Mr. Stanton, “that you are going to have some new Bible verses to memorize.

  Lash glanced up at the preacher, and he could have sworn that behind that weathered, stern face, the preacher was battling against the urge to grin. But he couldn’t be, Lash reasoned. The preacher was too upstanding to find any of this funny. Still, Lash found himself awfully glad that memorizing Bible verses was the most severe punishment in the man’s collection. It wouldn’t be so bad.

  “How many this time, sir?” Lash asked.

  The preacher’s bushy brows rose. “For this? Oh, I’d say...a hundred might be sufficient.”

  “A hundred!”

  The preacher nodded. “You may recite them before the entire congregation next Sunday—after you’ve delivered your apology to them, of course.”

  With a heavy sigh, Lash nodded. “Yes, sir.”

  “I swear, Lash, I’ve never come upon a boy with such a love of mischief-making as you. But I’m bound to reform you, son. Or die trying.” His hand, leathery and firm, gave Lash’s shoulder a squeeze.

  He’d die trying, Lash thought. Lord, but he wasn’t the one who was supposed to learn a hundred Bible verses in one week’s time. He wasn’t the one who’d be embarrassed right to the roots of his teeth getting up in front of all these people, who’d
probably still be itching from their ant bites, to apologize and recite all those verses. Lash was. But Lash wasn’t the one who’d orchestrated this whole fiasco in the first place.

  He met Zane’s triumphant beady little eyes across the room. An ant bit hard, and Lash jumped and slapped at his leg, and when he did, that pretty gray-blue cat’s eye marble he’d been trying to win for a month popped right out of his pocket, rolled under the pew behind him and kept on rolling. And before he could get hold of it again, pudgy Zane with his ugly mug was knocking people out of the way to wedge himself under a pew two rows back. When he got up again, he held that marble between his thumb and forefinger and admired it, just to be sure Lash would see. Then he dropped it into his own pocket, and turned to saunter out of the church, acting like he wasn’t even aware of all the hopping and slapping and shouting going on around him.

  Silently Lash vowed that he would never, ever for the rest of his life, want to be plunked down into the middle of a huge family. Especially one with so many older, bigger, meaner brothers! Never!

  He made his way out of the church, and on the way, he caught the pale gaze of Olive Stanton, his foster mom, and he knew just by looking at her that she’d seen what Zane had just done. She knew that Lash wasn’t the one responsible for all of this. Heck, as far as brains went, she had twice as many as her husband, even if he was a preacher and all.

  But all Missus Stanton did was shake her head sadly and send a reproachful look toward Zane’s retreating back. She wouldn’t say anything. The woman didn’t have any backbone at all when it came to telling her husband—or anyone else, for that matter—that they were wrong. She’d sooner be hung by her toes than disagree with anyone, and she never raised her voice above a whisper. Lash wasn’t sure if that was because she appreciated all their coddling so much she didn’t want to seem ungrateful, or if she just didn’t have a lick of courage. But he did know he didn’t want to be around females who got themselves used to being waited on. It made them soft and yellow, as far as he was concerned. Nope. Once Lash grew up and moved away from the Stantons of Maplewood, Illinois, he was going to keep himself clear of coddled girls, big families and older brothers for the rest of his life...and maybe even longer than that!

  He didn’t like having chores to do, Bible verses to memorize. He didn’t like having to answer to the Reverend Mr. Stanton. He detested having to wait on Missus Olive. He just plain hated having to watch his every step in case he crossed those bullies he was forced to live with.

  When he grew up, Lash was never going to have to answer to anybody. He’d be free as a bird. Why, when he got tired of living in one place, he’d just throw his stuff in a bag and head off to someplace new and different. Every trip would be a brand-new adventure. Life was going to be fun and carefree, not an endless cycle of rules to be followed and orders to be obeyed. Not for Lash.

  He was kinda hoping he could look up his real brother, Jimmy, who was in Texas now, and talk him into going along with this plan. They’d be drifters. Free and happy. No women or families allowed.

  Meanwhile...Lash picked up his Bible, riffled the pages to be sure no ants were waiting in ambush inside, and then opened it to see if he could find a hundred verses the preacher hadn’t already made him memorize. As often as he got himself into trouble—with plenty of help from Zane and Petey the beef prince—he kinda doubted he’d find many.