Page 27 of The Temptress


  For a moment, Chris closed her eyes in an attempt to keep from screaming at her father. “I did nothing to make him dislike me,” she said softly. “In fact, the reason I am marrying Prescott is because I’m carrying Tynan’s child.”

  That successfully closed Del’s mouth. “I’ll go after him and bring him back here. I’ll—”

  “You will do no such thing. I’ll not marry a man who doesn’t want me.”

  Del sat down in his chair heavily. “But Prescott—”

  Chris sat in the chair on the other side of the desk. “Asher wants my money and I want my child to have a name. I think it’s a perfect arrangement.”

  Del seemed to age before her eyes. “Sam and I thought we’d planned everything so carefully. I didn’t see any loopholes. We couldn’t have been more wrong.”

  “What has Mr. Dysan to do with all of this?”

  “Sam is Tynan’s grandfather. In fact, Tynan’s real name is Samuel James Dysan the third.”

  Chris couldn’t speak for a moment. “He’s who? What in the world are you saying? Tynan knows nothing about who he is.”

  “Sam hasn’t known it all that long himself.”

  “Would you mind explaining what you’re talking about? How long have you known about Tynan? Did you know when you got him out of prison?”

  “Of course. You don’t think I’d trust my only child to an outlaw, do you? I’ve always known who he was.”

  He leaned back in his chair. “I don’t guess it’ll matter that I tell you now, now that all Sam’s and my plans have fallen through. Sam has hopes that Tynan will return, but I think I gave up last week.”

  “And decided that he didn’t return through some fault of mine,” she said with disgust. “How did you first learn about Tynan?”

  “You’re too young to remember, but Sam and I knew each other many years ago. He was a suitor of your mother’s.” Del smiled. “Now there was a woman with sense. She knew which man to choose. Anyway, Sam married soon after I did and he and his wife had a son right away, named him Sam after himself. There wouldn’t have been any problems except for that hellion Sam’s brother married. Sam made all his money on his own, but whatever his brother touched, failed. Sam’s sister-in-law screamed night and day at her husband, then at her son who was just like him. Both men died young. It was when her grandson was born that she saw some hope of ever achieving what she wanted.”

  “And that was Beynard,” Chris said.

  “Yes, the woman thought for years that Beynard was going to be Sam’s heir because Sam the second didn’t produce any children. But then he and his wife decided to go to Washington to see about buying some timberland and they never returned.”

  “They were killed,” Chris said softly. “Ty said that his mother had three bullet wounds in her back.”

  “All Sam could do was guess what had happened. He heard that his son and daughter-in-law had been killed in a boating accident and never made it to the coast of Washington. For years, he thought that he was going to have to make Beynard his heir, even though he disliked the boy. But six years ago, a friend of his daughter-in-law’s came to visit and asked Sam what had happened to Lilian’s child. Until then, Sam hadn’t even known she was going to have a baby.” Del gave Chris a hard look. “Sometimes fathers are the last to know what’s going on in their children’s lives.”

  Del folded his hands on the desk. “So, for six years, Sam’s moved heaven and earth to find out if she had a child and if it lived. He found him three years ago. He’s your Tynan. We think his mother must have said, ‘Dysan,’ and the old miner misheard it as ‘Tynan.’ ”

  “Who killed Tynan’s parents?”

  “Sam could only guess that his sister-in-law hired someone to do it. Maybe she found out there was going to be a rival for her grandson’s place as Sam’s heir.”

  “So this is why Beynard wanted us. On the hill that day, at Hamilton’s, he was talking about Tynan when he mentioned Sam, wasn’t he?”

  “Probably, but Beynard never had a chance. His grandmother was crazy and she poisoned his mind against Sam’s family. She made him as crazy as she was. Sam made the mistake of telling the boy that he thought he’d at last found his grandson. Beynard broke into Sam’s office, stole the papers on Tynan and came to Washington to find him. Several of the things that happened to Tynan over the last few years were caused by Beynard.”

  “So, actually, he kidnapped Pilar and me to get to Tynan?”

  “We have no way of knowing for sure, but Sam and I think he knew Tynan…cared for one of you but he didn’t know which one, so he took both of you.”

  Chris was silent for a few minutes as she digested this information. “So why did you come up with this elaborate scheme with Tynan and me? Why didn’t Mr. Dysan just get his grandson released from prison and take him home? What did I have to do with this?”

  “Sam only knew of his grandson by reputation. He’d heard of every gunfight, every time he got thrown in jail, the banks he robbed when he was a boy, all the scrapes he got himself into, and all the women.” Del was watching Chris but she didn’t say anything. “Sam wanted to know what his grandson was like. He was afraid he was like Beynard. And, too, we both hoped for an alliance between our families.”

  “So you used me,” she said, her jaw set. “You used me in your matchmaking experiment.”

  Del’s voice rose. “I thought maybe you could benefit by meeting a man, something besides those city slickers you’d met in New York. Give a job to a woman! Of all the stupid—”

  “I don’t think we’d better start this again,” Chris said. “If you’d wanted me to meet him, you should have invited him to the house and introduced him to me. But no, you had to concoct an absurd farce to get us together. You had to threaten him with a return to prison if he so much as came near me and you also had to send that man Prescott who was drooling over me at every opportunity.”

  “And now you’re going to marry him.”

  “I have to! That man you chose for me won’t have anything to do with marriage. He’s scared to death of the idea. And he’d rather do anything than go back to jail.”

  “Is that what he told you?”

  “Yes, he did. I begged him to marry me, but he refused. You’ll be happy to know that your little scheme worked on my part. I fell in love with Tynan—or Sam, whatever his name is—practically from the moment I saw him. But all he wanted from me was…what he got, so now I’m carrying the consequences of having fallen in love with him.”

  “He walked out on a woman carrying his child?”

  “I most certainly did not tell him.”

  Del stood. “Well, we’ll find him and make him marry you. He can’t do this to my daughter.”

  “You do that and I’ll walk out of this house and you’ll never see me or your grandchild again. I’ll not force myself on a man who doesn’t want me. I’ve talked to Asher and told him about the baby and he’s agreed to marry me and raise the child as his own. I think it’ll work out nicely.”

  “Nicely,” Del mocked. “I never would have thought this of Sam’s grandson. I thought he had more guts than this.”

  “He said he was doing this for me and I think some of him believes what he’s saying. He says he’s not husband material and that I’ll be better off with some man who’s housebroken.”

  “But he could learn. I learned, didn’t I?”

  Chris looked at the floor. “I don’t want to talk about this anymore. Tynan didn’t love me. As much as you and Mr. Dysan wanted it to happen, it didn’t. I’m going to marry Asher in a week and I’m going to stay here and raise my child and I’ll probably never even see Tynan again. Besides, with his propensity for trouble, he’ll probably be back in prison by the time of the wedding. Now, I think I’ll go lie down and rest.”

  With that, she left the room.

  Chapter Twenty-seven

  “Do you really think you have the right to wear white?” Asher asked Chris as she sat in her father’s garden.
“I mean, isn’t that asking for gossip?”

  Chris didn’t answer him. Since she’d, in essence, asked him to marry her, he’d started showing what he was really like. He was deeply angry that she’d spent a night with “someone like that gunfighter,” and never lost a minute telling her so. They’d agreed that the child was to be known as his, so he could act proudly modest when the baby came three months too early. He didn’t mind people thinking he’d seduced the rich Nola Dallas, but he refused to let anyone know that there’d been another man. He’d been angry when she’d told her father the truth.

  “Won’t you be showing soon?” he continued.

  Chris closed her eyes for a moment. “How would I know? I’ve never had a baby. Doesn’t my father have some work for you to do? I thought you were going to learn some of his business so you could help him.”

  “I can’t this morning. There’s a divine mare being put up for sale at Frederikson’s and I need one more look at her before I buy her.”

  “But you’ve bought two horses already this week.”

  He stood back and looked at her and Chris knew what he was thinking. He’d taken Del Mathison’s pregnant daughter off the man’s hands and, because of this noble deed, he expected to be given the keys to the kingdom. He did no work and Chris suspected that he never planned to, that he was quite willing to go on living there, taking all her father had worked for and contributing nothing in return. And her father couldn’t have cared less what Asher did. He was too angry at Chris to think of anything else. And Samuel kept looking at her with the saddest eyes.

  “I thought maybe I’d buy this horse for you,” Asher said. “You’ll need a horse after his child is born.”

  She tightened her lips. In public, the child might be theirs, but in private, it was only “his.”

  “Yes, of course,” she mumbled. “Of course I’ll need a horse.” She knew she’d say anything to get rid of him. As she watched him leave, she thought that after the baby was born, she’d probably leave Washington and return East. Her baby’d have a name, and she wouldn’t have to deal with Asher every day.

  She tried to bury herself in her book, but nothing could keep the tears from coming. She ran back to the house, tears pouring down her face, ran past Samuel, and up to her room where she spent yet another day crying.

  • • •

  The day of the wedding was overcast and looked as if it would rain. Mrs. Sunberry helped Chris to dress and there was never a more dismal dressing of a bride in history. Mrs. Sunberry kept crying, letting out little statements like, “He’s not the man your mother would have wanted for you,” and “He’s already spent twice as much as your father does in a year,” and “It’s not too late to change your mind.”

  Chris had to grit her teeth each time the woman spoke. She had taken an instant dislike to Asher because he’d started giving orders the minute Chris told him about the baby.

  Chris smoothed the white dress, put her chin in the air and left the room, Mrs. Sunberry sniffling behind her.

  Her father was waiting for her at the foot of the stairs, and he managed to offer her his arm without so much as looking at her. His anger at her showed in every line in his face. Samuel walked behind them and he tried to put on a smiling countenance, but Chris thought he looked miserably unhappy.

  It was on the tip of her tongue to scream at both of them that if they hadn’t interfered, maybe this wouldn’t be happening. If they hadn’t told Tynan he’d have to return to prison where he would be beaten and starved, maybe he’d have considered marriage.

  Quick tears came to Chris’s eyes, because she didn’t believe that for one minute. It wasn’t the threat of prison that was keeping Tynan from marrying her, it was the fact that he didn’t love her.

  The church was packed with people she hadn’t seen since she was a girl, and many people she’d never met before. There were some of her mother’s relatives, the Montgomerys, standing there and watching her as she slowly walked down the aisle on her father’s arm. Asher waited for her at the altar, smiling triumphantly.

  “Probably thinking of the herd of thoroughbreds he’s going to buy tomorrow,” Del said under his breath to her. “Do you know why that business of his failed?”

  “I don’t want to know,” she hissed at him. “He’s the man you chose.”

  “As contrast. I thought you were smart enough to know that.”

  “I was. Tynan wasn’t.”

  “You could have—”

  “Borne him twins?” she asked, glaring up at him as she reached the altar.

  It was only as the preacher started the ceremony that Chris realized the full extent of what she was doing. She was promising to love, honor and cherish this man for the rest of her life. Tears welled up in her throat and closed it so that the pastor had to ask her three times for her answer. She was aware of Asher looking at her as if he meant to strike her if she didn’t give her answer soon. Behind her, she could hear the people beginning to get restless.

  It was then, while she was trying to answer, that all hell broke loose. A shot was fired outside the church and, suddenly, the building was overrun with men bearing arms. Men came in the windows, through the back door, from the door behind the altar. Two men must have been hiding in the balcony and they now rose, rifles aimed and ready.

  “I wouldn’t try it if I were you, mister,” said a man with a pistol pointed toward one of Chris’s Montgomery uncles who had his hand to his vest.

  Everyone stood still, looking at the twenty or so men who surrounded the interior of the church. The big double doors in the back were open, three men guarding the entrance.

  Chris watched with widened eyes as she heard a horse approach the back doors. The rider seemed as if he had all day.

  Through the doors rode Tynan on top of a big chestnut stallion, his gun sheathed, looking for all the world as if he were out on a Sunday stroll. He halted about halfway down the aisle, then, with everyone watching in open-mouthed astonishment, with twenty guns aimed at the guests, he took the makings of a cigarette out of his pocket and began to roll one.

  “I don’t guess I can let you do this, Chris,” he said softly, licking the paper to stick it around the tobacco.

  Chris took a step forward, but her father was there before her.

  “You aren’t taking my daughter without being married to her,” Del said. “You’re not going to make a whore of her.”

  “I never meant to. That’s why I came to church.” He hadn’t yet looked at Chris, but kept looking down at that cigarette that was taking a long time to roll.

  Del stepped back. “You can get on with it. The boy’s marrying my daughter.”

  “But—” Asher began but Del grabbed him by the ear as if he were a little boy and pulled him to a pew.

  “You can all sit down,” Del bellowed out to the congregation as if it were the most normal thing in the world that the bridegroom was sitting on top of a horse in the middle of the church. “And you men,” he said to the gunmen around the periphery of the room, “take off your hats.”

  They did as they were bid.

  Chris heard chuckles from the congregation, then they sat down. She turned back to the pastor who looked a little pale and didn’t seem to know what to do. “Perhaps you should hurry before the horse spoils the church,” she whispered. “His name is Samuel James Dysan III, also known as Tynan.”

  “Yes,” the preacher said and cleared his throat.

  This time, Chris didn’t have any trouble answering his questions. Her hearty “I do,” caused the congregation to laugh. When the preacher got to Tynan’s part, she turned back toward him. She wanted to watch his expression when his name was said.

  Tynan blinked a few times, and hesitated, and glanced at Samuel, saw the man nod once, then looked back at Chris—for the first time. “I do,” he said and the congregation broke into applause.

  Chris let out a yell of “hallelujah,” tore off her veil, sent it flying toward Asher and ran toward Tynan on
his horse. He caught her arm, heaved her behind him and backed the horse out of the church amid cheers and yells and guns being fired in jubilation.

  She held onto him with all her might as he thundered across the countryside.

  It was twenty minutes later that he stopped and hauled her around to the front of him and started kissing her. Her dress was unbuttoned to her waist after the first kiss.

  “Wait a minute,” he said, drawing back. “Is anybody going to come after us? I mean, is your father planning to send a posse out after us?”

  “Maybe to send his thanks,” she said, trying to continue kissing him.

  “What was all that back there? Why did that man say my name was Dysan?”

  “Because it is. Oh, Tynan, I have so very much to tell you. I know who you are and about your mother and father and Sam is your grandfather and I’m going to have your baby and what made you come back for me?”

  He sat there looking at her for a moment, not able to take in all of it. “Is your father going to have me sent back to jail?”

  “Only if you desert me.”

  “Ow,” he said as she ran her hands along his ribs. “Stop that.”

  “You’ve been hurt. What happened?”

  He grinned at her. “Lester Chanry found me again.”

  “And what did you do to that poor man this time?”

  “I gave him a piece of the old miner’s gold and told him where the mine was.”

  “So poor Lester will go up there and be met by that old man?” she asked, smiling.

  “They deserve each other.” He began kissing her neck again. “If nobody’s chasing us and we just got married, does that mean we can go somewhere and start the wedding night?”

  “This early in the day?” she asked in mock alarm. “Shouldn’t we wait until night?”

  “It’ll be night by the time I get through kissing your pretty little body.”

  “Oh, well, that’s all right then.”

  “Tomorrow you can tell me all about my—” he grinned, “grandfather, but now I have more important things to think about.”

  Holding her onto the horse, he kicked it forward and started down the road at a breathtaking speed.