TT2: Becky's Debt—Chapters 23 & 24
REMINDER: I write long stories. Many chapters don't have naughty bits, but those that do will be way more fun if you read the others, too! Also, although TT2 is a stand-alone novel, it takes place in the same family as Texas Trio, so you might want to read that one first! --Stefanie
NOTE: The chapter numbers 24a & 24b don't adhere to the book, but I'm leaving them here in a bid for happy-reader brownie-points: back when I could depend on having semi-regular writing and uploading opportunities, I planned to split the text at that point and make you guys wait a week before coming across with 24b! (greedy hand-grasping, evil grin). Alas, my imploding life makes such shenanigans impractical
.
.
. I'll have to rely on other methods of amusing myself! You're welcome!
—:—:—:—:—Chapter 23 —:—:—:—:—
Brody began showing up after dinner almost every night to walk out with Becky.
Her fears about being too innocent for Brody turned out not to be an issue: as though they knew something had happened to change her attitude toward him, Colt and Jeremiah suddenly became even more vigilant guardians of Becky's virtue. Nanny began to seem like a soft touch when compared to Becky's two protective older brothers, and no one had ever called Nanny a soft touch.
Colt and Jem didn't want to do the chaperoning themselves, but they did want final say over whether a chaperone was or was not qualified for the job. Many applicants failed to live up to their standards. Nanny was acceptable, of course, as were Cookie and Louella. Yan was deemed too young until she heard about it the following day and gave Jeremiah a severe dressing‑down in the kitchen, threatening him with the mallet Cookie used to mash chicken bones for Topper. Jem told Colt he was afraid to refuse, which was good enough for Colt: if Yan could scare Jeremiah into giving her the job while speaking only Chinese, he was sure she could scare Brody into keeping his hands to himself.
Their top two choices as chaperones were Caleb and Clancy.
Clancy said he'd be happy to do it: he'd hook up the pony cart and trail them around anytime the bosses asked him, night or day.
Rebecca was forced to take a stand and veto Clancy. It was bad enough that she and Brody were forced to endure a chaperone—she objected to that, of course, but she absolutely refused to have a chaperone who spent the whole evening muttering insults at her suitor. Jem blamed the veto on Nanny instead of telling the truth, because he knew Clancy wouldn't question Nanny. Jem was right: Clancy took it like a man.
Caleb communicated his disgust with a stare that had everyone but Nanny looking at the ceiling. Nanny prevailed.
So, Becky and Brody were most often accompanied by Caleb, who paced them at a discrete distance, ever‑watchful.
Caleb made it clear he didn't see the point—the man would get to her eventually—any idiot could see that, but his wife had asked him to stand in for her, and that's what he did. Whenever Brody got too close, Caleb grunted. Since "too close," was defined as what Caleb thought Nanny would think was too close, holding hands was all that got done on Caleb's shift.
Yan was equally as diligent in her duties, but Brody developed a fondness for teasing Yan, who reminded him of his stable-man's wife, an under-cook in his kitchen back home. He'd sidle ever-closer to Becky, until he'd provoked Yan into trying to hit him with the birch switch she'd cut for the purpose, then he'd hide behind Becky until Yan stalked back to her post, insulting him in Chinese as she tried to hide her grin.
Overall, though, Becky and Brody preferred Louella or Margaret, a widow from town who came out twice a week to help with what Catherine called the "heavy cleaning": bleaching, which was done in a pot of lye over an open fire; turning mattresses, washing windows, cleaning kerosene lanterns, and scrubbing soot off the hearths and fire surrounds. Between the cleaning and the four children waiting for her at home, Margaret didn't have the energy to care about Brody and Becky getting frisky. She was businesslike in view of the ranch‑house and kind to the lovers once they were away under the trees.
"I'm gonna rest right here on this rock. You two don't go too far, hear? And keep your braces on, Mr. Easton."
Brody didn't wear suspenders, but he knew what Margaret meant. Every so often, she'd call softly to them, and Becky and Brody would walk back to where she could see they remained clothed.
Louella was more zealous, but also sympathetic. She stayed in sight, but would periodically turn away, as though watching birds or admiring the sunset. She always hummed to let them know it was time and stopped suddenly on a louder note, so they'd know their time was up.
In this way, Brody and Becky accomplished a lot of walking, a lot of talking, quite a bit of kissing, and a tiny bit of petting—on Margaret's shift, of course. Brody made absolutely sure he was there on the days Margaret worked. He would have been there every night, if he hadn't thought Colt would shoot him for it.
Neither Brody nor Becky would have admitted it, but it was actually a perfect courtship—they had plenty of time to learn about each other.
They learned they were both orphans who didn't remember their parents.
They both liked to read, though not at all the same types of books. Becky read science, news, and occasionally philosophy. She knew where wars were being fought and when borders changed. Brody read almost exclusively novels and travel books. She found it horrifying that he didn't care what was happening around the world.
"Are the Russians invading Texas?"
"No."
"San Francisco?"
"No."
"Then why should I care?"
Try as she might, Becky failed to convince him that current events were important.
On the other hand, what she initially considered "dull travel books" were educational in surprising ways. When she bored Brody with dictatorial regimes, he told her how the region's history contributed to what she'd told him was happening there. Becky thought of history as a dead thing, but when she wanted to discuss the current conflict in Eritrea, Brody knew right away why it was significant.
"But that's geography, and geology, and agriculture," Becky protested, after he'd talked for ten minutes about the Red Sea, fertile highlands, and fishing in the Dahlak Archipelago.
"Yes, but writers who travel often like to see rocky coastlines or climb mountains and eat local cuisine."
"Mmm," Becky said thoughtfully, and stopped calling Brody's travel books "dull."
They were very different: Brody knew a little about a wide range of disparate topics, while Becky was intensely focused on a few specific subjects. Brody was much less serious by nature, gregarious, and widely‑traveled. Becky was politically well‑versed and friendly, but she was more comfortable at home with her family.
"Maybe it's because I've never been anywhere," she wondered aloud.
"You said you spent summers in New England."
"As a child, with school‑mates. We didn't visit museums and cathedrals: we rowed and played croquet."
Brody wanted to show Rebecca the world, take her to the finest restaurants, the most luxurious hotels . . . he laughed to himself: she'd end up in the basement, examining furnaces and stone foundations.
To him, her life sounded idyllic and sheltered. Though she'd lost her parents at a young age: she'd been raised by family and had never been separated from her sister for longer than a few weeks.
He'd stayed with an uncle for a while, Brody said, but they didn't get along.
Becky heard something in his voice and guessed his one‑sentence coda about running away failed to mention a lot of beatings. She'd been beaten once, too, but Colt and Jem had rescued them immediately; no one was there to rescue Brody.
"I have to tell you something," he said, after they'd been walking out together for several weeks.
He was so serious that Becky's heart sent a frantic pulse‑beat of alarm to her temples. He was leaving, going back to San Francisco. She bit the inside of her lip and clutched her fingers in her lap to avoid hanging on his arm and begging him to stay, reminding herself that she wasn't interested in marriage or courting.
They were sitting on a fallen tree that would soon be firewood, but for now acted as nature's serendipitous bench. Brody looked down at his hands.
"My foster mother--"
Becky released the breath she'd been holding in a rush, trying to do it silently while still paying attention. She knew about Miss May Murray, of course, and how wonderful she'd been to Brody, but his tone of voice told her this was something else.
"I was about fourteen when a storekeeper from Minneapolis started courting May. For no particular reason, I didn't like the man, though he gave me a job in his store and seemed nice enough. No one had anything bad to say about him. He and May got engaged, were supposed to be married the next year, but at the end of the summer, she told me she was breaking off their engagement. She didn't say why, and I didn't ask. We had a big shipment come in that weekend, and I slept in the storeroom Saturday night so I could get up early and start work again. When I got home Sunday night, she was dead."
Becky started, putting a hand to her throat as though choking off the cry which had risen there.
"He'd . . . violated her . . . beaten her almost to death, then slid a knife into her heart. I couldn't prove it, of course. I was just a boy. No one listened to me."
Brody held her hand between his own, without looking up. She was crying by then, silent tears for the lonely, lost boy he'd been, and for May, the woman who'd taken such good care of him.
"That's not what I have to tell you, though." He patted the back of her hand. "After the gravedigger finished covering her up, I went and got my stuff—didn't have much--" He laughed, not a funny sound at all. "--and I slit the storekeepers throat while he slept."
His tone didn't change.
"I stole everything I could carry from that store in one night, all the gold, jewelry, and cash in his safe, and struck out for Cassiar."
Brody shrugged. "You know most of the rest, but I got my start in the gold fields selling merchandise I stole from the store of a man I murdered, and I thought you should know that."
Becky's small hand was clenched tightly about his, he realized. He looked up to find her face tear‑streaked and furrowed with emotion. Brody straightened in alarm, sure she was crying for what they might have had together if he weren't a thief and a murderer.
He turned toward her. "Becky, I'm so sorry--"
Becky fell across his lap, sobbing, and he comforted her as well as he was able while his own heart tore in two. When she'd cried herself out, he gave her his handkerchief, apologizing again.
Becky waved her hand to stop his speech, her palm so close she was practically polishing his nose. When she finished mopping her eyes and blowing her nose (he wondered inanely how ladies managed to sound so
ladylike
while blowing their noses) she rested her head on his shoulder.
"I'm crying for you, not for me, ninny."
A great welling of gladness filled Brody's belly and came rolling out in a deep rumble of laughter, because she'd called him a ninny.
Becky lifted her head with a questioning glance.
Brody hugged her back to his side. "You called me a ninny."
"And . . .?"
"You wouldn't call me a ninny if you were sending me away."
Becky sat straight up and hit him, an easy fist to his ribcage.
He 'oof'ed to make her happy.
"How could you think I wouldn't understand
that
, Brody Easton?" She rose and turned away with a haughty flounce and her nose in the air.
Brody was faster, though, and vaulted the log, stepping into her path and falling directly to his knees with a pleading, upturned face. "I beg your forgiveness, Miss Connor. Please allow me to make it up to you in some way."