fatherâs store. Even then Benteen had been attracted to her, but of course sheâd been too young. From that day on, heâd become a regular customer of Pearceâs Emporium,hoping to catch glimpses of her. During trailing season, her parents didnât allow her to come to the store. Cowboys on the town, even those with the utmost respect for the gentler sex, could sometimes get offensive when theyâd had one too many glasses of red-eye. The Pearces naturally wanted to protect their daughter from such regretable advances.
When Lorna had turned sixteen, Benteen had asked her fatherâs permission to come calling. With some initial reservations about his ability to provide a good living, his request had been granted. Benteen had never doubted from the moment he saw her that he would someday make Lorna his wife.
Before heâd left on the trail drive last spring, heâd asked for her hand in marriage. He hadnât wanted to set a wedding date until heâd found a place for them. Benteen had always known his father would have welcomed him and his bride at the ranch, but there was no future. The Cee Bar was gradually being squeezed out by Judd Boston. It was only a matter of time before Boston acquired it on a tax sale. The ranch couldnât support his father, let alone Benteen and Lorna.
For the last three years heâd been saving every dime he could. Heâd rounded up mavericks and added them to the trail herds heâd taken north. Heâd managed to put almost a thousand dollars aside, with the thought of buying a place where they could build a future. Now that money could go into putting together an outfit to trail north with a herd of maverick longhorns from the Texas brush, since the land in Montana Territory was going to cost him only a filing fee.
Lorna would make him the perfect wife. Her head wasnât filled with dreams about big cities and fancy clothes like his mother. She was sensible and practical âand beautiful. The blood ran strong through his veins.
Lornaâs nerves were all ajumble when she heard the footsteps on the front porch. She didnât have to look atthe clock to know it was Benteen. Her pounding heart told her to run to the door to meet him, but a girl shouldnât appear too anxious. It wasnât properâand, Lord knew, there were times when Benteen made her feel very improper.
She pretended to straighten a setting of silverware on the table, covered with her motherâs best linen cloth. There was a knock at the door. She caught her fatherâs faintly amused glance as he looked up from the dayâs issue of the Fort Worth
Democrat.
âIt must be Benteen,â she murmured.
âMust be,â he agreed dryly and managed to keep the pipe clenched between his teeth as he spoke.
The long skirt of her china-blue dress rustled softly as she moved slowly toward the door. When she passed the oval mirror in the small foyer, Lorna stole one last glance at her reflection. Her dark hair was swept atop her head, making her look much more adult than she had when heâd seen her that afternoon. She hated for him to think her immature, as he sometimes did, she knew. She definitely looked olderâall of eighteen, at least.
When she opened the door, Benteen stood for a minute just looking at her. The bold inspection disturbed her in a way that Lorna wasnât quite sure she should feel. Or maybe it was the change in his appearance that was affecting her.
His hat was in his hand, leaving his head uncovered. Thick brown hair gleamed with polished mahogany lights in the rays of the setting sun. His lean cheeks were freshly shaved, revealing the natural strength of his features. He was wearing a clean white shirt and a string tie. But nothing seemed able to dim that innate power she sensed in him.
âYouâre a little early,â Lorna said. She felt the need to conceal her pleasure, and she knew the clock hadnât