Epilogue
Bode slipped an arm around Comfort’s waist the
moment he became aware that she was stirring in her sleep. He knew
the difference between the lazy feline stretch that meant she was
seeking his warmth and the first fitful movements that were the
portent of a nightmare. He responded to either of these moments in
nearly identical ways, drawing her close, cradling her bottom
against his groin, rubbing his chin gently against her hair. He had
learned that if it was warmth and ease that she wanted, he could
safely close his eyes and drift back to sleep, but if it was a
dream that prompted her restlessness, then it was better for both
of them that he stayed awake.
He stayed awake, waiting. She stirred again and
whimpered. Bode nudged her hair. She’d washed it this evening with
soap infused with peppermint oil. His nostrils flared as he
breathed in the cool, clean scent of her. He whispered her name;
she quieted. Not trusting that the moment had passed, he stared
beyond her head to the fireplace, where gold and orange flames
crackled and occasionally an ember popped.
His gaze shifted to the dressing room door as it
was nudged opened and Thistle emerged. The cat padded silently
toward the bed, crouched, and leapt. Bode batted him away when he
began a precise, delicate walk up Comfort’s leg, but he allowed the
cat to advance again when Thistle decided to test his balance on
his own leg.
“Mind that you watch her elbow,” he whispered to
the cat. “She’ll knock you out.” He thought that Thistle seemed
unconcerned. The cat kneaded the flesh of his upper thigh and
buttock, circled the area twice, and finally curled on Bode’s hip.
“You’re not long for that perch.”
Bode felt Comfort stiffen. That afforded him
enough time to move his chin out of the way. The arm she had under
her pillow went rigid, and she banged her knuckles hard against the
headboard. The bed shuddered. Thistle stood, arched, and jumped
over the arm Comfort flung backward, elbow sharp and high. Bode sat
up, caught Comfort’s arm, and watched the cat flee back to the
dressing room.
“Coward,” he muttered under his breath. He
released Comfort’s arm, stroked her shoulder, and quietly said her
name.
Her eyes fluttered open. She blinked once and
then squinted against the firelight. Bode moved away and gave her
room to turn over. When she did, he slid back under the covers and
propped himself on an elbow, facing her.
She pressed an index finger against his chest.
“Did you call me ‘coward’?”
“The cat.”
“Oh. He was in here?”
“Briefly. You scared him away.”
Comfort folded her finger back and lightly
knuckled the underside of Bode’s chin. “But not you.” She smiled.
“I’m glad of that.”
He glanced at the carafe of water and glass on
the bedside table. “Are you thirsty?”
She nodded. When Bode started to rise, she
stopped him. “I can get it.” She pushed herself up into a sitting
position, folded her legs tailor fashion, and poured water into the
glass. She drained the first glass quickly but only sipped the
second one. “It’s been months since I dreamed about the raid on the
wagon train. That’s good, isn’t it? I think it must be good.”
He smiled. “I’m sure it is.”
Comfort was visited by nightmares off and on for
several weeks after Crocker had been laid out on the study carpet.
Although Newt and Tuck made sure the Pinkerton man and his
followers were escorted to the county jail before dawn broke, no
one, least of all Comfort, held out any real hope that they
wouldn’t be freed. Bode visited the jail every day for almost three
weeks to test the alertness of the guards and discover all the ways
the jail was vulnerable to an attack. During that time, Newt and
Tuck applied legal, political, and financial pressure to the city
council to thwart similar influencing efforts out of Sacramento.
The Pinkerton Agency insisted that Crocker was working within the
scope of an investigation but would not offer any details to the
newspapers.
Lack of information fed speculation for a time,
but in the end the public grew weary of smoke without fire and
turned their attention to a scandal involving a brothel owner named
Maggie Drummond and her lawsuit against David Bancroft of Croft
Federal. She alleged he failed to make payments on a line of credit
that she’d extended to him over a period of eighteen months. He
insisted he’d never frequented her establishment. While the city
reveled in the classic she said/he said debate, Crocker and the
pair who’d followed him remained behind bars, no longer the subject
of gossip and rumor.
The morning after Comfort’s last nightmare, Bode
didn’t visit the jail. He also didn’t make an appearance that
afternoon. In his absence, a mob stormed the county jail at
nightfall, overpowered the police, and made off with all the
prisoners through a back door that opened into a narrow alley. The
authorities initially blamed the Rangers, but that theory didn’t
hold up under scrutiny. Not all of the prisoners had ties to the
gang, and there were witnesses who reported the prisoners weren’t
freed as much as they were carried off. The police revised their
thinking and looked to the crimps and runners who swarmed the wharf
like pirates and engaged in the practice of shanghaiing.
When not one of the prisoners reappeared anywhere
in the city in the following two months, it was assumed they’d been
pressed into service on one of the ships making a China run. The
harbormaster’s records indicated that four ships sailed before
daybreak: King’s Ransom of the Barclay Line; Mannering’s
Sea Pearl; the British merchant Loch Err; and Black
Crowne’s flagship, Artemis Queen.
The harbormaster stood by his records and his
recollection of the night’s events, giving a particularly detailed
account of how Mr. John Farwell had managed to cause nothing less
than chaos when he insisted on a departure schedule that was at
odds with what had been agreed upon. Farwell was so damnably
adamant that sides were drawn, and the crews of every vessel began
shouting curses and threats and waving weapons with the expressed
intention of commandeering one another’s ships. The harbormaster
settled the dispute by holding out a torch and threatening to burn
every ship to a hulk unless the masters took control of their men.
To punish Farwell, he did a second inspection of the Artemis
Queen on the pretense that she wasn’t yet seaworthy and that
releasing her to the open water would risk the life of every man
aboard. Farwell had nothing to do but swear and sputter on the pier
as the other three merchants were released.
It was the harbormaster’s opinion that John
Farwell was guilty of being a horse’s ass, but he could be
acquitted of pressing the city’s prisoners into service on Black
Crowne ships. Two inspections had revealed nothing.
The direction of Bode’s thoughts raised his
slight smile, one that didn’t go unnoticed by Comfort.
“What are you thinking?” she asked.
A chuckle rumbled at the back of his throat.
“That John Farwell is a very good man.”
She lowered her glass. “You’re thinking about
John Farwell? Here? In our bed?”
“Sure. As far as I know, he’s the only other man
to ever share a bed with my wife.”
Comfort dipped three fingers in her glass and
flicked water at him. “You weren’t my husband then.”
“That’s all you’re going to say?”
She set the glass aside, leaned forward, and
kissed him full on the mouth. “That’s all I’m going to say.”
“Cheeky.” Bode caught her by the elbows when she
would have drawn away. “Let me see if I can taste that sass.” What
he tasted was her laughter, and that was satisfying in its own
right. She was smiling, contented and a little pleased with
herself, when he raised the covers and helped her nestle in beside
him. They faced each other, he with an elbow raising his head, she
with one arm pushed under her pillow. Comfort drew up her knees,
and Bode stretched out. Her back was to the firelight so that her
face was in shadow, while his features were cast in a bronze glow.
She found his hand and threaded her fingers through his.
“I’m not certain why I had the dream tonight,”
she said. “I was very happy with how this evening turned out. It
doesn’t make any sense.”
One of Bode’s eyebrows kicked up. “Alexandra can
provoke a nightmare even in people who aren’t susceptible to them.
You need look no further than my mother’s visit for the
catalyst.”
“She was on her best behavior, Bode. And really,
wouldn’t it have been more reasonable for me to have had the dream
last night when I was anticipating entertaining her?”
“You hardly slept last night,” he reminded her.
“I know. I was there. You didn’t have time to dream.”
Comfort squeezed his fingers. “I’m sorry. I
tossed and turned a lot, didn’t I?” She raised his hand to her
mouth and kissed his knuckles when he nodded. “You know,” she said
thoughtfully, “the next time we invite her to dinner, perhaps we
could ask Bram to come as well.”
“I don’t think so.”
“All right.” She didn’t press. She waited for the
tension that she felt in his handclasp to fade. He’d resisted, too,
when she first suggested having his mother to dinner. Newt and Tuck
offered no objections, but Bode had plenty, although what he mostly
said was no. It wasn’t that he never saw his mother, only that he
visited her as a matter of business. Ever since Jones Prescott
assumed the debt for Black Crowne, Bode had been exercising
complete control over his mother’s spending. Bram no longer
received an allowance. Bode invited his brother to work for Black
Crowne, but as soon as Bram’s leg healed enough for him to be up
and around on crutches, he took a position working for the law firm
of Wheeler and Sutton, making a clerk’s wages, and moved into the
apartment above the Black Crowne office once it was clear that
Comfort and Bode would not return. He paid rent. Bode remained
skeptical of Bram’s turn, prepared to learn at any moment that his
brother was only playing at assuming duty and a conscience. Perhaps
if Newt and Tucker weren’t exacting their revenge by letting Bram
know at every turn that they were watching him, he would have
already begun his descent into gaming and whoring, but Comfort
didn’t think so.
“I won’t bring it up at again,” she said.
“Yes, you will.” His brief smile removed any
accusation from his words. “But you’ll choose the moment very well.
And I might say yes . . . eventually.”
Not only was it the best she could hope for right
now, Comfort decided, it was probably for the best. “Alexandra said
something this evening that I wasn’t certain I understood.”
“Oh? What was that?”
“I think you know, Bode. She said it to
you.”
He sensed a trap and proceeded cautiously.
“Perhaps you better just tell me what it was.”
She chuckled appreciatively. “I don’t know why I
thought I could catch more with a net than a pole. Very well. She
said it was right and proper what you had done. I had stepped out
of the room, so I didn’t hear everything that came before, but I
heard her mention Mr. Crocker.”
“Oh, that. You and my mother go fishing with the
same net. She believes I had something to do with that incident at
the jail.”
“Does she? So do my uncles. So do I,
actually.”
“Really?”
She searched his face, but he was giving nothing
away. He looked vaguely amused. “Really.”
“Mm.” He slipped his fingers from hers and
touched her cheek with his knuckle. “You know, if you’ve been
thinking about that this evening, it could explain your
nightmare.”
He was right. Crocker had been hovering at the
back of her mind even before she overheard Alexandra’s remark to
Bode. Alexandra’s mere presence had prompted the first inklings.
Had Bode suspected that might happen? Probably. “It’s more than a
little disconcerting that you know me so well.”
“For me, too.”
That made her smile. He traced the shape of it
with his fingertip before he tapped her lightly on the chin.
“Put him out of your mind, Comfort.”
Still uncertain, she nodded anyway.
“He’s not coming back. Not to San Francisco. Not
to California. Not ever.”
Comfort knew it as an absolute truth. Bode’s
features were no longer shuttered. His candor made him vulnerable,
but he returned her steady regard without flinching. “All right,”
she said.
“Good.” He leaned down and kissed her on the
forehead. “Sleep.”
She slipped her arms around his neck and lifted
her face. Her lips brushed his chin. “Not just yet,” she said. “In
a little while, yes, but not just now.”
Her mouth was gentle on his, almost tentative, as
though she had never kissed him before, searching out the right way
to slant her head and avoid bumping his nose. He kissed her back
almost as awkwardly. Soft laughter bubbled up between them.
“I think we would have kissed like that,” she
whispered. “The first time, I mean, when I was sixteen and you were
going off to war. I’ve thought about it.”
“Have you?”
“Mm. Why didn’t you ask me to dance?”
“You were sixteen and I was going off to
war.”
“That’s what my uncles said.”
“They were probably relieved.”
Her smile was a shade rueful. “They said that,
too.”
Bode fingered the hair at her nape. “You looked
as if you wanted to be anywhere but where you were. Do you remember
that?”
She nodded, sighing softly. “It’s just as well.
If you had approached me, I would have run the other way.”
“More likely you would have stabbed me with one
of the combs you had in your hair.”
“Do you think so?” she asked, pleased.
“I do.”
He made love to her then, first to the girl she’d
been at their introduction, and later to the woman she’d become. By
turns he was cautious and caring, deliberate and dangerous. She met
him halfway, easy in his arms, playing out the hand he dealt.
She loved him back, her heart full and open,
unafraid that she’d come to this pass where she could want him so
badly that she ached with it. Long before she understood his
intent, he had been waiting for her, watching over her, always just
there at the periphery no matter how often she turned her head. He
filled her vision now, and that was exactly as it should be.
She looked in his eyes and imagined she saw what
was reflected in her own. They were as furtive as thieves in the
night, the two of them, trading secretive, knowing glances while
they bartered touch for pleasure and guarding their voices to
exchange words whispered in passion for laughter.
Afterward, when she rested her head on his
shoulder, Bode felt her expel a soft breath. He thought she might
say something, but she yawned sleepily instead and closed her eyes.
That was all right, then. He idly stroked the arm she slid across
his chest and listened to her breathing quiet. He kissed the crown
of her head, a slip of a smile touching his lips, and in the
stillness of the room it wasn’t long before he drifted off to
sleep, unapologetically stealing Comfort.