Author Elizabeth Lane
Book Excerpt
"Christmas Moon"
by Elizabeth Lane
Excerpt from "Christmas Moon"
PROLOGUE
From THE CHEYENNE DAILY LEADER, February 21, 1872
FAMED LAWMAN MURDERED IN WYOMING SALOON
On the night of February 17 of this year, J.D. McNulty, once counted among
Wyoming’s greatest lawmen, was shot dead by a gambler in a quarrel over a card
game.
The incident occurred at Glory Gulch, a played-out gold mining camp located in
the Wind River Mountains above South Pass City. According to witnesses, McNulty
was seated at a table in the Laughing Lady Saloon, playing poker with a gambler
named Virgil Pomeroy, a traveling photographer named Asa Smith and two local
miners. An hour into the game McNulty, who was unarmed at the time, accused
Pomeroy of using a holdout. After an angry exchange of words, the gambler drew a
derringer from his vest and fired two shots. The first bullet wounded McNulty in
the shoulder. The second toppled him backward onto the floor where he expired in
the arms of an unidentified saloon girl. He was 44 years old at the time of his
death.
Pomeroy fled on a stolen horse after the shooting. His present whereabouts is
unknown.
J.D. McNulty was appointed deputy sheriff of Fremont County in 1868.
Subsequently, he served as Marshal in Cheyenne and later in Laramie, where he
single-handedly dispatched the murderous Cleary gang in Wyoming’s most famous
gunfight.
His body was taken by wagon to South Pass City for burial, there being no level
ground for a cemetery in Glory Gulch.
Mr. Asa Smith, a witness to the shooting, photographed McNulty’s body laid out
in its coffin. For those wishing to pay their respects, the picture will be on
display for the next 30 days in the front window of this newspaper office.
Cletis Morgan, Reporter
CHAPTER ONE
South Pass City, Wyoming
December 24, 2010 Emma Carlyle was on the trail of a man. A man who’d been dead
for more than a hundred years.
Here, in the old mining town where he was buried, lay her last hope of learning
his secrets.
Emma’s‘95 Subaru wagon fishtailed as she swung into the icy parking lot and
pulled up next to a gritty eight-foot mountain of plowed snow. Outside, the
winter hills glittered in blinding sunlight. The sky was a clear cerulean blue.
For a December day it was downright breathtaking. But Emma had lived in Wyoming
long enough to know that when she opened the door, the air would be cold enough
to sear her skin and freeze the moisture in her lungs.
Grunting with effort, she twisted toward the door and struggled to zip her goose
down parka over her bulging belly. Beyond the barrier of snow piles she could
see the half-buried entry booth and the large, painted red and white sign that
welcomed summer visitors to South Pass City. December 24 was not the best time
for a visit to a ghost town turned tourist attraction. But Emma had come on an
errand of desperation.
She was trailing a man—a compelling, elusive and troubled man who’d captured her
imagination and more than a little of her heart. Jethro Darlington McNulty had
stood six-three barefoot and towered another two inches in his boots. His eyes,
set in a hauntingly chiseled face, had been as blue as an October sky. When he
was out for a good time, those eyes could flash enough sexual magnetism to make
women tumble into his bed. Lit by anger, their cold fury would have sent the
likes of Eastwood and McQueen scurrying to Wardrobe for a change of underwear.
Legend and loner, J.D. had been an enigma to all who knew him—which made him an
absolutely maddening subject for Emma’s master’s thesis. The man’s penchant for
secrecy would have driven a saint over the edge. And Emma was no saint. In
conservative Lander, where she’d taught high school history for the past ten
years, her burgeoning belly and lack of a wedding ring said it all.
The thesis had given her a good excuse to request a year off. By now, however,
the whole town knew why she wasn’t at school. As the locals put it, the very
proper Miss Carlyle had gotten herself knocked up.
The baby, a girl, was kicking like a healthy little ninja. No cause for worry
there, thank heaven. But the thesis was driving Emma toward an emotional
meltdown. She had promised her advisor at the University of Wyoming that she’d
have the first draft mailed before her January 3 due date. But she’d made that
promise five months ago, before she’d understood the juju that a solo pregnancy
could work on a woman’s mind and body. This morning, as she’d stood by the
fridge in her flannel nightgown, wolfing down Pepperidge Farm Chocolate Chunk
cookies and staring at the Vesuvius of paperwork that littered her kitchen
table, Emma had broken down and bawled. It was no use. Her research on the
legendary gunfighter had more holes in it than J.D.’s Peacemaker had blasted
through the infamous Cleary Gang. She needed help, or maybe a confounded
miracle. An Internet search had brought up the name of an expert in local
history, a woman who ran a little bookstore in South Pass City. After a quick
phone call, Emma had struggled into clean black maternity slacks and a baggy red
sweater, dabbed on a smidgen of lipstick and too much mascara, and slicked back
her dark blond hair. That done, she’d stuffed her notes and manuscript into her
canvas briefcase and shoveled a path to her car. South Pass City was less than
an hour away on State Highway 28. The weather was decent, the road was clear,
and just in case anything went wrong, she had her cell phone in her purse, fully
charged.
Given a choice, Emma would have taken the graveled Loop Road through the
mountains, to the place where an overgrown wagon trail wound up a side canyon
toward Glory Gulch. She’d hiked that trail last fall, on a sunny day when
crimson maple and bright gold aspen blazed across the slopes. Nothing had
remained of the mining camp but a few tumbledown shacks and rock chimneys rising
out of the bracken. A pimply-faced young ranger had shown her the ruined cabin
where J.D. had spent his last winter, and the saloon where he’d died. A chill
had passed through her fingers as she’d touched the faded brownish bloodstain on
the floor. Emma had tried to picture Glory Gulch in the dead of winter. But
there’d be no going back to see it now. The mountain road was closed and
wouldn’t be passable again till spring. So here she was, after a pleasant drive
on a highway that wound upward between glistening walls of snow. She could only
hope that her visit to Tilly’s Book Nook would turn out to be worth the trip.
South Pass City was a restored historic site, a relic of the late 1860s gold
rush. In winter the exhibits shut down, but a few hardy people lived there year
round. Tilly Farson was one of them. She’d mentioned over the phone that since
her shop was also her home, Emma would be welcome to drop by anytime.
Now Emma picked her way between the huge mounds of plowed snow, taking shallow
breaths and shifting her weight to anchor the soles of her fleece-lined boots.
Snowmobiles had packed a trail along the street, saving her from having to
flounder through hip-high drifts; but a frigid wind had sprung up, blasting
sheets of snow across her path. For someone who couldn’t see her own feet, it
was treacherous going. By the time she spotted the quaintly lettered sign on the
bookstore, her face was a frozen mask.
Tilly’s Book Nook was housed in a vintage barbershop with a squared false front.
The windows had been shuttered against the cold but the front door swung open at
Emma’s knock. The woman on the threshold was built like the Willendorf
Venus—short and stocky, dressed in plum velveteen stretch pants and shearling
boots. The buttons of a hand knit snowflake cardigan strained over her outsized
bosom. Her silvery hair was cut in a plain Dutch bob with rimless bifocals
jutting from beneath her bangs. “Oh, you poor dear!” she crooned, sweeping Emma
inside. “You must be half frozen! Here, don’t worry about your wet boots. Just
take off your coat and have a chair by the stove!” The bookstore was a haven of
cozy warmth. Floor to ceiling shelves lined the walls, crammed with books on
western history and used paperback novels. Tendrils of asparagus fern trailed
from a hanging pot in one corner. Two tartan-covered wing chairs with a rosewood
tea table between them were drawn up before a glowing potbellied stove. Emma
hadn’t planned to unburden herself, but over homemade oatmeal cookies and
steaming mugs of hot cocoa, the whole soap opera came pouring out—the man she’d
thought of as her lifetime love until she’d answered that phone call from his
wife; her surprise pregnancy and, finally, her wrenching decision to give the
baby up for adoption. “It won’t be easy, but I know it’s for the best.” Emma
laid a hand on her belly and felt the subtle stirring beneath her palm. “My own
mother was unmarried. We lived in a trailer park, and she was so steeped in
pills and alcohol that I practically raised myself. I...” Emma paused to swallow
the tight lump in her throat. “I’m afraid I don’t have the genes to be a good
mother.” Tilly listened, punctuating Emma’s words with sympathetic little
clucks. “Does the father know?” she asked gently.
Emma nodded. “He offered to pay for an abortion. I told him to go to hell.”
“Good for you! Men can be such jackasses!” Tilly sighed as she refilled Emma’s
mug from a blue enameled pot. “What a shame we women can’t seem to get along
without them. It would make life so much simpler, wouldn’t it?” Emma forced her
mind back to her quest. “Right now the only man in my life is J.D. McNulty, and
he’s driving me crazy.” Tilly chuckled. “J.D. was known to have that effect on
women. And you can see why. Just look at him!” She inclined her head toward a
framed poster that hung on the wall behind the antique brass cash register. Emma
had seen the photograph before. Taken in Cheyenne, where J.D had been marshal
for eighteen months, it showed a rangy man in his late thirties, dressed for
work in a dark woolen shirt and knotted tie. His left hand rested lightly on the
ivory grip of his Colt. 45 Peacemaker, which hung in its holster from a heavy
cartridge belt. The silver star of his office blazed on his cowhide vest. With
his long square jaw, sharply chiseled face and melancholy eyes, he looked like a
young Henry Fonda. Throw in one devilishly quirked eyebrow and a body that would
do credit to Tarzan, and you were looking at Hollywood material. “How could you
not fall in love with that?” Tilly teased. “Confess now, haven’t you at least
developed a little crush on the man?” “Does it show that much?” Emma’s cheeks
blazed as she recalled the erotic dreams she’d been having the past few nights.
Good grief, she was pathetic! A woman in her ninth month, as big as a cow, with
a raging case of the hots for a man who’d been dead since 1872!
“I thought so.” Tilly flashed her a wink. “Now, how can I help you, dear?” Emma
reached for her briefcase. “For starters, since we’re talking about men and
their attributes, was J.D. ever known to be a jackass?” Tilly’s eyebrows
crinkled above lenses the diameter and thickness of silver dollars. They
reflected the light in the room, masking her eyes. “Oh, J.D. had his moments. He
was a man, after all, with a full set of male complications. But he was honest
in his dealings and, as far as I know, he never raised his hand against a woman.
That’s more than you can say for some of our so-called western heroes. Take
Wyatt Earp—now there was a real jackass for you, the way he treated his first
wife. And Bill Hickock wasn’t much better, especially in his later years.” “You
almost sound as if you knew them.” “Look around you, dearie.” Tilly’s gesture
encompassed the overflowing bookshelves. “What do you think I do here all
winter, with nothing but a cranky old tomcat for company? I read. Histories,
journals, letters, you name it. Some of those old boys are as real to me as you
are—J.D. in particular, because he spent so much time in these parts. Why, it’s
likely he got his hair and whiskers barbered in this very room.” She set her cup
down and leaned closer. “Sometimes I imagine that when the barber was sweeping
up, little bits of J.D.’s hair fell between the floorboards. They could still be
there, right under our feet.” In the warm stillness, Emma could feel her baby
kicking. She willed herself to unzip her briefcase and ease out the sheaf of
papers she’d stuffed into a manila folder. A single page slipped loose and
fluttered onto the braided rug. Tilly bent down, picked it up and handed it back
to her.
It was a copy of the most widely published photograph ever taken of J.D.
McNulty. He was laid out in his open casket, dressed in a suit and tie, his eyes
closed, his long, elegant hands folded across his chest. He looked older here
than in the picture on Tilly’s wall. His dark hair was longer and lightly
silvered at the temples. His weathered face sported a well-trimmed moustache.
Even as a corpse, J.D. was beautiful. But Emma had never liked looking at the
grisly portrait. “I know that picture well.” Tilly leaned back into her chair,
gazing into the ruby glow behind the stove’s mica panes. “J.D.’s grave isn’t far
from here. But nothing really dies, you know. The chemical elements, the energy
particles that hold us together, they just get rearranged. Wood becomes heat and
smoke and ash, and then maybe soil for a new tree. As for people...” Her voice
trailed off for a moment. “Every place we go, every life we touch, we leave a
little piece of ourselves behind. We’re all connected, in the present, in the
past, for all time. If that isn’t immortality, I don’t know what is.” The
silence in the room was warm and deep. Emma felt herself growing drowsy.
Blinking herself awake, she held out the sheaf of papers to Tilly. “Here’s what
I’ve done so far. I’ve tagged my questions with these pink sticky notes. Maybe
you can help me fill in some blanks.” Tilly was more than willing to lend her
expertise. Most of Emma’s questions were swiftly answered. But there were some
puzzles that even Tilly couldn’t resolve. One of them concerned the saloon girl
who’d clasped the dying J.D. in her arms.
Emma dug into her briefcase and pulled out a file crammed with photocopied
research. “I have the newspaper accounts here, and this later story, based on an
interview with Asa Smith, the photographer who was there. He adds a few more
details—like the piano playing “Beautiful Dreamer” in the background, right up
until the first shot. But even he doesn’t mention the name of the girl.
“I’m guessing no one knew her real identity. A lot of those girls would change
their names to keep from shaming their families. The person who reported the
shooting probably didn’t think her name mattered.” “But she could have been
important,” Emma protested. “What if she was in love with J.D.? What if he was
in love with her?” Tilly’s lips tightened in an enigmatic smile. “We’ll never
know, will we, dear? It’s one of those mysteries that make the past so
intriguing.” Emma shuffled through her pages. “Well, here’s an even bigger
mystery for you. Why did J.D. drop out of sight after that big gunfight in
Laramie? What happened to him? How did he end up in a rundown mining camp like
Glory Gulch?” Tilly’s fingers toyed with a loose pewter button on her sweater.
“Only J.D. could’ve answered those questions, and he was the sort who played his
cards close to his vest, as they say. But I can tell you one thing. J.D. McNulty
was a man who carried a load of pain in his gut. It ate at him something awful.
Made him do things that weren’t in his best interest. Self-destruction—that
would be the fancy term they use for it these days. In the end, I suspect that
was what really killed him.” Emma waited, eager to hear more, but Tilly had
fallen silent again. The only sound in the little shop was the slow crackle of
burning sapwood in the stove. From the next room, an unseen clock chimed four.
Tilly rose from her chair, wincing as her legs straightened. “I’ve kept you too
long, dear,” she said. “This twinge in my left knee tells me there’s a storm
moving in. You’d best be heading back to Lander before the roads get bad.”
Reluctantly, Emma stuffed the papers back into her briefcase. She had a world of
questions for this woman who talked about J.D. as if he’d been a close friend.
“I wish we had more time,” she said. “But you’ve already been so much help. I
can’t thank you enough.” “It was my pleasure. Come back anytime.” Tilly had
begun clearing the tea table. “I’ll bag some of these cookies for you to take
along. You can nibble them while you work on your thesis.” Emma shrugged into
her parka, picked up her purse and gratefully accepted the bagged cookies. “Will
you be all right out there?” Tilly asked. “I’d be happy to walk you back to your
car.” “Thanks, but I’ll be fine.” Emma moved toward the door but Tilly stopped
her with a touch on her arm.
“Are you sure, dear? About giving up your baby, I mean. Forgive an old woman’s
meddling, but I sense such a deep sadness in you, such reluctance...” Emma shook
her head. “It’s all arranged. The papers have been signed and the parents are
waiting to take her home from the hospital. This little girl deserves a better
life than I could ever give her.” Her vision blurred as she opened the door and
stepped outside into the brittle sunlight. In the west, a bank of mud gray
clouds drifted along the horizon. There was no other sign of the storm Tilly had
predicted, but the air was so cold that every breath formed a frosty puff of
vapor in front of Emma’s face.
Minutes later she was in her car, teeth chattering as she waited for the heater
to kick in. The frigid steering wheel stung her palms as she pulled out of the
parking lot and headed back toward the paved highway.
She had every reason to feel elated, Emma told herself. Tilly had given her
enough information to finish the thesis, maybe even on schedule if the baby
wasn’t in a hurry to get here.
But it was Christmas Eve and she’d be going home to an empty house. The thesis
had drained so much of her energy that she hadn’t even vacuumed, let alone put
up a tree or hung a string of lights. All she wanted for Christmas this year was
to get the miserable holiday behind her.
The baby was kicking hard. Emma stifled a yelp as the tiny feet delivered a
volley of rapid-fire jabs to her bladder. The sensations that shot through her
body would have made a nun swear. She sighed as the kicks subsided. “None of
this is your fault, kiddo,” she murmured. “You can’t help it if your mother was
a silly old maid who thought she’d found love and your father was a jerk in
disguise. But never mind that. You’re going to have a life—a wonderful life with
a mom and dad who’ll read you bedtime stories and go to your soccer games and
love you as much as if you’d been born to them. Maybe more.” Maybe almost as
much as I do. Lord, she was getting maudlin now. Desperate for a diversion, Emma
punched the radio button. A twangy country-western version of “Santa Claus is
Coming to Town” blared out of the speakers. Turning up the volume, she began to
sing along. By the time she’d made it through “Silver Bells” and “Grandma Got
Run Over by A Reindeer,” Emma was actually feeling a glimmer of Christmas
spirit. But the disk jockey at the radio station couldn’t leave well enough
alone. The next selection was Elvis Presley’s “I’ll Be Home For Christmas,” a
song that had always made her weepy. This time The King’s velvety tenor
triggered a freshet of tears. They spilled out of her eyes, trailing black
mascara down her cheeks. For Emma, home was no place at all. Her mother had long
since died of drink and despair, and she had no other family. Soon her baby
daughter would be gone, too. There’d be no little stocking by the fireplace in
years to come, no cookies for Santa, no dolls under the tree. Emma’s fingers
tightened on the steering wheel. “Oh, damn...” she muttered, biting back sobs.
“Oh, damn, damn, damn!” It was then, by chance, that she remembered her
briefcase. She had left it at Tilly’s, next to the chair.
Muttering, she swung the Subaru around and headed back toward South Pass City.
The text of her thesis was on her computer, but her edits, her notes and her
photocopied research were all in that briefcase. She couldn’t afford to leave it
behind.
The sun had vanished behind a pall of dishwater clouds, darkening the late
afternoon sky. The music on the radio had degenerated into static. She caught
the words, “severe storm warning.” Then the station went dead. Ahead of her now,
black clouds were closing in. A drop of sleet splattered the windshield. The
fast-moving storm was stampeding over the mountains and across the high desert
plateau. Minutes from now it would swallow her in snow and wind. It was too late
to turn around and make a run for Lander. Her best hope of shelter lay with
Tilly.
She was watching for the turnoff to South Pass City when the full force of the
storm struck head on. Going too fast, she hit the snow-slicked pavement and spun
crazily. An eternity flashed past before the Subaru crunched to a stop on the
shoulder of the road. Dizzy but unhurt, Emma slumped over the wheel. Huge flakes
of snow swarmed around her, piling up on the windows of the car. Pulling herself
together she punched the defroster buttons and switched the wagon to four-wheel
drive. She’d be fine, she told herself, as long as she kept her head.
Turning on the lights and wipers, she pulled back onto the road. By now she was
driving in total whiteout. She could only pray that she’d recognize the turnoff
to South Pass City when she reached it.
Moments later she sensed the rising of the shoulder that marked a side road.
Emma swung the wheel and felt the welcome crunch of gravel beneath the tires.
She laughed with relief. Before long she’d be back at Tilly’s, warm and safe.
Half an hour later she was still driving. Even more unsettling was the fact that
the road seemed to wind upward through the blinding snow. Could she have lost
her bearings and taken the wrong turnoff?
She was searching for a wide place to turn around when she felt a crumbling
sensation beneath one wheel. The car lurched sideways, flinging her hard to the
right before it came to rest at a slant, its weight on the front axle.
Sick with dread, Emma jammed on the emergency brake and clambered out the
driver’s side door. The Subaru’s right front wheel hung over the edge of the
road with nothing visible beyond it except swirling snow.
Now what? Emma willed herself to stay calm. If the wheel was in some sort of
ditch, she might be able to jack it up and back onto the road again. But first
she needed a closer look.
Blinded by flying flakes, she groped her way around to the passenger side. Her
legs went watery as she saw the tire. It hung over empty space where the edge
dropped off. There was no way she was going to get the vehicle back onto the
road. In fact, it might not even be safe to get back inside the car. Creeping
closer, she strained to see the slope below. If it wasn’t too steep, she might
be all right. Otherwise— Emma screamed as the snowy edge gave way under her
boots. Down, down she plummeted through powdery white drifts. Then something
struck her head and the world exploded in blackness.
* * *
When she opened her eyes the sky was dark. She was lying on her back, cradled by
snow and cushioned by her down parka. Tiny crystals of ice drifted onto her
face. Dazed and chilled, she began moving her fingers, then her arms and legs.
Slowly the memory returned—the storm, the car, the fall...
The baby! Emma sat bolt upright. Her lips moved in silent prayer as she clasped
her belly. An eternity seemed to pass before she felt a tentative push, then a
spunky little kick. Dizzy with relief, she staggered to her feet. She was sore
and stiff, but aside from a tender lump on the back of her head, she didn’t seem
to be hurt.
A full moon shone through the clouds, flooding the landscape with light. Looking
up, Emma could see the slope where she’d fallen. It was steep, but not so steep
that she couldn’t get back to the road. Jamming her boots into the snow, she
began to climb.
“Don’t worry, little one, we’ll be fine,” she murmured. “We’ll just get into the
car and call 911. Then we can keep warm and munch cookies while we wait for the
Search and Rescue hunks to show up. How does that sound for a way to spend
Christmas Eve? Just you and—” Emma’s words died in her throat as her eyes came
level with the road. There was no sign of the car—not even tire tracks to show
where it had been. Shaking, she sank onto a snow-covered rock. She’d left the
car keys in the ignition and her purse, with her cell phone inside, on the seat.
Clearly, the temptation had been too much for some passer-by. Now she was in
real trouble.
Her eyes scanned the moonlit terrain. From where she sat, the road seemed to
disappear into a wooded canyon. Wherever it led, she had little choice except to
follow it. It might be her only hope of finding shelter. By the time she reached
the mouth of the canyon it was snowing again. The wind had risen to a howl,
blasting snowflakes into her face. Head down, Emma trudged through the stinging
blizzard. Once, then again, she stumbled to her knees. Reeling with effort, she
pushed on. She knew the danger. If she stopped to rest, she and her baby could
freeze.
She had just fallen a third time when she saw the light. It was little more than
a glimmer through the bare aspens, but even when Emma rubbed her eyes the light
remained. She staggered toward it.
As the trees thinned out she saw a log cabin with a tall stone chimney. Soft
amber lamplight glowed faintly through a tiny glass-paned window. Something
about the place—the ramshackle slope of the roof, the off-kilter set of the
door, looked familiar. Emma had the vague feeling she’d seen it before, but she
was too exhausted to remember where or when. On the wide, covered porch, she
hesitated, working her hands out of her pockets. Just because she’d found the
cabin, that didn’t mean she was safe. Anybody could be on the other side of that
door—maybe the very people who’d stolen her car. She could be taking a dangerous
chance, but she’d run out of options. It was knock or freeze. Her knuckles
rapped feebly against the rough-sawn planking. There was no response from inside
the cabin. Maybe no one had heard her, or maybe they didn’t want to answer. Her
eyes fell on a pile of kindling next to the door. Choosing a long, stout stick
she banged it on the door with all her strength. From inside the cabin she heard
a crash and the sound of a male voice cursing. Heavy footsteps lumbered across
the wooden floor. A bolt slid back and the door burst open, flooding the porch
with lamplight. Emma found herself staring up the barrel of a nasty-looking Colt
revolver. But it wasn’t the gun that made her gasp. It was the man holding it.
Dressed in nothing but faded red long johns and riding boots, he was tall and
rawboned. An evil-looking black cheroot was jammed into one corner of his
scowling mouth. The bloodshot eyes that glared down at Emma from beneath a mop
of dark, silvered hair were as blue as an October sky.
“Who in holy hellfire are you, lady, and what in do you want?” he growled.
Heaven save her, he looked exactly like J.D. McNulty.
Copyright 2007. Elizabeth Lane, Author -All Rights Reserved. Web Design by LadyWebPro.com