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Authors: K. Anderson

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Chapter Twenty

 

It was a small wedding: Pastor Hofmann, his wife, their
seven children, William and me.

“I don’t even have a proper dress,” I confessed to Inge, the
Hofmann’s oldest daughter. She had just turned sixteen, and clearly found the
story of William’s impending marriage to be extremely romantic.

“Don’t worry about it,” she said. “You look absolutely
beautiful in that green dress.” She produced a length of wide lace from a
basket. “And we can pin this up in your hair to make a veil.”

“I’ve got the bouquet,” one of the younger children chimed
in. “I picked it myself!” Clutched in her chubby fist was a bountiful spray of
Queen Anne’s Lace and Brown Eyed Susies.

“It’s beautiful,” I said, taking it from her and bending to
give her a kiss. “Thank you so much.”

“Come on,” she said. “Mama’s going to play Here Comes the
Bride for you!”

The church was small and plain, which meant the piano music
easily filled it to overflowing. I heard the familiar notes echoing off the
walls as I walked down the aisle between the pews. William was waiting for me,
hands clasped before him, a big smile on his face.

Papa’s words echoed in my head. “Do what you have to do to
survive.” Somehow, through the sheerest chance, I’d found a way to escape
Richard Benson. In just a few minutes, I’d be married, and no matter how
wealthy or powerful my would-be suitor was, there’d be nothing he could do
about it.

Chapter Twenty-One

 

Our ride home from the church was much quieter than our ride
home from the train station. Suddenly, William and I were shy with each other.
The road was wide and empty; above us, a million stars sparkled in a twilight
gray sky.

“It’s been quite a day,” I said.

“It has,” he agreed. “I many times have imagined this day,
but I never really thought it would happen for real. I thought I would spend
all of my days a bachelor.”

“Really?” I looked at him. “Why would you possibly think
that?”

“Why wouldn’t I think it?” his shock was equal to my own.

“You’re very smart and hardworking,” I said. “It’s clear
that Pastor Hofmann and his family respect you greatly. Any girl would be lucky
to have you, Patience said, and she’s right about that.” I could feel myself
blushing, but forced myself to continue. “And of course, you’re quite
handsome.”

William blushed. “Do you think so?”

“I do.” I scooted over on the wagon seat until the sides of
our legs were pressed against each other. Even through the thick folds of my
green dress and his dungarees, I could feel the heat of him, and it made me
want him.

“And you are quite beautiful too,” he said. He put his arm
around me, letting his fingers play with my hair. “In all my imagining, never
once did my girl have curls the color of fire.” He paused for a second. “Of
course, that makes statistical sense. Maybe three in one hundred people are red
heads, if I remember my reading.”

His digression made me smile. “It runs in families,” I said.
“My mother was a red head, and the odds are good that our children will be as
well.”

The mention of children put us both in mind of how progeny
are produced. A new energy entered the air around us; I was very aware of how
William felt against me. How he sounded. How he smelt. Every bit of it was
wonderful.

“You know,” he said slowly. “What is to come…”

“Yes?” I said, leaning against him.

“It is not something I have done before.” I was silent for a
moment, and he must have found the pause awkward, because his words tumbled out
like puppies through a gate. “I mean, I’m familiar with the concepts…from the
literature….”

“It’s all right,” I said. “We’re bright people. I’m sure
we’ll figure it out.”

 

When we arrived back at William’s house, he was determined
to carry me over the threshold. “We may not have had much in the way of
tradition,” he said, “but we will have this much.” He swept me up easily;
clearly he was every bit as strong as I’d imagined. I rolled against his chest
and leaned up into his kiss, my arms around his neck.

We went through the house, kissing. He laid me gently on the
bed and stared at me for a long moment. “You are very beautiful, Abigail.” He
leaned forward and started unbuttoning the bodice of my green dress. “And I
think without this, you will be even more beautiful.”

I laughed. “Let me do that,” I said. “My fingers are faster
than yours.”

He grinned at my eagerness. “I am willing to believe this.” 
His expression grew more serious as the fabric parted, revealing the corset I
wore below. “Like two fawns, the twins of a gazelle,” he said, gazing at my bosom.
“May I kiss you there?”

“Of course,” I said, opening my arms wide. “You are my
husband.”

I’d expected William’s kisses to feel wonderful; those he
had already placed on my lips and neck had been sheer delight. But it turns out
that I was wholly unaware of what wonderful truly meant. Every touch of
William’s lips upon my bosom brought forth wave after wave of sensation. I came
fully alive, shivering from the top of my head to the bottom of my feet.

“You’re shaking,” he whispered. “Am I scaring you?”

“No,” I said, pulling him close against me. “You’re bringing
a new part of me into being.” He smiled and I sighed. “And it is wonderful.”

As we kissed my underclothes somehow came right off;
William’s shirt fluttered to the floor with amazing speed. Seeing him unclothed
was a revelation; my eyes drank in the sparse gold fur covering the muscles of
his chest. His stomach had lines that spoke to the long hours he’d spent
working in the fields and orchard, and below that I found new delights to
discover.

William would ask, before each touch, “May I?” To say yes
was such a pleasure; I wanted to give the same to my new husband. So I
stretched forth my hand and let my fingertips brush against the side of his
swollen member.  His eyes flew to meet mine, wide and startled. “May I?” I
whispered.

He didn’t speak, just nodded. As my grip grew more certain
William bit his lower lip. It was his turn to shake; his arms trembled like
birch trees in a gale. The first stroke of his shaft brought forth a gasp from
his lips. This deepened into a moan as I tried the action again and again.

Watching him in pleasure increased my own need. It felt so
natural to let my legs fall open and guide the tip of William’s cock to the
edge of my desire. For a moment we were frozen in that position, barely
touching and intensely aware of every point of contact. I looked at him, and he
looked at me, and at the same time, we said “May I?”

After that, we stopped talking. Having him inside of me took
all of my breath; each thrust forced all the air from my lungs, each retreat
forced inhalation. Every bit of my being was centered on William. I could feel
his heartbeat echoing inside my own chest. His tempo became my own. We moved
faster and faster until at last, my husband cried aloud, “May I?”

I answered the only answer possible, “Yes!”

Chapter Twenty-Two

 

Father’s letter arrived 23 days into my marriage with
William. It arrived in the post with the journals he subscribed to, addressed
to me by my maiden name in a most familiar script. I brought it to William
unopened.

“What’s this?” he asked, holding the envelope aloft.

“It’s from my Father,” I said. “Or so I believe.”

“It’s addressed to you,” William replied. “Or so I believe.”
He tossed the envelope on the table in front of me.

“You don’t want to open it?”

“Of course not.” William opened up one of the journals that
had arrived in the post and started to scan the page. “It’s your mail.”

Surprised, I picked up the envelope. I noticed that William
was watching me as I opened it, but he acted as if he was still reading.

“You can be curious, you know,” I said.

“I am and I’m not,” he said. “For the first time in my life,
I think there’s something I might not want to know.”

“What do you mean?” I asked.

“A man wants his in-laws to think well enough of him,”
William said. “And your Father may not be in a position to think charitably of
me.”

I cocked my head. “What do you mean?”

“When you left, your erstwhile fiancée didn’t get the
payment he expected.” I’d told William how Kitty had come to be Richard
Benson’s wife, and what had happened to her family when she’d disappeared. “And
we know he is not a man who forgives debts.”

“Great,” I said. “Now I don’t want to read this either.”

“And then there’s the question of how he knew where to send
the letter,” William added. “You’ve not contacted him, so how did he get our
address?”

That question sent shivers running down my spine. William
was looking at the envelope again. “He doesn’t know we’re married, I suspect,
or he wouldn’t have used your maiden name to post this.”

“Still,” I said. “Somehow, he has tracked me down.”

“I imagine Mr. Robert Benson has a hand in this,” William
said. “Both the discovery of your location and the genesis of this letter.”

“Why would you say that?” I asked.

“Because your Father would probably much prefer that you
never be found,” William said. “He loves you. He didn’t want you married off to
this murderous bastard.”

“You’re awfully certain of that, for someone who’s never met
my Father.” My hands were shaking. I didn’t want to read the letter. I was
afraid of what I would read there – the recriminations, the hardships Benson
was imposing on him, the fact he was forced to sleep in an open field somewhere
because he’d been forced out of the house. All of those things would be my
fault. “If it’s in his best interests that I go back to Virginia, then that’s
what this will say.”

“Even if that is what it says, you’re not going to go back,”
William said. “Your home is here now.” He reddened a little and said, “That is,
as long as you’re happy.”

“I’m happier than I’ve ever been, William,” I said. “That is
God’s own truth.”

“So you might as well read it,” he replied. “It’s always
better to know than to not know.”

“I hope you’re right.” Father was always wordy; I wasn’t
surprised to see the envelope was thick with a pair of folded pages. I was
surprised to discover one page entirely blank and the other filled by just two
sentences, a scant ten words long:

Get away as fast as you can! Benson is coming!

Chapter Twenty-Three

 

“I have to get out of here,” I said, panicked. William took
the pages from my fingers and quickly read the letter’s contents. “I’ve got to
go now!”

“Go where?” William said. “You’re not going anywhere. We’re
not going anywhere.” He stood up and began to stride around the kitchen table.
“Benson is coming? Good. Let him come. He will see that we are married, man and
wife, and that will be the end of it.”

“You don’t understand!” I said. “This man killed his wife!”

“But you are not his wife,” William said. “You are my wife.”

“But I was meant to be his wife…” I started.

“Is that how you feel?” William snapped. It was the first
time I’d heard him the least bit cross, and I wanted it to be the last. “Was
that man your destiny? Are you sorry you’ve wed me instead?”

“No!” I exclaimed. “Of course not. I don’t want anything to
do with him. That’s why I came here to you.”

“As good a reason as any, I suppose.” William snarled.

“What is the matter with you?” I shouted. “I don’t
understand why you’re angry with me. I want to get away so you’ll be safe, you
dunderhead! Don’t you understand that Benson can do anything?” I broke down in
sobs. “I don’t want him to shoot you.”

“Abigail. Liebchen.” William took me in his arms and
squeezed me tightly. “You must be calm.”

It was hard to respond to him, as I was crying so hard.
“Shh, shh,” he soothed me. “You must calm down, and you must believe.”

“Believe what?” I asked.

“Believe in me. I am not going to let anything happen to
you. It is my duty to protect you.”

“You don’t know how he is,” I wailed.

“Honestly, you don’t know how he is, either,” William said.
I looked at him, shocked. He continued, “You’ve heard a lot of rumors, and
you’ve seen the man once for yourself for at the most half an hour.” He
shrugged. “From your observations, Robert Benson is a man in his mid to late
forties, in poor health and most probably considerable pain. He depends on his
servants to do even simple things for him, and apparently doesn’t have much in
the way of family and friends.”

“But he has influence,” I tried to explain. “When a man has
enough money and connections, the law doesn’t apply to him quite the same way
anymore. He can act with impunity and never face any punishment.” There were
more than a few rumors about exactly why the Sheriff back home couldn’t find
any evidence of Kitty Benson’s murder. “He can do what he wants and he knows
it.”

“This isn’t Roanoke. It’s not New York, or Boston, or even
Chicago,” William said. “Mr. Benson may have influence in any or all of those
places. But this is Sioux City, and only you and I even know who he is. The
West may be wild, Abigail, but we’ve got our share of law here.”

“Fat lot of good that will do us after we’ve been shot,” I
groused.

William laughed and kissed me. “The man can’t shoot me,” he
said, “if I shoot him first.”

Chapter Twenty-Four

 

Something in William’s calm, bold proclamation inflamed my
sensibilities. I turned in his embrace so we were standing nose to nose, and
took his face between my palms.

“What’s this?” he asked, a little startled.

“I want to kiss you,” I said and then I did. In the three
weeks we’d had together, I’d learned a lot about kissing, but that particular
embrace was all passion and no technique. William drew back, eyes wide at my
enthusiasm. “Abigail!”

“I want you,” I said. “Here, now.”

“In the study?” My husband laughed. “All right,” he said,
“but I’m not sure how we’re going to make that work.” Every flat surface in the
room was piled high with books and papers; I’d been pleading with him to let me
straighten the room since my arrival, but on this one point, he’d been
unwilling to budge. “There’s nowhere to lay down.”

“Then we’ll have to stand,” I said. I leaned forward over
the reading table, flatting my belly against the surface. Then I reached back
and started to pull up my skirts, inch by inch.

“I see,” William said, springing to his feet. He moved into
position behind me and took over the task of raising my skirts. Once my
haunches were exposed, he stood there for a second, running his hand slowly
over my bloomer-clad bottom. “I see perfectly.”

The desire in his voice increased my already considerable
need. I didn’t have the words to express it, but pushing my hips backward
against William’s hand seemed to say everything that needed communicating.

“Yes, yes,” he said, tugging at the strings that held my
bloomers closed. “I’m going to give you what you want.”

He was quick enough to say the words, but the actual
delivery took some time. I stood trembling, feeling the air’s room tickling
against my skin. I felt both exposed and completely safe, a delicious
combination.

“You truly are a beautiful woman,” William said. He slowly
began to stroke my behind, letting the very ends of his fingertips skitter
across my folds. “I can’t believe you married me.”

I looked over my shoulder to see him loosening his belt. “I
did. Honest and for true.”

William stepped even closer to me. I felt his bare thighs
brush against my own naked legs, a contact so pleasurable that I closed my eyes
to savor it.

I opened my eyes again, wide, when William slid into me. I
must have been far more eager than either of us realized, since for the first
time ever he was deeply in with a single stroke. I cried aloud and he did the
same.

“My God, Abigail,” he murmured, bending forward over me,
hands on my shoulders pulling me even further back onto him. “How can anything
feel so good?”

“I don’t know,” I replied. It was difficult to think; all of
my attention was on the feeling of being filled so completely. We started to
rock back and forth, slowly. Even this gentle motion was too much for my
companions on the tabletop. We sent first one pile of books and then another
crashing to the floor. Loose pages went flying everywhere.

“Oh!” I said.

“We’ll worry about that later,” William said. He was moving
faster, with less restraint evident in every stroke. His throaty grunts sounded
almost like growls; I could feel his hot breath against my neck and thought for
a moment he was going to bite me. “Now is for this, now!”

His body went rigid against me and he gave one last moan. I
could feel his need spilling into me, a sensation that triggered my own
response. I stopped even pretending to try to hold myself up off the table;
collapsing onto it, I let my feet come up off the floor. William grabbed my
legs and kept me pulled back against his groin for a long time before
collapsing on top of me.

“Whoof!” I said to my husband. “I love you, darling, but
you’re heavy.”

William propped himself up on one arm and looked down at me
with a clearly satisfied smile.

“What’s that?” I asked him. “That has you smiling so?”

“That’s the very first time you’ve said “I love you” to me,”
he said.

“Well, it’s about time,” I replied.

He laughed. “I guess that is true.”

“And if it is time for me to say it…” I prompted.

“Oh, I’ve been saying I love you from the minute I saw you,”
William said. “But I guess today is a good time to say it out loud. I love you,
Abigail.” He leaned forward enough to kiss me. “With all my heart.”

BOOK: Wilson's Hard Lesson
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