Saturday, March 30, 2013

Finding Kitty, Chapter 6 "No More Snakes"


Matt held Kitty close for a very long time until her violent trembling eased and her tears slowed. 
Laying her back on the bed, he took the wet handkerchief that’d been on her forehead earlier and wiped her flushed face.  He soothed, “You need to rest, Kitty.  All this excitement is not good for you.  You’re hurt.”

“I know, I know.  My head aches twice as bad now.”  Then she added anxiously in a hushed voice, “I don’t think I can sleep in this room, Matt.”

“I checked everywhere, Kitty.  I covered the hole.  If there are any more, they can’t get through.”

“I’m sorry, Matt, but I just can’t.  I really can’t.”

Matt thought for a moment and then offered, “What about if we move you to the front room?  This bed is small.  I could easily move it in front of the fire for you.”

“You’d do that for me?”  Her wide blue eyes, still brimming with tears, melted his heart. 

To conceal his feelings, he answered a little gruffly, “Of course.”

“I hate to be such a bother...”

“You’re not a bother to me.   Come here,” he said, gathering her into his arms.  “I’ll sit you in a chair while I move your bed.”  Matt lifted his charge effortlessly and placed her carefully in a straight-backed chair while he struggled to fit the small bed through the door.  After turning it on its side, he had little difficulty in maneuvering it through. 

Then he retrieved Kitty carefully from her chair, but she still winced and gasped slightly when he gripped her torso a little too tightly. 

“What’s the matter, Kitty?  Did I hurt you?”

“No, really...”

“It’s not your head, is it?”

“No, it’s not my head.  It’s nothing really...”

“Tell me,” he softly commanded as he carried her to the bed, lowering her gently.

“I don’t know, Matt.  Everything’s so hazy, I guess because of my head.  It’s just...”

“It’s just what?”  He looked anxiously down at her side where he’d touched her and she’d cried out.

“My side hurts.  I just don’t remember what happened to make it so sore.”

“Is it your ribs?  Let me see...”  He reached toward her jacket buttons.

“No, Matt!  Really, I...”  She blushed and she didn’t quite know why.  She’d had enough men see her in her altogether in her lifetime, heaven knows.  But...Matt was different...  She hastily explained, “I don’t think they’re broken.  I’m just sore.  I’ll be alright, honestly.”  She stilled his hands with her own.
He stopped and gazed at her worriedly, and then at the thought of what he’d almost done, his face began to turn red.  He looked down at their entwined fingers, embarrassed to look her in the eye.   Then he gathered his wits about him, fetching the blanket and spreading it carefully over her.   He stoked the fire, adding more wood, and asked, “Are you warm enough?”

“Yes, thank you.”  She smiled at him gratefully, trying to ease his discomfort.  “I seem to be thanking you a lot lately, don’t I?”

“Kitty, I don’t think I can ever do enough to make up for getting you into this situation.”

“You...  What?  None of this is your fault, Matt!”

“Now, don’t you go getting riled up, Kitty Russell.  I’m sorry I said anything.  You need to lay quiet and rest.”

“But what if there are more snakes?”

“I will check for more snakes.”

“When?  Cause I won’t be able to sleep a wink until I know without a doubt that there are no more snakes.” 

“I’ll check right now.”  He smiled and rose, squeezing her hand lightly.  Then he went about leaving no stone unturned, searching every nook and cranny in the cabin, high and low, making sure there were no more snakes so that Kitty could get some well-needed rest.

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Scaly skin slithering, sliding, twisting, coiling around her slim, white neck.  Forked tongue flicking from a pointed snout, cold eyes with slitted pupils staring into her terrified gaze, hypnotizing, hypnotizing...  She is frozen in place, unable to move, unable to scream, unable to breathe.  A rhythmic buzzing, rattling sound emanates from its tail, warning of impending danger.  I will bite you, it is saying, and its mouth gapes open, exposing a pale bloodless mouth and long fangs dripping with lethal venom.  The mouth opens wider, hissing devilishly.  The wicked, writhing creature poises to strike at her, and there is no way she can stop it...

Kitty awoke with a start in the dim light before the fire as Matt Dillon tumbled from his chair to the hard wooden floor.  “Matt!” she exclaimed.

Matt groaned and sat up, a chagrined look on his haggard face.

“What on earth happened?” she asked.

“I think I fell asleep,” he answered groggily.  “I was dreaming...”

“What on earth were you dreaming about?  I heard you call out...”

Matt looked at Kitty’s worried expression in the firelight and muttered matter-of-factly, “You don’t wanna know.”

“It’s late, Matt.  You need to sleep.  And you can’t sleep on a chair.”

“It’s okay.  I’ll be alright, Kitty.  You go on back to sleep.”  Matt unsuccessfully attempted to stifle an enormous yawn. 

Kitty peered through the dim light at his exhausted features.  “How long has it been since you’ve slept, Marshal?”

“I...uh...”

“That’s what I thought,” she answered knowingly.  She sat quietly for a moment, strengthening her resolve, then whispered, “Come ‘ere.”

“What?”  Matt had a wary look in his eye.

“I said, ‘Come ‘ere,’ Marshal.”  One finely arched eyebrow lifted, daring him to argue with her.  She stretched out an arm and slipped to one side of the narrow bed.  “You need rest.  Badly.  You’re not gonna get it with me hogging the bed.  It’s small, but I think we’ll both fit reasonably well.”

It was Matt’s turn for his eyebrows to shoot up. 

“Don’t worry, Cowboy, I won’t bite.”  She beckoned with one finger.

“Kitty, if you knew what I was just dreaming about, you wouldn’t be joking like that.”

“Sorry.  I didn’t mean to scare you.  But I’m not going to argue.  Remember, I’m injured and don’t need to get excited.  So do as I tell you, big man.  Come ‘ere and let’s both get some rest.”

“But, Kitty...”

“No ‘buts’.”  Her voice became softer, coaxing.  “Do it for me.  I know you’re exhausted and I won’t be able to rest anymore until...”

He gave a sigh and lifted himself from the floor with a groan.  Seeming to gather his courage for a moment, he finally sat on the edge of the small bed.

“Lie back,” she instructed firmly.

It was a tight fit, and there was only one pillow.  Kitty ended up placing it under Matt’s head, and after much twisting and turning, Matt tentatively wrapped his arm around her while she pillowed her head on his chest.   They lay perfectly still for a while, soaking up the sensation of being so near that they could each feel the heartbeat of the other, the taking in of breath, the warmth, the scent of the other, so very close.  It was a heady feeling, and Matt honestly didn’t know if he’d be able to sleep a wink with Kitty Russell nestled against him, touching him, sharing her heat.  But complete and utter exhaustion overcame all reservations very quickly as they both sank deeply into a dreamless sleep, together.

tbc

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Finding Kitty, Chapter 5 "Slither"


Matt’s heart stopped at the sight that greeted him through the bedroom door.  A prairie rattler, every bit
of three feet long, had slithered atop Kitty’s body, coiling on her chest, seeking warmth away from the cool weather.  A second rattlesnake had slipped through a hole in the floor, also making its meandering way toward the bed, flicking its forked tongue.  Kitty lay completely unaware, sound asleep, as the mottled brown snake absorbed the heat from her body.

Matt’s mind raced.  He couldn’t shoot the snake curled on top of her chest without hitting Kitty as well.  He couldn’t shoot the snake on the floor without startling the snake on the bed, causing it to strike out and possibly bite her.  There was only one thing to do.  He steeled himself, breathing shallowly and noiselessly moving closer to the bed, one silent step at a time.  The snake seemed unaware of his presence; it was facing in the direction of Kitty’s head.  If it struck, that’s where it would bite.  He prayed that Kitty wouldn’t waken and startle the heat-seeking reptile. 

Two more steps to go.  He stopped breathing entirely.  Sweat popped out on his forehead as he inched one arm soundlessly closer...closer... 

Kitty stirred and the snake hissed menacingly.  Matt’s heart was in his throat as her eyes slowly opened.  Thankfully, she lay frozen, though he could see the utter terror reflected in her stare.  The snake coiled more tightly and gave a rattle of its tail, its head rearing before her face.  Her eyes widened in fear, but still Kitty did not move. 

Matt struck suddenly and decisively.  His agile gun arm shot out, grabbing the snake just below its head.  He jerked it off Kitty’s body and held it at arm’s length, then raced around the bed, aiming awkwardly with his opposite hand at the rattler undulating across the floor.  He shot and missed.  The snake on the floor lifted its head to strike, shaking its rattler in warning.  Matt shot again and hit its body, but the rattlesnake was still able to strike at him. 

Kitty cried out in alarm, attempting to sit up in bed.   She watched in terror as the snake gripped tightly in Matt’s hand hissed and writhed, wrapping itself around his arm.  Matt fired again at the snake on the floor.  This time the shot found its mark, the bullet piercing the rattler’s head.  He shot once more at close range, over the spinal cord directly behind the head, then ran out the door with the first snake still desperately gripped in his hand. 

Hurrying to the wood pile, he knelt and held the snake’s head over the cut end of a log, dropping his gun and grabbing the rusty axe nearby.  The rattler’s mouth stretched wide, giving him a view of fangs dripping with venom as its body wound round and round his arm.  Matt gritted his teeth, sweat dripping into his eyes.  Shaking his head hard to clear his eyes, he tried again to aim carefully.  He had a very small margin for error and did not want to lose a finger.  Holding his breath, Matt chopped the angry snake’s head off with two blows of the axe.  Standing, he pitched the snake’s lifeless body far away, in the direction of the Gunther brothers’ graves. 

Retrieving his gun from the ground, he hurried inside to where Kitty lay, shaking, her hand held tightly over her mouth.  Her frightened gaze led his eyes in the direction of the hole in the floor. Yet another rattlesnake was poking its head through.  Quickly Matt strode across the floor and shot through the dark hole.  Hitting his target once again, he snatched a fallen wooden shelf from the floor and dropped it quickly atop the hole, grabbing the small nightstand and turning it upside down to hold the shelf securely in place.  No more snakes would get through here. 

Rapidly, urgently, he searched the room, even looking under the bed and jerking Kitty’s covers off, searching for any further intruders or possible entrances.  He found only the snake he’d shot on the floor, still twitching and moving even in death.  Matt carefully picked it up and carried it outside, slinging it distastefully across the yard, again toward the outlaws’ graves.  They all belonged together, he thought with satisfaction. 

Noticing the blood on his hands, he stopped at the well and quickly drew a bucket to clean himself before he went inside and upset Kitty with his appearance.  She’d had more than enough scares for one day.  Matt dried his hands carelessly on his pants legs and hurried in to check on her.

Kitty was still curled on the bed, eyes searching the room, her labored breath coming in hiccups.  He strode toward her, and her arms were outstretched, reaching for him.  “Matt...” she called and her voice was nothing more than a whisper.  He took her in his embrace as he sat facing her, and she buried her face in his neck.  He could feel her hot tears wetting his skin, but she hardly made a sound.   He didn’t quite know what to say to her to calm her fears so he just stroked his own hands, trembling as well now that the danger had passed, across her shuddering back over and over, saying, “It’s okay.  Kitty, it’s okay now...”

tbc

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Finding Kitty, Chapter 4 "Lair"


Matt saw Chester off, grabbing the canteen and bedroll from his saddle to take inside.  He noted the
dilapidated state of the property with many belongings still lying around, as if the owner had perhaps died and left them behind.  There was a pile of freshly chopped wood with a rusty axe out front, but he knew the Gunthers hadn’t chopped it.  He’d watched them like a hawk all night long.  Apparently quite a few travelers still used this place to stay for the night.  Maybe the unfortunate man who’d encountered Kitty and her captors on the trail had been the one who’d chopped the wood.

Matt skirted the Gunthers’ bodies as he hurried back inside.  He’d come back out and bury them as soon as he got a little food and water into Kitty, but only if she was resting quietly.  They could wait, as far as he was concerned.

Passing the fireplace, he saw the remainder of the outlaws’ breakfast, still in the pot, along with some coffee.  There were more dishes in a sideboard whose doors swung open.  Matt wondered what else he would be able to find of use around here.  Matt hastily scooped some of the porridge into a clean bowl he found, grabbed a spoon and headed into Kitty’s room.   Setting the food and canteen on a rickety bedside table, he spread his blanket over her quiet form.  Then he gingerly sat on the edge. 

She looked so small and pale and helpless.  His chest squeezed as he looked at her.  Why?  Why had they taken her?  She hadn’t done anything to deserve this.  She’d just been in the wrong place at the wrong time.  With him.  Attending to official business.  His job was dangerous, even for the innocent bystanders in his life.   Matt swore to himself then and there that he would never let Kitty Russell get hurt again because of him and his job.  He swore to keep her safe.

Matt splashed a bit of water from the canteen onto a clean handkerchief and placed it on her bloodless forehead.  He’d noticed a well in the yard and there was a rope and bucket, too, looking as if they’d been used recently.  He’d try and get them some fresh water later.

She made a soft noise and stirred again, eyelids barely fluttering open. 

Matt looked at her anxiously, his heart in his throat, as he nervously rearranged the damp cloth above her eyes.  “Kitty, honey, can you hear me?”

The words came out small and faint, only an echo of her usual voice.  “Yes...”  She frowned at a sudden memory.  “Matt, the Gunthers...  They’re dead, aren’t they?”

“Yes, Kitty.  I shot them.  I couldn’t take any chances that they’d try and hurt you.”

“Jed tried to shoot me, didn’t he?”

“Yes, he did.  But I didn’t let him.”

“Thank you for saving me, Matt.”

Matt felt his cheeks flush a little.  “I did what I had to do, Kitty.  I almost feel like it’s all my fault to begin with...”

“No, don’t say that.”  She closed her eyes tiredly for a moment.  After a heartbeat, she continued, “How could it be your fault?”

Matt quickly changed the subject.  “Here, take a drink of this.”  He cradled the back of her head in his large hand and tipped the open canteen to her lips while she sipped easily at first. 

Then she took a breath, resting her head against his hand on the pillow and looked piercingly at him again.  “More, please...” 

He supported her head a little higher this time, and she drank deeply, greedily, and Matt fumed, wondering if they’d withheld water from her.   She dropped her head back at last, breathing heavily.  He wiped away some water that’d trickled from the corner of her mouth with his fingers. 

He said quietly, “I have some breakfast for you.  It may not be the best, but I suspect you haven’t eaten since day before yesterday.  Is that true?”

Her answer was a raspy whisper, confirming his fears.  “Yes.”

He tried not to let her see his anger, but it was glinting in his eyes as she gazed at him.  He coaxed, “Take a bite of this.”

She opened her mouth, and he dutifully spoon-fed her the entire bowl.   “Do you want some more?”

“No...”  She closed her eyes again.  “I’m so tired, Matt.  I didn’t sleep last night.  So tired...”

“Then you need to rest now.”  He laid the bowl down and tucked the covers around her snugly, turning the wet cloth on her forehead.  “Just sleep...”

He picked up the dish and canteen and headed for the door, stopping when he heard a faint voice from the bed.  “Matt?”

He turned.  “Yes?”

“Thank you.” 

He felt the tips of his ears warming as he answered, “You’re welcome, Kitty.”

Matt laid the dish on the sideboard, taking the canteen outside to the well.  The pulley was squeaky, but it worked, and soon he had a bucket of clean, fresh water.  He refilled the canteen by dunking it inside, then drank thirstily from it until it was nearly empty.

Then he refilled it again and drew another bucket to carry in the house.  He had to duck beneath a beam fallen from the tattered roof where daylight shone through in order to peek inside the bedroom and check on Kitty.  She lay sleeping peacefully, the rise and fall of her even breaths reassuring to Matt.  He felt he could leave her for long enough to bury the bodies. 

Matt knew he needed to get them away from the house before they attracted predators.  Unable to locate a shovel, he simply dragged the bodies feet first to a spot some yards away, so that he would still be able to keep an eye on the house, and began covering them in rocks he gathered from the immediate area. 

He felt no sorrow at their passing, or even remorse at his role in their deaths as he contemplated Kitty’s hunger and thirst, the dried blood on her scalp and in her hair and her obviously weakened condition.   He despised them for what they’d put her through.  The men he was burying were heartless and evil, and Kitty hadn’t deserved anything they’d done to her.

Dropping the last heavy rock on top of the graves, he dusted his hands on his pants, wiped the sweat from his face with his shirtsleeve and loped back toward the house.  Walking noiselessly inside, so as not to waken her, he crept to the bedroom door to peer within.  

At first glance, everything looked peaceful and normal.  But then, his eyes fell on a scaly, long reptilian shape on the bed.  It was slithering slowly atop Kitty’s body, seeking warmth.  Matt’s eyes were drawn to a small hole in the wooden floor in the far corner of the room where another rattler was just slipping through, heading in the direction of Kitty’s bed as well.

tbc

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Finding Kitty, Chapter 3 "Caught"


“If I do shoot Kitty, I’ll do it with your gun, Marshal.  The first person I ever killed was a woman.  I’ll
leave her on the trail...fresh kill.”  The haunting threat of bank robber Jed Gunther echoed ceaselessly in Matt Dillon’s head as he waited in the brush, silent as a panther, near the dark, dilapidated cabin where Kitty Russell was being held captive by two vicious men.  Uneasily he sat, all night long, accompanied only by Chester’s even breathing as he slept on the ground beside him.  Gut churning, Matt tried not to think of all the things that could be happening to Kitty right now.  He crouched, barely breathing, the better to detect the faint sounds emanating from within the cabin, praying that Kitty was safe.  He’d heard nothing that would indicate a struggle, only inaudible voices, occasional clanking that sounded like the noise of pots and pans, nothing more.  Every nerve and muscle fiber in Matt’s body reverberated with tension and dread, and the words that he’d spoken in the bank repeated itself in his heart like a mantra, “Don’t take her.” 

If only he hadn’t brought Kitty to the bank with him that morning.  But on the way to speak with Botkin, he’d encountered her on the street, looking pretty as a picture in her riding habit sitting sidesaddle.  He’d hardly seen her since that fateful dinner with James Rackmil because he’d been out of town so much, first in Elkader looking into the strange case of Joe Phy and then out on the prairie with a couple of buffalo hunters.  The night of the dinner at Delmonico’s, Matt had surprised himself with what he could only describe as raging jealousy if he was completely honest with himself.  The intensity of his feelings had been startling, and it had shaken him up.  But he’d never seen Kitty show much interest in other men, even that old boyfriend of hers, Cole Yankton, who’d turned out to be a bank robber whom Matt had unfortunately been forced to shoot. 

But when Matt had witnessed, up close and personal, Kitty laughing and talking and seemingly immensely enjoying herself with that Eastern dandy Rackmil, something had switched on inside of him.  Suddenly he felt possessive and protective of Kitty Russell, his dependable, big-hearted, caring friend who sat across from him at the dinner table looking so lovely and desirable it made his chest ache.  And then later outside the Long Branch she had kissed him, big as life, even after he had acted like an ass with Rackmil, who hadn’t done anything except behave like a gentleman.  And now, after it was all said and done, he might lose her to these murderous animals, brothers Jed and Billy Gunther.  The thought left him bleak and empty...and terrified.  He’d said to Chester, "They do anything to her by g--...  I'll tear their throats out."  And he meant it.

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Matt held Kitty’s limp body in his arms, his heart racing and his blood pumping after shooting both Gunther brothers stone dead.  In cold blood is what Chester had called it.  But he’d had no choice.  To save Kitty, he had to shoot them outright.  They didn’t deserve a chance, he thought bitterly as his eyes searched her unconscious form, reassuring himself that she was alright.  He hoped she’d just fainted from lack of food or fright, or perhaps both.  He carried her inside to let her rest, make sure she was unharmed and find something to feed her.  Matt laid her on the bed carefully, pressing a hand to her cheek to try and wake her as Chester hovered anxiously over his shoulder.

“You think she’s gonna be okay, Mr. Dillon?  She shore does look peaked.”

Matt had to agree.  Her face was very pale and drawn beneath the grime and dust left by a grueling day-long trail ride with the two homicidal Gunther brothers.  On second thought, he couldn’t be sure whether it was all dirt or...  The thought of what they may have done to her stoked the angry fire already burning in his gut.  Now that the initial relief of freeing her had worn off, he was getting worried.  She still hadn’t moved.  “Kitty, wake up.”  He stroked the hair off her pallid forehead and took her limp, cold hand in his, gently patting it.  “Can you hear me?”

Chester added fretfully, “Miss Kitty, are you alright?”

She made a small sound and stirred. Then brilliant blue eyes opened a crack, looking up at them in confusion.  “Matt?” she mumbled in a small voice.  “Where are they?  Where are the Gunthers?  You’ve got to be careful...”

Had she forgotten?  The shock of seeing them killed must be playing tricks on her mind.  He hurriedly reassured her, “You’re okay now, Kitty.  You’re with me.  Just me and Chester are here.”  Matt placed a hand on her shoulder.  “They’re gone.  They can’t hurt you.”

“Gone?”  She gingerly touched a hand to the left side of her head and winced at whatever she encountered there. 

Alert now, Matt moved her hand aside and discovered dried blood.  He looked over his shoulder at Chester whose brows beetled in concern.  Matt turned back to her.  “What happened?” he muttered darkly. 

“What happened?”  she repeated.  Kitty was disoriented.  “I don’t know...” 

“Your head has been bleeding.  What did they do to you?”  He touched her chin, drawing her gaze to his own.  “Did they hurt you?’

“I...”  Kitty’s eyes narrowed as she thought.  “Oh, Matt, my head hurts so badly.  Jed...it was him.  I can’t remember what happened exactly but he’d been threatening to beat me... fetch me up is what he called it.  He got mad at me, but I don’t quite remember....”  Her eyes fluttered closed and she lay very still.

“Kitty?”  He grasped her shoulder.  “Kitty, can you hear me?” 

Chester’s eyes were wide when she wouldn’t wake.  “Oh my, Mister Dillon.  What do you think we should do?”

“Go get Doc,” Matt answered determinedly.  “Bring a wagon.  She can’t travel by horse.”  He looked into Chester’s concerned face.  “And Chester... hurry.”

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Finding Kitty, Chapter 2 "Dinner for Three"


Matt Dillon quickly clamped his mouth shut when he realized it was quite noticeably gaping open.  Suddenly remembering to stand in a lady’s presence, he reached blindly beside him, whacking James Rackmil on the arm to spur him into rising from his seat as well.  Rackmil’s eyes were slightly glazed and his mouth hung open just like Matt’s had moments before when Kitty Russell first swept into Delmonico’s in a fragrant cloud of lavender and vanilla and rose petals, a luminous vision in off-the-shoulder crimson silk. 

She was, in all truthfulness, completely stunning.   Matt Dillon was dazzled by Kitty’s glittering, flowing beaded red dress that he’d never laid eyes on before tonight.  He would’ve certainly remembered it if she had.  She wore a black velvet choker around her slim throat, which simply emphasized the daring low cut of the dress.  He didn’t know where to look first with all that lovely exposed décolleté—bare shoulders, smooth back and softly-rounded, creamy bosom peeking over tiny crimson ruffles and exquisite embroidery.  Flashing them both her most dazzling, white smile, Kitty strategically took the chair between the two men as they both leaned down to push it in for her at the same time, nearly thumping their heads together in their haste.  Murmuring apologies, Matt peered up and noticed the brim of his hat, hurriedly removing it and placing it in the empty chair beside him.  He cleared his throat, suddenly nervous, as they all settled in their seats.

“Evenin’, gentlemen,” Kitty beamed, removing her spotless white gloves, placing them in her matching beaded reticule. 

“Evening,” both men chorused, looking at each other in surprise, as if each had been hoping that the other had suddenly disappeared. 

Matt quickly spoke up again, “That’s an awful pretty dress you’re wearin’, Kitty.” He cleared his throat again, fidgeting a little with his black string tie.  “I don’t believe I’ve ever seen it before.”

Dangling earbobs sparkled and flashed in the lamplight as she replied, “That’s because it’s new, Matt.  I splurged and bought it when my first income from the purchase of the Long Branch came through.  Reason enough to celebrate, don’t you think?”  She gazed at him steadily with striking sapphire blue eyes that seemed to pierce right through him.

Quickly, he agreed, “You better believe it.”  Matt poured each of them a glass of whiskey and held his aloft.  “Here’s to...”  He hesitated a moment, seeming to gather his courage.  “...to the most beautiful business owner in town.”

“Hear, hear...” responded Rackmil, enthusiastically raising his own glass to his lovely red-headed dinner companion. 

Smiling, though inwardly surprised at what was, for Matt Dillon, an effusive toast, she took a delicate sip of her whiskey, looking at both men over the rim of her glass.  Matt was busy noticing her prettily flushed pink cheeks and ruby red lips as she drank.  Kitty Russell looked positively radiant.  Matt cleared his throat and shook his head a little when he realized he was staring.   He hurried to continue the conversation.  “So, what brings you to Dodge, Rackmil?”

Kitty interjected, “Why, Matt, don’t you know?  Mr. Rackmil here...”

Rackmil held up a hand and interrupted, “Now, Kitty, you promised to call me ‘Jim’, remember?”
Matt watched as she gave a friendly smile to Rackmil.  “I’m sorry, Jim.  You’re right.  Once you’ve been through what we have together, you can expect to be on a first name basis, right?” 

They both laughed and looked at each other a moment.  Then as if suddenly recalling Matt was in the room, she gave a start.  “What was I saying?  Oh yes, Jim traveled here all the way from New York, and he’s heading to Denver to make some mining investments.  Isn’t that right, Jim?”  She placed a hand familiarly on Rackmil’s jacket sleeve and urged, “Tell us about it, why don’t you?  Oh, and I want to hear all about New York.  It must be very exciting to live there.  Don’t you think so, Matt?”

Matt watched as Kitty unfurled an intricately beaded scarlet fan with dancing black tassels while she listened raptly to James Rackmil’s account of his trip out West.  Matt tried to get a word in edgewise from time to time, but Kitty would interrupt, eagerly asking Rackmil yet another leading question.  And then the city slicker would be off again, spinning his unending story.  But the worst part was, Kitty only seemed to have eyes for him.  Chin in hand, she hung on Rackmil’s every word, her eyes sparkling just like they usually did when she talked with Matt. 

Matt’s mood suddenly took a turn for the worse.  I might as well not even be here, he thought cantankerously, sipping his whiskey and feeling increasingly sorry for himself.  As dinner wore on, Matt had to suffer through Kitty laughing at Rackmil’s lame jokes, flattering his pride, and encouraging his extreme long-windedness.  Matt’s shoulders slumped lower and lower, and by dessert, he’d had enough.  He fairly glowered across the table at this high-falutin’ dude who so fascinated Kitty Russell that she had pretty much forgotten that Matt Dillon was sitting right next to her. 

Kitty gave a little glance in his direction at that moment, the first in quite a while, he noted, and she commented airily, “Well, gentlemen, it’s getting late.”

Rackmil exclaimed, “Oh, I hadn’t realized.  I didn’t mean to keep you so long...”

“That’s perfectly fine, Jim.  I had a lovely evening.”  She beamed and fluttered her fan while Rackmil grinned from ear to ear.  Shaking her head in wonder, she remarked, “You have led such a fascinating life!  Don’t you think so, Matt?”

Matt scowled across the table at Rackmil and grunted a wordless reply.

Kitty continued, “How long will you be in town, Jim?  I was just wondering if...well, perhaps...”
Rackmil eagerly answered, “Well, actually, I had plans to leave soon...”  Rackmil’s hand brushed Kitty’s arm and Matt narrowed his eyes.  Rackmil continued, “But I could change those plans if...”
“Oh, Jim, honestly, you shouldn’t change your plans because of...”

Matt interrupted, “No, Rackmil, you shouldn’t change your plans.  I’m sure you have business to attend to in Colorado.”

Kitty exclaimed quietly, “Why, Matt...”

Resolutely, Matt continued, “It’s late.  Why don’t we call it an evening?” 

Rackmil quickly invited, “Could I escort you home, Kitty?  The marshal is right.  It is late, and a lady shouldn’t walk on the street unaccompanied.”

“Oh, Jim,” Kitty smiled gratefully.  “Why, that is so thoughtful of you.  I think that I...”

Matt firmly declared, “I’m escorting the lady home, Rackmil.”  He folded his arms across his chest.  “Don’t trouble yourself.”

Once again, Kitty was taken aback at Matt’s bluntness.  She’d never expected he’d actually be rude.  She’d only wanted him to pay her a little more attention.  She blurted out, “Why, Matt...”

Rackmil stuttered, “I meant no offense.  I just...”

Matt abruptly countered, “You just what?”

Rackmil’s brow rose slightly as he took in the tall lawman’s determined stance and the beautiful saloon owner’s surprised expression, contemplating her old friend so curiously, as if she didn’t even know him.  “Ah, yes...um...Marshal, I am sure that you will safely see the lady home.”  He bowed to Kitty, then dared to take her hand and lightly kiss it.  “My dear Kitty, it was a very great pleasure meeting you.  Thank you both for a lovely dinner.”  He tipped his hat to them both, warmly smiling at her.  

“Goodnight.”

“Goodnight, Jim.”

“Rackmil.”

They watched as James Rackmil hurried out the restaurant door, giving a brief, longing, backward glance over his shoulder.  She heard Matt grunt wordlessly again.  Looking up at her towering, broad-shouldered, resolute companion, she took his arm.  “I’m ready when you are,” she murmured.

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The short walk to the Long Branch was traversed in weighty silence.  They hesitated in the shadows outside the saloon doors, and Kitty could feel Matt Dillon’s eyes drinking her in, just like he always did.  Quietly, matter-of-factly.  Simply.  Her lips turned up in a tiny smile because she’d worn this dress just for him.  Then she took a deep breath and began haltingly, “Matt...why did you...?”

Matt’s eyes narrowed thoughtfully as he ran frustrated fingers through his dark hair.  “I’m sorry, Kitty.  I didn’t mean to be so...”

Her tone was urgent as she interrupted, “Don’t be sorry, Matt.”  Tentatively, her hand clasped his arm.  “Please don’t be sorry...”  Then she took a breath and quickly tiptoed up.  Sliding slim arms around his neck, she touched those ruby red lips to his cheek, her soft, voluptuous bosom pressing against his hard chest, and the warmth of her and the scent of her and the feel of her lips against his skin for the very first time made him dizzy with longing.  Then just as suddenly, she pulled away and was gone in a soft whisper of flowing crimson skirts through the swinging doors of the Long Branch.  Matt could still smell her perfume.

tbc

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Finding Kitty, Ch. 1 "Lost & Found"


This fic is an ATC for “Daddy-O”, “Kitty Lost” and “Kitty Caught”, episodes written by John Meston.  It is vastly unrealistic, but please just sit back and enjoy the dramatic license I employed liberally throughout.  Thanks to singerme for suggesting this ATC and beta reading along the way.

“Bet you haven’t learned a thing...” Matt had cocked his head and remarked flippantly to Kitty with an irritating smirk when he’d at long last located her, wretched and abandoned by dude James Rackmil on the lone, desolate prairie.  Funny how, ordinarily, she would’ve found Matt’s crooked little grin charming and irresistible, but not today.   After the initial overwhelming relief that she’d finally been rescued had passed, Kitty was beginning to feel rather put out with everyone involved, especially Matt Dillon.

That man...he was so vexing sometimes!  She was exhausted and ravenous after the interminable night, itchy from her foray into the brush hiding from the natives, and mad as blue blazes to boot.  She was furious with Rackmil for taking off with their only horse and leaving her to the Indians.  She was perturbed at herself for ill-advisedly attempting to make an oblivious Matt Dillon jealous with a moonlight drive alongside a good-looking city slicker.  But she was exasperated beyond all reason at Matt himself because, after all the uproar, he was still laughing and joking, apparently completely unconcerned about the whole business!  Not a blasted hint of jealousy in sight!  Oh...that man!

Kitty knew very well he thought she was attractive.  She could tell just by the way he looked at her sometimes.  She’d be standing at the crowded bar of the Long Branch, chatting with a lonesome, freshly-scrubbed trail hand, bolstering his confidence  by laughing at his feeble jokes and stroking his male ego until he’d worked up the courage to ask her to go upstairs with him.  A girl had to make a living somehow. 

She would think that she’d just about closed the deal with her shy young customer, and then she’d sense it.  Matt Dillon’s gaze was palpable from across the rowdy, hazy, smoke-filled saloon.  She could feel his eyes on her.  It was always the same.  Turning slowly, she’d give a little involuntary shiver as she spotted him watching her from the doorway, an inscrutable expression on his handsome face.  Just quietly looking.  Then his eyes would light up at her return gaze, and she’d smile knowingly at him and politely but quickly abandon her unfortunate cowhand at the bar to meet Dodge City’s marshal halfway across the floor. 

“Hello, Kitty.  You sure look pretty tonight,” he’d say in a low, soft drawl, tipping his hat further back on his head with a long index finger.  His intense clear blue eyes framed by thick, inky lashes would sweep over her figure and make her flush with pleasure at his open admiration.   She’d thrill with the desire to have those soft lashes brush delicately like a butterfly’s wings over her cheek as they had one evening when he’d gotten very close to whisper in her ear.  She’d never forgotten that feeling. 

Then he’d respectfully pull out a chair for her at a nearby table, and they’d sit and talk about their day, sharing amusing stories and troublesome worries and sometimes secrets, things they wouldn’t have shared with anyone else.   Matt Dillon was her dearest friend.  Indeed, she was closer to him that anyone alive since she had no family of which to speak.  They’d very quickly become attached after her damp, gloomy, utterly inauspicious arrival in Dodge a couple of years ago after she’d felt a connection with the big man eating breakfast across from her in the café and decided to stay awhile. 

Yes, she was aware that Matt Dillon thought her attractive and considered her a friend as well, but, unfortunately, that’s as far as it went.  Even after she’d purchased half-interest in the Long Branch and was no longer forced to take men upstairs to share her bed for money, he still hadn’t shown any inclination toward furthering their already close relationship.  It’d been weeks now since she’d become partners with Bill Pence, and she was despairing that Matt Dillon truly had no interest in her in that way.  She got a sick feeling in her stomach when she thought, perhaps she wasn’t good enough for him. 

That nagging thought ate at her, nibbling away at her hopes, and she tried in vain to push it away.  She was good enough to be his friend, wasn’t she?  He’d never once acted ashamed to be with her.  But as the weeks passed and still Matt treated her as nothing but a confidante, the realization that he truly might not be interested in her stung deeply.  She might be fit company for a friend, but maybe she just wasn’t quite good enough to be his girl. 

Then she’d decided that perhaps Matt didn’t realize their potential, that maybe he needed a tiny nudge in the right direction.  So on a whim, a ridiculous idea in afterthought, she’d agreed to go riding around the deserted prairie way after dark with a complete stranger, hoping to spark some jealousy in Matt Dillon.  Ha.  Afterwards, Matt had even taken Rackmil’s side, defending him against Kitty’s outrage at being left behind to the Indians.  But Kitty had managed to swallow her anger, ceasing her indignant rant and smiling sweetly.  She’d even apologized to the fancy pants city boy. 

Matt had joked that she sure had a temper.  Well, Katie bar the door, she felt like she could sure enough explode right now.  But she was holding it all together, trying to save face after this disaster of a plan, an ill-fated, hare-brained idea for sure.   But Matt was enjoying himself entirely too much, even inviting Rackmil to eat dinner with them, of all things. 

Well, she’d have dinner with them all right.  Marshal Matt Dillon might not give her a thought beyond a pretty face to look at while he unburdened himself of all his problems.  But she’d show him that she didn’t care one whit.  Tonight at dinner those two big lugs would see who ended up having the last laugh.

tbc

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