The Adventures of Dixie Dandelion Read online




  Table of Contents

  Excerpt

  Kudos for R. H. Burkett

  The Adventures of Dixie Dandelion

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Chapter Forty-Eight

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-One

  Chapter Fifty-Two

  Chapter Fifty-Three

  Chapter Fifty-Four

  Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  I studied my reflection.

  Nineteen. I was nineteen. I giggled. Most girls my age would be married and have young’uns by now. Bet my childhood friend, Ima Jean, was trapped in a tedious life depending on some dull, bald-headed, round-bellied, store clerk for money and a roof over her head.

  Not me.

  I owned a ranch. Nineteen years old, and I had my own place.

  My best friends were rough and tough Doves who bowed to no man. I was Foxtail Woman who rode into Indian camps without fear and made deals with medicine men and chiefs. I’d stabbed a man who tried to ruin me. Stole a lawman’s horse. I drank whiskey. Granted not very well but still. Smoked sometimes too. I could rope and ride. And when push came to shove, I could whip up a batch of biscuits as soft and fluffy as clouds. I looked mighty pretty in green too.

  I was Dixie Dandelion and by God, I wasn’t going to let any sawed-off buckaroo ride onto my ranch, shove my friends in the dirt, threaten my dog, and take my sister away without a fight.

  So much for perfect hair, ironed skirts, and manners. I strapped on my Colt and grabbed the Winchester on my way out the door.

  Kudos for R. H. Burkett

  Winner of the Ozark Writers League’s

  2012 Book of the Year

  ~*~

  Winner of the Oklahoma Writers Federation Inc’s

  2016 Best Fiction Book of the Year

  The Adventures

  of

  Dixie Dandelion

  by

  R. H. Burkett

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  The Adventures of Dixie Dandelion

  COPYRIGHT © 2016 by Ruth H. Weeks

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: [email protected]

  Cover Art by RJ Morris

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History

  First Cactus Rose Edition, 2016

  Print ISBN 978-1-5092-1042-8

  Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-1043-5

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedication

  For the Cowgirls

  Chapter One

  Feelings have color.

  Sorrow: Deep purple and indigo. The same as the stormy sky that spreads across the plains like a giant bruise from horizon to horizon.

  Grief: Slate gray. The drizzle that fell. Stones heaped upon the grave.

  “Sorry for your loss.” False sympathy: Dirty dish-water brown.

  Fear: Black as pitch.

  The wagon master flipped the ragged-edged Bible shut with a snap. Impatient and grumbling, he stomped back to the train. A day wasted. Damn fool woman. Stupid accident.

  Mama wasn’t dumb.

  Murder is no accident.

  A spindly arm wrapped around my shoulders. I pushed back. “Get your hands off me.”

  The slap came so fast I couldn’t block it. One minute, standing. The next, crumbled at the foot of Mama’s grave. The bitter taste of blood on my tongue.

  “Don’t sass me, girl! You’re all mine, now.” A leer so sinister, my stomach lurched. “And I got big plans for you.”

  No one witnessed the blow. Even if they had, nothing would’ve been done. Family business, none of theirs. My stepfather, a slick, dressed up dandy in fringed trousers, laughed and swaggered back to camp. No doubt to meet with his partner, Jake Cantrell the wagon master, for a night of drinking, gambling, and scheming. Lead the sodbusters west, earn their trust, take their money. Then, lose them.

  Mama found out.

  They killed her because of it.

  Hate is raw-meat red.

  “He your pa?”

  A hand steadied me. The scout for the wagon train, Jackson McCullough, stood solid and as tall as an oak before me.

  “No. Papa never raised a hand to me.”

  “Against your ma?”

  “Her, neither.”

  “Huh. How’d y’all get mixed up with a varmint like Whitaker?”

  Why the hell did he care? None of his business anyway. Yet, the need to explain burned in my throat.

  “The damn war.”

  His eyebrow arched. A trace of humor faded his dark eyes to a shade of rich, Kentucky bourbon.

  “Papa was a huge Irish man with twinkling blue eyes and a laugh that could shake walls. Rode off to join the Confederacy one day and never rode back. Mama is…was…a real looker but fragile as glass. Couldn’t fend for herself or me.”

  I rushed on unaware of walking by his side. “Preston Whitaker is a man who always gets what he wants. He set his snake eyes on Mama. Promised her a land of milk and honey if she’d marry him and go west. Wealth. Society. All the things she dreamed of. The stars in her eyes blinded her to his ‘shortcomings.’ Whiskey. Cards. Hair-trigger temper.”

  Talk about Mama and Papa brought fresh tears to my eyes. Didn’t need no one’s pity, so I kept my gaze lowered to the ground and blindly followed McCullough’s footsteps. He’d walked away from the circle of wagons to the picket line.

  The sound of a low whinny stopped me short. A buckskin horse stretched out his black velvet nose and nudged McCullough’s arm. He reached in his p
ocket and pulled out a ripe persimmon.

  “Persimmons?”

  “Yep. He’s crazy about ’em.”

  A low nicker came from the paint gelding tied next to the stallion.

  “Him, too?”

  “Yep, ’fraid so.”

  “Why two horses?”

  He walked over and shook the saddle on the buckskin. Hooking a stirrup over the horn, he tightened the cinch. “Buck is big and strong. Dependable as sunup and sundown. But there’s times when speed is more important than strength.” He patted the paint’s neck. “Joe can pick-’em-up and put-’em-down faster than most.”

  “You always keep both of them saddled?”

  “When necessary. Extra Colt in the saddlebag, too.”

  “Why?”

  He winked. “Never know when I might need to make a fast get-a-way.”

  I smiled. “You some kind of outlaw or something?”

  “Something.”

  “Then you know.”

  “Know what?”

  “Cantrell. Whitaker. They’re in cahoots. They cheat honest folks out of their lifesavings. Leave them lost, wagon-wheel-deep in the snow. Mama found out about it and threatened to tell. That’s why she’s dead. They killed her. Made it look like an accident.”

  “Sounds about right,” he mumbled. “I hear the Pinkerton Agency got complaints on Cantrell.”

  “Somebody ought to arrest them.”

  “Whoa, hold on there, Dixie Belle. Knowing and proving are two different things.”

  “My name isn’t Dixie.”

  He chuckled.

  The laugh irked me almost as much as the pet name. “Stop it! My name’s Margaret Katelyn O’Shea.”

  His bourbon-colored eyes traveled up and down my body. No one had ever looked at me that bold. Half of me liked it.

  Desire: rosy pink.

  “Huh. Scarlet hair, snappy blue eyes, soft Southern drawl, creamy skin. Nope. Don’t look like a Maggie. Sorry, darlin’. Dixie Belle fits too good.”

  Fists clenched. “Go to hell.”

  Loud laughter rolled out of his tight belly, and he doubled over, holding his sides. Buck threw his head and snorted. I turned to go. Lightning fast, he reached out and caught my arm. Spun me around to look up at his chiseled face, now serious and stern.

  “You got any idea just how much danger you’re in? How old are ya’, anyway? Fifteen?”

  “Eighteen. And I can take care of myself.”

  “You ever been with a man before?”

  I gasped. How dare him. Lips flattened in a straight line, I reared back and swung with all my might.

  He caught my fist in midair. Amusement flickered in his eyes. “Didn’t think so.”

  Damn the man.

  “Simmer down and listen. The point I’m making is this. Whitaker is your step-pa. Family. Ain’t no one gonna interfere with anything he does. I heard him tell you he had plans. You know what that means?”

  Fear shot an arrow into my heart. Mouth dry, I wilted like a daylily. “I got some idea.”

  “A buck, no matter how mangy, is a dangerous, strong animal in rut. Savvy?”

  Panic: Puke green.

  “You wouldn’t let anything happen to me.”

  Broad shoulders sagged, and he removed his hand. “Don’t saddle me with that burden. Besides, I ain’t always gonna’ be around. Fact is, I’m riding out today.”

  “Where to?” Only grass and dirt surrounded us.

  “Six Shooter Siding, a railroad town two days north of here.”

  “Won’t Cantrell be suspicious if you’re gone too long?”

  “Well, Dixie Belle.” He winked again. “That’s the beauty of being a scout. Can come and go as I please. Not being around for a few days won’t be unusual.”

  “No!” Reined-in tears made my voice tremble. “He killed Mama.”

  “And he’ll swing for that. I promise.” A muscle quivered in his square jaw. “But you need solid proof. It looked like an accident. Said so yourself.”

  Dropping to one knee, he pulled a knife from his boot. He straightened with a loud sigh. “Take this. Got the guts to use it?”

  Thoughts of Whitaker’s slimy hands on my skin and waxy lips on my mouth made me shiver. My hand tightened around the blade’s elk-horn handle. “I’ll skin the son-of-a-bitch if I have to.”

  “Darlin’, of that I have no doubt.” His laughter came easy and full-hearted. “You’re a wild prairie dandelion, Dixie gal. Good thing. Gotta’ feeling you’re gonna’ need all that fire before this is over with.”

  He untied Buck and swung a long leg over the saddle. “Watch your back, Dixie darlin’. See ya’ in a few days.”

  With a gloved hand, he touched the brim of his black Stetson and spurred the buckskin into a slow lope.

  Heaviness laid a hand on the top of my head and pushed me to the ground. I was on a wagon train in the middle of nowhere heading for a place I never wanted to go. California was Mama’s dream, not mine. Alone. No one to care. My life depending on the very man who killed her.

  Despair: black as soot.

  My tears broke and splashed the dirt. I raised my gaze to the horizon and whispered a silent prayer to the disappearing dot in the distance.

  “Hurry.”

  Finished with the evening chores, I crawled into the wagon. The yellowed thumbnail moon played hide and seek with the clouds, and my eyes grew heavy. On guard for Whitaker, I refused to rest and sat rigid and upright. Waiting. Sleep pulled at my eyelids.

  The bitter scent of cheap whiskey jerked me awake and covered me before Whitaker did. A slimy tongue licked the side of my face like a cow slurping a salt lick. Sweaty hands pawed the front of my dress. Someone screamed. Me.

  Whitaker threw me to the floor like a rag doll. The full weight of his body crashed down on top of mine. Like a band of steel, his hand pinned my arm to my side. Another scream ripped from my throat. His free hand, grimy and tasting of stale tobacco, clamped down hard on my mouth cutting off my breath. Terror grabbed my heart with a cold fist. He hissed in my ear.

  “Ain’t no one coming to help ya’ girl. Just lay there and take it.”

  A picture of Mama surrendering night after night to the brutal attacks of this slobbering pig flashed in my mind and cooled the wildfire of my fear and panic to frosted water.

  Revenge: Ice-cold blue.

  I forced my body to go limp.

  Whitaker relaxed.

  Teeth bit down on his fingers.

  Crying out, he yanked his hand away from my mouth and gawked at the blood trickling down his wrist.

  Lungs filled with blessed air. Strength returned. I kicked free from his grasp.

  McCullough’s knife lay within inches of my hand. Whitaker lunged across my body to grab it.

  Too late.

  I drove the blade deep into the small of his back and ripped it across his skin like gutting a fish.

  Whitaker let out a howl a coon dog would be proud of.

  My fist hit him hard, square on the nose.

  Blood poured and covered me in a blanket of snot and gristle.

  Struggling to stand, Whitaker fell backward. His head hit the side of Mama’s mahogany dresser. He crumbled to the floor, twitched, then lay still.

  Satisfaction: Golden.

  God almighty. How much blood does a body have? Buckets of the stuff spread across the floor quicker than soft butter on warm biscuits.

  Stunned, I watched crimson inch slowly toward the toe of my boot. Every nerve in my body danced like I’d been hit by a lightning bolt. Bile squirmed in my belly and crawled up my gullet. I clamped both hands over my mouth and choked it down.

  Lips tightened into a hard line. Bad enough the son-of-a-bitch killed Mama, but now he’d forced me to become a cold, hard killer.

  Anger: Hot poker orange.

  I drew back my foot and kicked the body.

  One.

  Two.

  Three times, until sweat rolled down my neck and nausea started its march up my
throat again.

  “Bastard!” I yelled and kicked him once more for good measure.

  What was I going to do? Whitaker and Cantrell were partners. No one would believe my story. Only one thing to do.

  Run!

  Money. Where could I get money? We had none. Wait. It was a sure bet Whitaker did.

  His silk vest lay in a rumbled heap on the floor. I rummaged through the pockets and pulled out a wad of bills that made me gasp. For once I appreciated his gambling. Where to put it? Dress had no pockets. Remembering McCullough’s hiding spot, I tucked the bills into my boot.

  Get the knife.

  Using Whitaker’s vest, I wiped the blade clean and eased the sharp edge into my boot between the tanned leather and the greenbacks.

  Widow McGuire did washing for the bachelors and widowers on the train. In my haste to get to the picket line, I forgot about the makeshift clothesline she’d stung between the trees. Ducked just in time to avoid being throttled. Men’s and boy’s clothes flapped in the soft breeze, laughing at me. My dress, soaked with blood, sticky and smelly, went flying over my head. It took only a second to wiggle into the smallest pair of breeches. Snug around the hips but not too bad. My fingers trembled buttoning the plaid shirt. Had to hurry. Better take another pair. As an afterthought, I pulled a few bills from my boot and pinned them on the line. Wasn’t a thief, just a murderer.

  Joe let out a soft nicker and nudged my pockets for persimmons. I patted his brown and white shoulder and whispered to his flicking ears. “Get me out of this mess, and I’ll pick you a bushel full.”

  I crammed the extra clothes into the saddle bags. My fingers brushed against the cold, smooth steel of a gun barrel. Even if I couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn, it was comfort knowing it was there. Wait. What was this? I pulled the star into the moonlight. Well, I’d be damned. A badge. McCullough was a lawman. Why hadn’t he told me? No time to think on it now, I had to hurry.

  Oh hell and damnation! The stirrups were too long. I adjusted the length and wondered if my hands would ever stop shaking. McCullough took good care of his horses, so much so, he spoiled them. Why would he leave Joe fully saddled knowing he was going to be gone for days? He wouldn’t. Unless…unless he figured someone would need to make a fast get-a-way. I smiled and led the gelding away from the wagons before stepping up into the saddle.

  I had more in common with Papa than his red hair and blue eyes. He could ride like a wild Comanche, and so could I. Full of piss and vinegar, Joe fought the reins, begging to run. I fixed my gaze on the North Star and nudged him with my heel. Six Shooter Siding was two days away. From the way Joe flew across the prairie, we’d be there in one. Leaning low on his neck, I surrendered all thought and listened only to the wind whistling in my ears.