Never would she forget that face.
Raw, burning fear surged up inside her. She took a step back, but he was too quick. She turned to flee him, but before she could manage it, he had her in his grip again.
Beneath the blade, the straps of her costume gave way. Elena cried out and clutched the fabric to her breasts. He snarled and pushed her to the ground. A savage yank on the red spangles ripped the garment in two. He clamped a grimy palm over her mouth, smothering her scream.
“Silencio!” He straddled her, his weight rendering her immobile. He unbuckled his belt with his free hand. “I will kill you if you make a sound, señorita. And not even the good doctor’s medicine will help you, then, eh?”
His head lowered; long, wavy hair fell across her cheek. With his mouth and tongue upon her, the stench of his lust, his greed, filled and sickened her.
Afterward, when he left her cold and alone, Elena curled into a tight, miserable ball. And wept.
Chapter One
Laredo. Two Years Later
J eb Carson wanted a night of hard drinking, wild whoring and a plate full of hot, American food. He didn’t care in what order he got them, just that he did. There were times in a man’s life when his needs overrode all else.
Now was one of those times.
He’d ridden hard through northern Mexico toward the Texas border for days. The anticipation drove him hour after long, dusty hour. He didn’t analyze this need to get back to his homeland, that being in America was where he should be. Now that he was back on her soil, he couldn’t wait to have what he’d always taken for granted.
He swept an assessing glance around him. Laredo’s streets bustled with commerce and evening activity, signs that the place had grown since he’d been here last. No one seemed to notice a couple of strangers riding in.
“That belly of yours growls any louder, the whole damn town will know we’re here.”
Jeb glanced at Credence Sherman, the only person he trusted enough to call friend. “Can’t help it. Got a strong hankering for a big, thick steak.”
“Sizzlin’ in its own juices.” Creed grunted. “Me, too.”
They pulled up at a small saloon at the edge of the plaza and dismounted. The interior was cool, dim and unexpectedly crowded.
Jeb preferred crowds. Easier for a man to go unnoticed.
“What’ll it be, boys? A place at the bar? Or your own table?”
He glanced at the first bona fide American woman he’d seen since he left the country six years earlier. She wore an apron around her waist, and she was older than he was by a decade or so, but she was clean and her features were pretty enough to warrant looking at twice. Jeb guessed by the way she was looking back, she was available, too.
“A table,” he said, letting his gaze linger. “We’re staying a while.”
“Glad to hear it.” She tossed him a provocative smile and led them toward the last empty table, wedged in a dark corner at the back of the saloon and hidden from view by anyone walking in. By the sway of her hips, she knew what he was thinking.
And wanting.
After seating them, she left with a promise to bring back a couple of stiff whiskeys. Jeb watched her go, his blood warming just looking at those hips.
“Keep your pants fastened, compadre,” Creed said. “She’s practically old enough to be your mother.”
Jeb allowed a small smile. He hadn’t thought of his mother in years, and he stifled the thought of her now. “Doesn’t matter. She’s warm, breathing and female.”
“You’ve always been able to get any woman you want. Take your time. You’ve got all night.”
“I’m not feeling choosy at the moment. Or patient.”
Creed’s amusement deepened. “Damn, but you’re jaded.”
Jeb hadn’t had a woman since…when? Havana. A little Cuban beauty who’d betrayed him the next morning to her Spanish-loyalist lover.
The incident had nearly cost Jeb his life. But with a fair share of determination and guts, he had escaped the Spanish soldiers holding him prisoner. Within hours a riot erupted, and both the woman and her lover were killed.
Jeb felt no remorse for his part in it. She had double-crossed him—and the United States, which had sent him there to help her people. She’d paid the price for her treason.
As if he, too, remembered, Creed fell silent, and Jeb knew what he was thinking.
War was pure hell. And it was good to be back home.
Creed possessed skin as sun-darkened as Jeb’s, his build as tall, as muscular. Fast friends from their days at West Point Military Academy, they’d formed a partnership based on mutual trust, equal skills.
And a shared passion for rebellion against rules.
Jeb had been born with nerves of steel. Few could match his thirst for risk, that ever-present flirtation with danger he found exhilarating. Only Creed was cut from the same cloth. They’d saved each other’s necks more often than Jeb cared to count.
But at that point, their similarities ended. Creed was headed home to a large, loving family, to the childhood sweetheart he hoped was still waiting for him.
Jeb had no one. At least, no one who cared if he came back or not.
The barmaid returned with their drinks, and without sparing her a glance, Jeb threw back a quick swallow. The whiskey burned the bitterness that flared inside him. A second swallow buried it altogether. He reached inside his coat pocket for a rolled cigarette, then tucked it unlit at the corner of his mouth.
“We’ll head for San Antonio in the morning,” Jeb said, and rooted for a match. “I figure you can take the Southern Pacific to Los Angeles. I’ll send word you’re arriving, and—”
“Come with me, Jeb.”
“No.” His mood souring again, he found the box he was looking for.
“You can find work out there. You—”
“We’ve had this discussion already, Creed.”
“Then what the hell are you going to do?”
“I’ll think of something. I always do, don’t I?”
Suddenly, near his left ear, a match struck flint. He stilled. Creed’s attention jumped upward to whoever stood in the shadows beside him.
“Allow me, Mr. Carson.”
The sharp scent of sulfur reached his nostrils. An arm appeared. Jeb dared to dip the end of his cigarette into the flame. He drew in deep. Only then did he look to see who held the match.
A tall, burly-chested man, well into his thirties. He wore a military uniform signifying him as a field officer in the United States Army.
Jeb leaned back in his chair. He narrowed an eye. “Have we met?”
“No, sir.”
“But you know who I am.”
The officer glanced over his shoulder, as if wary someone was listening. “I’d like to join you, if you don’t mind.”
Jeb’s instincts warned he wouldn’t want any part of why this man sought him out. But before he could refuse, Creed pulled out a chair, and the officer seated himself.
“My name is Lieutenant Colonel Eugene Kingston.” He kept his voice