The Outlaw's Daughter (Hero Hearts; Marrying A Marshal Book 3) Read online




  The Outlaw’s Daughter

  Marrying a Marshal Book Three

  Natalie Dean

  Eveline Hart

  Hero Hearts

  Kenzo Publishing

  © Copyright 2018 by Kenzo Publishing - All rights reserved.

  In no way is it legal to reproduce, duplicate, or transmit any part of this document by either electronic means or in printed format. Recording of this publication is strictly prohibited, and any storage of this document is not allowed unless with written permission from the publisher. All rights reserved.

  Respective authors own all copyrights not held by the publisher.

  Dedication

  I’d like to dedicate this book to YOU! The readers of my books. Without your interest in reading these heartwarming stories of love on the frontier, I wouldn’t have made it this far. So thank you so much for taking the time to read any and hopefully all of my books.

  And I can’t leave out my wonderful mother, son, sister, and Auntie. I love you all, and thank you for helping me make this happen.

  Most of all, I thank God for blessing me on this endeavor.

  Exclusive Books By Natalie Dean & Eveline Hart

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  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  If you enjoyed this story…

  Other books by Natalie Dean & Eveline Hart

  Sneak Peek: A Soldier’s Love, Brides & Twins Book One

  Beginnings

  Chapter 1

  About Author - Natalie Dean

  Chapter 1

  1886 Western District of Texas | Cypress Creek, Texas near the Guadalupe River

  U.S. Marshal Hank Fulton strutted down the boardwalk of Cypress Creek. He’d been gone too long on his last assignment to rustle out a den of thieving cowboys, and it felt good to be back. He knew the quiet wouldn’t last, but he’d enjoy it for as long as he could.

  “That you, Hank?”

  Hank pulled his gaze from where he’d been studying the outline of the mountains in the distance and focused on the shopkeeper ten feet from him. It wasn’t like him to slip away from the present like he had, but the last raid had been hard and he’d lost a man. That never got easy; he didn’t think it should.

  “Howdy, Junior,” he said, nodding his head at the rotund man he’d known ever since moving to Cypress Creek years ago.

  “You’re back. Glad to see ya, Marshal,” the man said, clapping him on the shoulder in place of a handshake.

  “Yes, you too.”

  “It was close to a month, wasn’t it?”

  “A month and a week actually,” Hank admitted. He’d missed sleeping in his own bed, albeit a ratty cot in the corner of his rundown cabin, but it was his.

  Hank didn’t need much in the way of comfort, never had, but as of late, he’d been thinking about making his little cabin more of a home than a shack.

  “Say,” he said, scratching the back of his neck, “I may be in to make some orders in a week or so. When would they arrive?”

  Junior’s eyebrows rose. “Orders? I ain’t never known you to order a thing in your life, Hank Fulton.”

  Hank wanted to remind the man that he hadn’t known him his whole life, but instead he just gave a mysterious smile. “People change.”

  “That they do. Sure, come on in. I’d say they’d be here in three to four weeks’ time, depending on what you order.”

  “Sounds about right. Thank you kindly, Junior.”

  The man nodded. “Glad to have you back. Town’s not the same without you.”

  Hank nodded in the face of the compliment and shuffled on his way. He was never sure what to say. “You’re welcome” sounded a little too arrogant, as if he was responsible for all the good the town experienced. The voice of his mother telling him the best way to accept a compliment was to say “Thank you” rose up in the back of his mind. He’d certainly done her proud.

  The rustle of leaves in the streets brought to mind the reality of winter. It wasn’t upon them yet, thankfully, but Hank knew it would descend soon, and he and the deputy marshals would be holed up for most of it.

  It was his least favorite time of year. He could do without the months indoors, the cold rain, and the time of family. He cringed at the uncharitable thought. It wasn’t so much family, he was happy to spend time with his brother, Andy, and his wife, Louise, but it wasn’t the same as when they were children. Things changed, and Hank felt it wasn’t always for the best.

  When he approached the U.S. Marshal Service’s office door, he peered in through the murky glass. The waves made whoever was inside look like they were reflected through water, but it was enough of the profile for Hank to know that it wasn’t either of his deputies.

  “Howdy,” he said, coming inside and pulling his hat from his head.

  “Good afternoon,” the man said. He’d turned to the door when Hank opened it and now stood tall and with the fresh-pressed look of a man on a mission for someone else.

  “How can I help you?” Hank made his way around his desk. “I assume you’re here to see me.”

  Seeing as how the man hadn’t engaged in conversation with either his brother or Andy Fulton, the other deputy marshal, Hank could only conclude that he was the reason behind the man’s presence.

  “I’m Mr. Worthen and, well, yes.” The man shot a furtive glance to the deputies. “Is there somewhere we could speak in private?”

  Hank’s interest was piqued. “There something you can’t say in front of my deputies?”

  “I’d rather not, if it’s all the same to you.”

  It wasn’t, but Hank didn’t feel like fighting it at the moment. “This way.”

  The man followed Hank out the back door and toward a bench that sat under a tree with orange leaves in full array.

  “It’s nothing fancy, but it’s private.”

  “This will do just fine,” the man said, brushing off the leaves before taking a seat. “Mr. Fulton—”

  “Let me get one thing straight,” Hank interrupted. “Are you here talking to me because of my capacity as a marshal?”

  “I am.”

  “Then it’s Hank to you.”

  The man inclined his head slightly. “All right. Hank.” He cleared his throat as if thrown off by Hank’s informal manner. “I am here as an intermediary for the government and the marshals. We’d like to have you look into a…matter for us.”

  “Matter?” Hank repeated the word and cocked his head to the side. “What type of matter are we talking about?” He’d much rather the man get to the point than this beating around the bush.

  “We’d like you to persuade a member of the Jenkins Gang to turn on the family.”

  Hank was sure his eyes were as wide as saucers. “The Jenkins Gang?”

  “The very same.”

  Hank leaned back, his mind whirring with poss
ibilities. “What do you mean by persuade?”

  “Nothing untoward,” the man assured him, “but we’ve recently found out that there is a relative of theirs living right here in your town. We think you’ll be the best man for the job, but it must be done with caution. This matter must happen without the rest of the gang hearing about it. The member’s return must appear…genuine.”

  “So as to make sure the infiltration is complete. I see.” He rubbed his jaw, considering the possibilities. If they could convince this member to return to the gang and set up a trap for them, they could capture the whole family at one time. It would be an extensive operation, but it could have far-reaching rewards.

  Hank didn’t care about money or the like, but he did care about the law. Even more than that, he cared about keeping people safe, and it sounded like, with the Jenkins Gang out of commission, there would be a lot of people saved from their terror and wild nature.

  “Mr. Worthen, you’ve got yourself a deal.”

  * * *

  Ella Jenkins hadn’t asked to be born into a criminal family. She’d never wanted to do anything other than abide the law like any good church-going woman would, but that had proven to be more difficult than she would have expected.

  At the age of five, Ella had seen her first dead body. It had been a jarring thing, and her pa had told her to get used to it, seeing as how she was a member of their family. That had been the first time Ella had vowed to leave her family behind for better—less bloody—things.

  At age ten, Ella had grown adept at disappearing when the family “needed” her the most. They’d taken to putting her into houses through windows, due to her small size, preying upon her to open the doors in order for them to thieve and pillage. All the while Ella had known it was wrong. She’d tried to tell her pa that she wanted to stay home, but he wouldn’t hear it. Since Ma had died bringing her into this world, she had no recourse. No safe haven.

  At the age of fifteen, Ella decided she’d had enough and had set off one evening to find her own way in this world. She’d packed only what truly belonged to her—purchased from money she earned through her job as a shopkeeper’s helper—and set off to make her way in the world as anyone other than a Jenkins.

  Ella Jones, as she now went by, had first stepped foot in Cypress Creek five months prior. It was a small, dusty town with a big river running near it that had captured her fancy. The train stop, heralded by the train attendants as enchanting, had been anything but that, but she’d met Missy Franklin within the first ten minutes of her arrival and that had sealed the deal for her.

  “Ella?” Missy said from the kitchen. “Will you be home for supper, or should I plan to eat without you?

  Missy had looked as lost as Ella, standing on the platform and looking up and down it like someone was going to magically appear. After watching for several minutes, Ella had mustered the courage to speak to the young woman, who looked about her age. Finding out that they were indeed close in age—her nineteen to Ella’s twenty-two—they had struck up an easy conversation.

  Missy had shared that she was a mail order bride in search of her husband-to-be, and Ella had dodged most questions of her past and left it at the reality that she was starting up a new life. Somehow, Missy had known not to pry.

  After two hours of conversation, laugher, and no sign of Missy’s husband-to-be, the girls had decided to split a meal and a room at the hotel.

  The rest, as they always said, was history, but Ella was more than happy that they now shared a small cabin on the outskirts of town and had become the best of friends.

  “I don’t think I’ll be back in time. Don’t wait for me.”

  “Sounds good.”

  “Bye!” Ella called out.

  Missy said goodbye, and Ella stepped into the crisp autumn air. It had only recently turned into true fall, and Ella loved it. She took in the beauty of the trees with their changing leaves and the colder mornings that promised rain and a reprieve from the summer’s heat. She felt like she could live in fall if it were possible.

  Her walk to the heart of town only took her fifteen minutes, and she’d found that she enjoyed all of those minutes. Sometimes, they even felt too short to her, despite the pinch of her toes in her too-small boots or the cooler wind nipping at her cheeks.

  But what Ella relished most was the beauty of anonymity.

  Growing up as Ella Jenkins, she’d known what path her destiny had set her on. The one with robbery and murder, but as Ella Jones, she had created a life that was valuable. She dreamed of starting up a home for orphaned children someday, making a place for them to belong and maybe even to find a home of their own. It was a big dream, one that seemed almost too far out of reach, but a girl could pray, couldn’t she?

  Until then though, she had to be content working as the local seamstress and practicing her stitching. While Missy had found a job at the restaurant as a waitress, Ella knew her prior skills as a seamstress could come in handy. When she found the local tailor, Mr. Hobbs, she had offered up her help for the female clients in town.

  While Mr. Hobbs, a man who looked more like a skeleton than a human being, treated her well, he had no consideration for her time. He’d keep her much past supper time in order to finish up orders he hadn’t gotten to.

  She’d thought to complain at first, but as he often let her leave early when there was no work to be done that day, but paid her the same all around, she decided it was best to let sleeping dogs lie.

  This evening, however, Ella knew she would be staying late. It was near the end of the month, and that meant that all of the orders Mr. Hobbs hadn’t gotten to would be coming to her. She’d step out for a bite to eat at the restaurant, something her employer paid for much to her surprise, but she would stay late until all—or most—of the sewing was done.

  This wasn’t the life Ella had been raised to live, but it was the life she was living, and she loved it. If she’d followed the wishes of her family, she might have fallen prey to the law or possibly to a stray bullet.

  The only thing truly lacking for her was that special someone. Her heart beat faster at the mere thought, but that wasn’t something she could plan. Unlike Missy, she wasn’t willing to auction herself off to the first man. She cringed; it sounded uncharitable to her dear friend. It was just the fact that she had dreams of marrying for love, whereas most women she’d met on her lonely journey had dreams of stability.

  She’d had stability as the daughter of a criminal. No, what she wanted was true affection, and she was willing to wait for it—or forego it all together, should the Lord will. Either way, she was just happy to be free from her family and working an honest job for her survival.

  God was good; that was for certain.

  Chapter 2

  Hank pushed his Stetson more firmly onto his head and walked toward the small shack on the outskirts of town. It looked like it had seen better days, but he couldn’t fault the inhabitants on their lack of upkeep. Things weren’t exactly flourishing for all residents of town.

  It wasn’t that things were scarce, but not everyone had found gainful employment, and it showed in their standards of living. He looked around him, taking in the surroundings of the area. Low brush, a few sparse trees, and a good view of the mountain range in the distance.

  The land itself was rather pretty, but that was all that Hank could admire.

  He checked the sheet again. It was a set of directions that would lead him to his man. A little unorthodox, but Mr. Worthen had said the source they were using was not educated and had offered up the location of the Jenkins family member as a means to commute his sentence. Mr. Worthen hadn’t said whether or not the information had been useful enough to do so, but he was at a residence, which was more than he could say for other tips he’d followed in the past.

  Then again, he’d never had anything quite as impressive as the Jenkins’s gang. They were a mean bunch, looting, thieving, and even stooping so far as to murder when necessary. Hank wondered wh
y a member of their family would have left. He was happy with that fact, of course, but suspicious too.

  He consulted the sheet one last time before folding it up and stuffing it into his inside pocket. Time to get to it.

  The sound of his spurs clanking against the dry, packed earth, followed him to the front door, where he raised a fist and knocked. A few moments later, a petite woman answered the door, fear immediately filling her eyes at the sight of a tall man in her doorway.

  “Howdy, ma’am. I’m U.S. Marshal Hank Fulton,” he said, hoping that would put her at ease.

  “Um, how do you do?” She peered around behind him then returned her gaze to his. “Can I help you?”

  “I’m looking for,” he hesitated. He’d barely been giving anything more than an address—and not even that. How was he going to ask about a Jenkins family member if they weren’t interested in being found. “That is to say…is your husband around?”

  That had to be the only logical explanation, didn’t it? It had to be this woman’s husband who was part of the gang. That, or their intelligence was faulty.

  “My…I’m sorry, but you must have the wrong house. I’m not married.”

  His eyebrows rose. “You live out here alone?”

  “No,” she said, a slight defiant streak peeking through. “I live here with a housemate.”

  His eyes narrowed. Housemate? “And that would be?”

  She looked offended. “Is it your duty to go around asking prying questions, Mr. U.S. Marshal?” she said and then clamped a hand over her mouth.