An excerpt from Chapter One of When Doves Fly, a new historical fiction novel set in 1870s Colorado, coming September 30, 2015:
Lily Wright departed the train
before the other passengers, gripping her carpet bag tight, eager to disappear.
The bell clanged their arrival as the train rumbled to a stop, and voices rose
over the hiss of steam engines as travelers greeted family and friends. Lily
had no one to greet, yet every face resembled her husband’s and filled her with
cold dread. Throwing peeks over her shoulder, she dodged and weaved until she
found the station agent.
“Where’s the nearest hotel and stagecoach, sir?”
“Welcome to Denver ,
miss.” He jerked his thumb to the east, beyond the depot. “Plenty hotels within
a few blocks, they can get you to a coach.”
She nodded and proceeded inside. People,
suitcases, and trunks littered the station. She ducked her head and wound
around them. Hair prickled on her neck. Convinced eyes had followed her, she
turned, but no one seemed interested. Her heart pounded faster as she skirted
the ticket line and burst through the doors to the street.
Wagons lumbered past in the waning evening light.
A river of people flowed around her—men in work clothes or suits and bowlers,
women in walking dresses with pert bustles—while she stood in front of the
depot and searched building signs.
She wanted a smaller place, inexpensive and
inconspicuous. She’d thought she would feel safe once she reached Denver ,
but her anxiety had grown stronger with every mile as the train chugged across
the prairie.
Lily negotiated the wide, muddy road with a stream
of pedestrians toward a cross-street lined with tall brick and clapboard
buildings. When the group reached the other side and went their separate ways, she
started up the narrower street, scanning the buildings and stopping at each
corner to survey the side roads. After several blocks, a squat, wooden
structure with a large sign on the roof drew her attention: The Broadwell
House. Her pace picked up.
The noise and chaos fell behind as the traffic and
crowds thinned. The buildings cast long shadows over the road, and the mountain
sunset blared bright color on the facing side.
Her apprehension dimmed outside the crush of
people, and exhaustion weighed her shoulders down. The hotel beckoned. Her hand
ached, and she shifted the small suitcase to her other hand as she passed an
alley.
An arm shot from the narrow void between buildings
and snatched the bag from her fingers. She gasped, but shock throttled a scream
in her throat. She swung toward the breach but caught only a glimpse of a
darker shadow darting away. Her feet moved a few yards into the alley, but the
gloom stopped her.
Wait, what if I catch up with him? Who knows
what he might do.
She spun and darted into the road.
“Thief! Help!”
The street had emptied. The nearest figure, a
block away, kept moving in the opposite direction. She opened her mouth to
shout again but closed it with a snap.
Heavens, what am I thinking? I can’t get
involved with the law here. But my bag ….
She turned back to the alley, but nothing moved,
the shadow gone.
“No!”
She stomped her foot and flapped her arms. The
bag. Everything. The money! This cannot be happening.
Paralyzed by frustration, Lily couldn’t fathom
what to do next. The sun dropped below the skyline. Fear overcame shock. When
full dark hit, the street would only present more danger.
She scuttled toward the Broadwell House, where she
walked to the clerk’s desk and pulled a purse from her skirt pocket.
“One night, please.”
The clerk flicked her eyes up from a newspaper.
“$3.00. No visitors.” She returned her attention to her paper.
Lily dug the money from her purse. The remaining paltry
bills and coins worsened the roiling in her stomach. She tucked the pouch back
in her pocket and laid three gold coins in the woman’s outstretched hand.
“Up the stairs, on the left.” The clerk slid a key
across the desk.
Relieved the woman hadn’t indicated a guest log,
Lily snagged the key and hurried to the second floor. She let herself in,
slammed the door, and turned the lock.
Minimal furniture filled the modest, tidy room.
She bypassed a table with an oil lamp and matches and fell onto the bed.
Burying her face in the pillow, she sobbed.
I can’t stay here. He’ll find me here, I just
know it. I have to make it to a more remote place. But what will I do when I
get there? I can’t start a store with no money. She pummeled the mattress. It’s
not fair. All I want is freedom to do as I wish, independence with no one
deciding where I can go or how I must live, the chance to be my own. Is that so
much to ask?
Dark settled, but she didn’t drift off for hours.
© 2015 Lauren Gregory All Rights Reserved.
Very good :D
ReplyDeleteThanks Anna!
DeleteI highly recommend this book. The action stops only long enough for you to catch your breath.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jackie. :)
Delete