Rebecca's
Surrender
The little
sign outside the door of the general store in River's Junction reads: "Rivers'
Mercantile-Rebecca Rivers Proprietor." The Rivers were the first family to
settle the small valley, and since her parent's death, Rebecca Rivers
considered it her duty to tend the only general store for miles around. Her
position has made her proud and haughty for a woman so young. Although there
were few people in the surrounding community that could say they liked Rebecca,
she did have a respected place in the small town.
Rebecca grew up in a farmhouse near
town. When her parents died she turned
her house over to the bank to sell, and moved behind the mercantile where she
could make her life as simple as possible. She liked her life in order, and
there wasn't anything in her life that wasn't, as long as she controlled it. At
twenty-five she considered herself a satisfied, if not somewhat lonely woman.
When Jake Elder came to town, Rivers'
Mercantile was the first place he stopped.
"I need some food, flour, sugar,
yeast, beans..." his list went on and on. "Deliver it to the house on the Trail
End road," he ordered like some land baron, far above his station.
As Rebecca
looked into his dark eyes, they seemed almost as black as his hair, as his
boots, as the wide belt he wore about his waist.
"That's my house."
"Yours?"
"Well, it was mine," she admitted.
"Well, it's not yours anymore," he
smiled broadly for an instant, and walked out the door.
Rebecca wondered as she watched him
leave, why her banker sold her house to this rough man. She didn't like it at
all. She should have managed the sale herself, she thought, found some nice
stable family rather than this strange fellow from God knows where. She took an
instantaneous dislike to him.
However, as time passed, the
relationship between Jake and Rebecca warmed, as she became less wary of him.
He was a curious breed of man in Rebecca's eyes, not like most men she knew,
startling in a dark, mysterious way, his hair to his shoulders, his mustache long, his mouth rarely
smiling, except to tease her for reasons unbeknownst to her. She was curious
about him, and attracted to him as well. And because of that, she kept their
relationship cordial. She wasn't
altogether sure if she trusted him, or her attraction.
In Jake Elder's eyes, Rebecca Rivers
was the kind of woman he'd love to love: a challenge. She was strong willed,
proud and gutsy; and that long brown hair falling down her shoulders... he would
love to glide his hand on its silky surface.
Toward the end of spring Rebecca
Rivers drove her buckboard to the Elder house.
"I want my trees," she announced, as
Jake walked from the barn, a blacksmith's hammer in his hand. With his sleeves
rolled up, she could see his strong, tanned, muscled arm.
"Your what?"
he queried.
"My trees."
"What trees are those, Miss Rivers?"
"The ones over there," she said
pointing to a space just outside the garden.
"I beg your pardon, Ma'am, those are
mine."
Rebecca was taken aback.
"Mr.
Elder, I planted those trees three years ago before I decided to sell the
house. I've always intended to come get them. They are a special fruit tree I
ordered from the East Coast at considerable cost. My banker should have told
you this."
"Well, I'm sorry, Miss Rivers, no
one told me about them. Since I like them, they'll stay here."
"But they are mine!" She didn't like
the way the man opposed her. In her mind the trees were hers, plain and
simple. She didn't see any reason why he
shouldn't understand that.
Rebecca looked at him, trying to
decide what to do. She wasn't used to people disputing her, and she had no
intention of letting Jake Elder steal her trees. Ignoring him, she started
toward the garden. Though much to her surprise, Jake grabbed the haughty Miss
Rivers, "I said no!"
"How dare you," she yelled, as she
wrenched herself away.
He laughed. "You don't come into my
garden and take my trees."
"I intend to have them," she stomped
her feet firmly.
"And I'll take it out of your hide,
if you so much as touch one."
"You wouldn't dare!"
"You want to try?"
She seethed at him.
He nodded to her wagon, it was time
to go.
Rebecca mounted the buckboard again
and turned back toward the road, as if she'd given up. But to Jake's surprise, she stopped again at
the end of the garden, and dismounting, found her shovel in the back of the
wagon, and began to unearth the trees.
Jake's tall lean body traversed the
space between them in seconds. His hand firmly grasped Rebecca's wrist one more
time.
"You continue ma'am," he said, "I'll
whip you."
"How dare you!"
"You'd best not test me."
"You unhand me, sir, and let me have
my trees," she demanded.
"No," he replied adamantly.
She wrestled with him, but he was
powerfully strong. She could smell the earthy perfume of his sweating body,
recalling how long it had been since she'd been so close to a man. She knew she
would not win a physical battle, so she abandoned her struggle and he let her
go.
"I'm coming back for them," she
snapped, "I'll steal them if I have to."
She was about to climb back in the
wagon, but Jake had other ideas, and with one swift stroke he gathered her into
his arms. She struggled, but it was to no avail. He bent her over with one arm,
her hair in wild disarray. Holding her firmly in his grasp, his right hand came
down on her bottom with several resounding smacks.
"Stop!" she yelled as he began, but
there was no relenting.
"You think you'll get the better of
me, ma'am, you'll think twice next time. His hand came down again and again.
"Ouch! Ouch. Stop it!"
Her screams fell on deaf ears.
There were several more firm,
well-placed smacks.
Though Rebecca still struggled, Jake
was delighting in his efforts. Her plump round bottom was a perfect target,
jiggling just a bit beneath the fabric of her cotton skirt. He would have liked
to do it on her bare rear end-the sound would have been louder,
and of course the pain more fierce. But for now, he was hopeful Miss Rivers
would get his message with this abbreviated rendering. When he set her aright,
she could not contain her anger.
"I hope your rear is as red as your
face," he taunted.
"You've not heard the end of this,"
she spat back, and abruptly returned to her wagon. She was out of sight as
quickly as any remaining dignity would allow.
As she rode back to the mercantile,
she could feel nothing but fire in her highly charged body: the fire of her
anger, the fire of her abused bottom, and most disturbing a fire in her
loins-though that fire she ignored. The gall of the man to
deal with her that way. She pondered her revenge, having no intention of
letting Jake Elder get away with this appalling stunt.