THE LEGEND OF ANNE SOUTHERN
First of The Legend Series
By J. Rivers Hodge
With
Brenda Hodge
Chapter 1
Ruse Blackburn
At twenty-seven years of age, Ruse Blackburn was a good-looking devil
and he knew it: over six feet tall; with straight, black hair slicked down and
parted in the middle; penetrating, dark eyes; and a carefree grin.
Wearing a bloodstained white apron, Ruse stood behind the counter
in his father’s shop, his back to a dressed hog; two quarters of beeves; half
a dozen smoked hams and an equal number of plucked chickens; four
featherless geese; and numerous links of sausage, all hanging on a taut wire
next to the back wall.
The mouth-watering odor of smoked meat, hampered by a metallic
tint of fresh blood, clouded the air. A swarm of pesky flies buzzed around,
most of them drawn to the stench of the scraps tub hidden under the far
end of the counter.
Ruse wrapped a seven-bone beef roast in butcher paper for Mrs.
Glenda Harvey and grinned for her, no longer an easy task. She smiled
back, and he knew the words about to come from her mouth as sure as
his surname was Blackburn. He set the package on the counter between
them, leaving his hand on it. “There you are, Mrs. Harvey. Shall I charge
it to your account?”
She placed her pudgy hand on his bloody paw. “Oh, please, my dear
Ruse. I just now remembered, I must go from here to the church and
discuss Sunday’s hymns with Pastor Higgins. Could you deliver this
package later tonight? My husband returns tomorrow afternoon, and I
want him to have a grand supper.”
Ruse winked at the stout, much older woman. This wasn’t his first
invitation today and probably not his last. He’d lost interest in intimate
acts with women on the last Friday in June after a delivery to Mrs. Ridge,
the wife of the owner of the Ridgeville Bank. For deliveries such as this,
he sent his younger brother, Tommy. “Perhaps, but I’ll have to come very
late.”
Mrs. Harvey’s voice dropped to a coarse whisper. “You won’t disappoint
me again, will you? The last time your puny brother showed up with
the damned meat. If you can’t handle the job, I’ll take my business to
Murphy’s.”
He turned his back and spoke in the direction of the carcasses on the
wall. “I understand Mr. Murphy’s meat has been spoiled by age, but if you
can tolerate the stench—”
“Listen, don’t let me down,” she hissed and stormed from the store.
Afternoon business would pick up soon. It was almost time for Ruse’s
father, out back butchering a steer, to wash up, put on a clean apron, and
come inside to help. Ruse dug a slippery beef liver from a bucket, slapped
it on the block, and cut thin slices for a customer’s order. Blood pooled
from the organ and dripped to the sawdust-covered floor.
The over-the-door bell rang as Miss Penelope Gardner, carrying a large
straw basket on her arm, entered the shop. Ruse stood a bit straighter. He
gave the young woman, now two years past her debut, his most brilliant
smile.
Here was a delivery well worth making, and he enjoyed flirting with
witty Penelope. He intended to take advantage of his good looks and marry
up, this eligible beauty his prime target.
Her father’s business manufactured wagons, carriages, coaches, and
all the related equipment necessary to transport goods and people. They
sat well above the Blackburns’ roost on Evanston’s social architecture. The
trim, dark-haired woman’s interest in Ruse seemed to be strictly a platonic
verbal sparring, full of winks and grins and double entendres.
His fantasies included getting close enough to kiss her tempting lips,
massage her jaunty breasts, and bed Miss Gardner proper and often. She
represented exactly what he needed to regain the enthusiasm and necessary
physiology for the act.
Ruse used his lowest octave, most masculine voice. “Good afternoon,
Miss Gardner.”
In her white eyelet afternoon dress, she strutted up to the counter and
set the basket between them. “Miss Gardner, is it now? I thought I told
you to address me by my familiar name.”
His world tilted. Surely, he would remember such an instruction. “I
was unsure if you meant it, Penelope.”
“Not Penelope—Penny, you silly goose.”
Ruse swallowed. “Penny?”
She gave him a coy look, a sweet smile on her pretty, narrow face.
“Mother sent me here to obtain a goose for tomorrow’s dinner. Do you
have a goose, Ruse?” She giggled as soon as the words left her lips.
He stuck the butcher knife solidly into the block and laughed. “I get
it, goose-Ruse. Very clever. As you can see, I’m a gander; but I have four
geese-gooses, Penny. Which would you desire?”
Her brown eyes twinkled. She placed the index finger of her white-gloved
hand on her dimpled chin. “How does one know, Ruse, which
goose is grandest?”
Ruse grinned; he couldn’t help himself. “In order to be eaten, a goose
first must be properly plucked.”
She licked her lips and leaned over the counter toward him. “By what
measure does one determine when a goose is ready for the plucking?”
Turning quickly, Ruse grabbed a long pole with a hook at the end
and lifted the fattest goose from the wire. He plopped the cleanly singed
bird on the counter. He poked a blood-tinted finger on the bird’s breast,
raising his eyes from the dead goose to her ripe chest. “By the firmness of
its breast, of course.”
“So, what do you think, is firm more important than size?” Her most
salacious grin displayed perfect ivory teeth. “I’ve always heard the fatter
the goose, the sweeter its plucking.”
Stunned and excited by her alluring display of one of Evanston’s most
heavenly bodies, he barely choked out, “I’ve never seen sweeter so amply
explained before.”
She patted her hair with one delicate hand. “Admit it, Ruse. You’ve
never seen a finer goose.”
His heart pounded. “Might I call on you, sweet goose?”
The sound of buzzing flies filled the shop. One of the bugs landed on
Penny’s pink cheek, a dark blot quickly swatted away.
“Socially, I mean.” To Ruse, his voice sounded hollow.
The young woman flashed him a coquettish smile. “So, you want to
pluck my little goose, eh?”
“Yes,” he said, entirely too quickly. “No. It’s the nature of the beast. I
mean, I’d be pleased to court you if you would be agreeable.”
“You, Ruse, pluck my goose?” Penelope Gardner whirled in a circle.
She placed her hand over her mouth and giggled—then she giggled louder.
Then she laughed—then she laughed louder.
Ruse’s face flushed as the woman giggled, laughed, and danced around
the shop.
Finally, she gained control. Penny pointed at him—her eyes now
bottomless pits, and her teeth fanglike. She glared and said, “Look at you.
Father would have your hide if you placed one bloody claw on a single
pinfeather of my precious body. What makes you, the butcher’s boy, think
you can court me? I have class.”
She stripped the glove from her left hand and displayed a diamond
the size of a cat’s eyeball. With a wicked grin, she met Ruse’s eyes. “I’m
engaged to be married on November the tenth.”
His shame turned to anger. He gripped the butcher knife so hard,
had it been alive, he would have squeezed blood from its handle. In his
mind, he saw himself jump over the counter and cut her haughty throat.
Nevertheless, he silently placed the goose on the scales, weighed, and
wrapped it—all the time the power of her scrutiny causing his hands to
tremble.
Ruse looked up, a forced smile fixed on the murderous mask covering
his face. He placed the package in her basket. “There you are, Miss
Gardner—a grand goose for a stupid goose.”