to it, Iâll wash and cut your hair,â came the womanâs voice. Jake looked up to see her coming into the bedroom. âHow are you feeling today, Mr. Harkner? Have you returned to the real world?â
He just stared at her a moment. She was actually smiling and looked relieved that he might be better. And todayâ¦today she was the prettiest he had ever seen her. She wore a deep blue calico dress that fit her small but nicely curved frame. Her long, honey-blond hair was hanging well past her shoulders, drawn up at the sides with combs. There was no more fear in her eyes as she came closer and touched his face with the back of her hand, and what a slender, gentle hand it was.
âThe fever is finally gone. Iâd say youâre going to live, Mr. Harkner. And I must say, under all that trail dust and that neglected beard, you turned out to be quite a handsome man once I found your real face.â
Jakeâs eyes moved over her, and Miranda immediately regretted the remark, wondering what had made her say it. She moved to the foot of the bed, draping a light blanket over his bare feet, then moved to the window and opened the curtains. âItâs a beautiful day.â
Jake tried to sit up, but dizziness overcame him. He groaned, and quickly Miranda was at his side, grasping his shoulders and pressing him back into the feather mattress. âNot yet. Donât be so anxious, Jake.â
âHow long have I been here?â
âNearly a week now. I imagine it will be another few days before you can think about walking around, let alone riding a horse.â
Again Jake tried to sit up. âI donât have another few days. Iâve been here too long already. Where are my guns? My clothes?â
âJake, if you do too much too soon, everything Iâve done, all the hours Iâve sat with you through the night, will be for nothing. Youâll kill yourself. Let your body heal.â She straightened and folded her arms. âIâm not giving you any guns just yet. As far as your clothes, theyâve been boiled and pressed and are clean whenever youâre ready to wear them again, but at the moment you are far from that.â
Again he settled back into the bed, hating to admit she was right. She had called him Jake twice, using the name as easily as if he were her best friend. And was that true concern he saw in her eyes? She left the room, and he heard the sound of dishes clinking, water being poured. She returned a few minutes later with a tray. âA cup of good, strong tea is just what you need. Good for a stomach that hasnât seen food for a long time.â She set the tray on the table beside the bed. âAnd if youâre so determined to sit up, then letâs do it right. Then you can get the tea down better. If it stays down, Iâll cut you a piece of bread and weâll see if that stays down.â
She reached over to help him raise up a little, bracing an arm under his neck. She reached around him then to fluff the pillows and grasp an extra one to prop against the cross-poles at the head of the bed.
Jake noticed her neck was small and pretty. She was so close, smelled so good. He thought how if he were at his usual strength and felt all right, it would be very hard not to pull her to him and taste her mouth, feel her soft skin. How long had she been a widow? How often did she think about what it had been like to let a man bed her? Had it been good with her husband, or were there things he had never even taught her?
âIâll help all I can, but youâre going to have to push with your hands a little.â Miranda grasped him under the arms and used all her strength to help scoot him up slightly, thinking what a solid, muscular man he was, in spite of his last week of sickness. His skin was so dark, she wondered if he had Mexican or Indian blood. She struggled to ignore his closeness, tried not to think about how good it might
Gemma Halliday
Shelley Freydont
Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Keith Graves
Jim Butcher
Kylie Gilmore
JT Sawyer
Laura Strickland
John R. Maxim
Joy Fielding