at the wrong moment, and then was eliminated. Then the policeman suddenly found himself demoted from hero to spear carrier and his story finished. I didn’t blame Jimmy at all. If I had been able to act, I would have done as he had, simply in order to stay alive. And Jimmy didn’t see the policeman as a spear carrier. Jimmy was always a more humane, open, warmer person than I, and it cost him greatly to shoot the man. I admit that the man was still a spear carrier to me, but nonetheless both deaths bothered me.
If I had the opportunity, I would make the proposal that no man should be killed except by somebody who knows him well enough for the act to have impact. No death should be like nose blowing. Death is important enough that it should affect the person who causes it.
We made our camp at last. We attended to the horses as best we could, sheltering them under the lee of some trees. Then we set up the bubble tent, pitching it on a level spot. Jimmy went after the saddlebags, bedroll, and saddles while I finished with the tent. We stowed things away in all the corners and that left just enough room to stretch out the bedroll.
We were soaking wet. The rain made a steady pitter on the bubble and we could hear the rising and falling shrill of the wind outside. We left the light on until we had taken off all our clothes. Undressing was difficult because of the lack of room and a cold saddle is an unpleasant place to put your bare bottom. Jimmy was more hairy than I had ever suspected. Finally we spread our clothes out to dry, turned out the light, and got into bed.
The bed was cold and so was I, and I put my arms around Jimmy. His skin was cold too, at first, but he was comfortingly solid. I needed comfort. I think he did, too.
I touched his cheek with my hand. “I’m not mad anymore, you know.”
“I know,” he said. “I didn’t think you were. I’m sorry, anyway. I’ve got to take you as you are, even when you say stupid things. You can’t help what you think.”
He kissed me gently. I cooperated with the kiss.
“I’m glad you came for me,” Jimmy said. He moved his hand up the length of my back and across my shoulders. It gave me shivers. “Are you cold?” he asked.
“No,” I said. “Did you think I’d come?”
“I hoped, I guess. I’m glad you came. I’m glad it was you, Mia.”
He shifted and then put his hand on my breast. I put my hand over it.
“You’re beautiful,” he said.
“Why didn’t you ever say that before?” We’d kissed and done some other things, and I’d assumed he liked me, our differences aside, but he’d never said he liked the way I looked. I pressed the hand on my breast and I kissed his cheek and his mouth. I felt safer and warmer and more secure than I had in days. Oh, he was good to hold onto.
I let his hand go free and he let it wander. “I never dared,” he said. “You’d have used it against me. Hey, you know, that’s funny. When I touch this one, I can feel your heart beat and when I touch this one, I can’t.”
“I can feel yours, too,” I said. “Thump, thump, thump, thump, thump.”
I kissed my hand and let it touch his face. Kissed his face.
“You do like the way I look?”
“Of course. You are beautiful. I like the way you look. I like your voice—it doesn’t squeak. I like the way you feel.” He moved his hand. “I like the way you smell.” His face moved in my hair.
“It’s odd, isn’t it?” I said. “I don’t think I’d like this if I didn’t like the way you smell, and I never thought about it before. What do you mean I’d have used it against you?”
He said slowly, “You’d have said something snippy. I just couldn’t take the chance.”
I never realized before that he was that vulnerable, that something I might say could hurt him. “I say things sometimes,” I said, “but never if you told me that.”
He kissed my breast, moved his tongue experimentally over the nipple, and it swelled without my willing it. I thought my heart would become too large and break with the surge it made. We moved tightly into each other’s arms and