to him; he was in the habit of judging a man for himself, not by what he heard, but he wanted to know from me if the rumors were true.”
She’d never given the farmer a glance, but the next time she passed Dan O’Brien on the street she planned to nod politely, maybe even say good morning to the man.
“From the morning I heard about the shooting, I didn’t believe you did it,” she said, almost to herself.
“You were the only one,” he answered.
She agreed. “I went away to school before the trial, but I kept up with it in the papers. No one wanted to believe it might have been a stray bullet, but after you went to prison all the boys who’d been on the creek that night found reasons to leave town. I think they felt sorry for what they’d done.”
“Not sorry enough to drop me a note.” Rowdy stood and walked to the water’s edge. “You have any idea what prison’s like when you’re fifteen? I spent the first year mad at the world and the second wishing I was dead. No one would have cared, one way or the other.”
“I would have,” she answered, then hurried on when he glared back at her as if he was about to call her a liar. “I know it couldn’t have been as bad as prison, but the school my father sent me to was dark and hard. Most of the girls were two or three years older than me and offered no friendship. I had no one to talk to and my family never wrote. On Sundays, we had to go to chapel and pray.” She straightened. “I prayed you were safe.”
All the anger melted away from Rowdy. He walked back to her and knelt down beside her. “Why?”
She shook her head. “Maybe because you were the only person I knew who had also been sent away to hell.”
She stood, embarrassed by her own honesty, and straightened her skirts as if they’d been having tea in her parlor. “I’d better get back.”
He held the reins of her horse. “Let me help you up,” he said from behind her as she reached for the saddle horn.
She almost said that she’d been climbing on a horse by herself since she was six. Instead, she nodded. She felt the warmth of his body only an inch away from hers.
Hesitantly, his hands went around her waist. He lifted her up. Laurel closed her eyes and imagined that he was really touching her out of caring and not politeness.
His hands remained at her waist for a moment. “I haven’t been around a woman in a long time,” he said. “I’ve forgotten how they feel. I know you’re strong, but I’m afraid I’ll break you if I hold too tight.”
She almost said that she’d never been touched with such care. He’d lifted her as if she were a treasure.
He moved his hand over hers. “I like the way you feel, Laurel. I’ll be careful helping you up if you allow me to when we’re alone.”
When he started to move his hand away, she caught his fingers in hers and held on tightly. She might not be able to tell him how she felt, but she had to show him.
He finally pulled his hand away and whispered, “It’s all right, Laurel. I think I understand.”
When she took the reins, he stepped back and watched her leave. Neither said a word.
She rode back through the passage and straight home, her thoughts full of the way he’d touched her.
When she walked down the hall, she wasn’t surprised to see her father’s study light still on. The man never went to bed if he could walk straight.
“There you are, girl,” he yelled in a slurred voice watered down by a dozen drinks. “I’m glad to see you stayed awhile at the dance. Filmore mentioned that he worried about you being so shy. A banker needs a wife who can be part of society, not a mouse running to the corner every time someone talks to her.”
“Jeffery Filmore never talks to me, only at me.” Laurel voiced her thoughts for once.
Her father laughed. “That doesn’t matter, girl. I never did have a conversation longer than a minute with my Rosy and we got along just fine.”
Rosy had been his second wife. She’d died ten years ago, but he still mourned her, especially around bedtime.
Laurel tried again. “What if I don’t want to marry Jeffery?”
The captain gave most of