Authors: Marcia Lynn McClure
“
It wasn’t a love letter, so to speak, now was it, honey?” Patty asked.
“
I think telling a woman you want her to have children with you would definitely constitute a love letter, Patty.” Fallon took another bite of her apple and chewed it violently, trying to release some of her frustration.
“
He didn’t tell her that, now did he, girl? You chew on it for a while. It was late when you read that letter, I’ve no doubt. You mull it over again and tell me if you still think it meant what you thought.”
“
I suppose we could use the beef, don’t you, Patty?” Trader said, entering the kitchen suddenly. “Bulls might be a bit tough, but the heifers should be all right, I would think. Those men will pay for this, I promise you that.” Then, directing his attention to Fallon, he said, “You better put some clothes on before those hands start coming in and out of here, girl.”
Fallon only at that moment realized she stood there, in the daylight of the kitchen eating an apple, dressed only in her nightgown. Suddenly feeling overwhelmingly self-conscious, she tucked a strand of her long hair behind one ear and looked away from him. In her haste to follow Trader that morning to see what the commotion was, she hadn’t even gone to her room for a cover. He seemed to be staring at her, and Fallon cleared her throat uncomfortably. Timidly, she brushed past him and walked toward her room. The sound of his boots on the floor as he stepped behind her severely unnerved her. Clearing her throat again, she turned to enter her room. It surprised her when he followed her, standing just inside the door.
“
Have Patty help you move your things this morning, Fallon,” he ordered.
Fallon turned to see him standing ominously inside her room, arms folded across his broad chest and feet planted solidly apart.
“
But I—” she began.
“
Ben and one of the hands can move your wardrobe. You won’t be staying in here again. They know it’s your room,” he explained.
“
But the guest room still—”
“
I didn’t say anything about the guest room, Fallon. Have them move your things into my room.” Fallon felt her eyes widen and her mouth drop open. “They wouldn’t dare try to get at you with me in there with you, now would they?” he asked. “I won’t stay in here. It would be ridiculous to do so. Therefore, you will share my room.”
“
But…there is only the one bed,” Fallon stammered.
“
Yes. One is all we need. It’s a very large bed, Fallon.” How she wished she could see his face. See what sort of expression he wore there. “I don’t intend to endure being disturbed every night by Peeping Toms at your window. You’ll adjust.” He chuckled and mumbled, “You adjusted well enough last night.”
Fallon felt the warmth in her face and knew it was no doubt the brightest shade of red imaginable. Trying to salvage a shred of her dignity, she sighed mockingly. “You’re right. I’ve adjusted before to sleeping in odd places.”
Trader chuckled again and, dropping his arms to his sides, said, “Well then, it’s settled. Off to the gruesome job of cleaning up that mess outside.” He turned and crossed the hall to his own room.
Thinking of the slaughtered cattle, Fallon’s heart swelled with the knowledge that Trader did indeed go to great lengths for her sake. Entering his room, she found him rummaging through his own wardrobe, no doubt in search of a shirt.
“
Trader,” she ventured.
“
Yes?” he asked, still rummaging.
“
I thank you for your great compassion and kindness to me,” she muttered.
He paused for a moment in his searching and said, “You’re welcome.”
“
If there is anything I can do to repay you even a little—” she began.
“
That’s enough. Too much gratitude is a dangerous thing, Fallon,” he said, turning toward her.
“
You say the oddest things,” she muttered. “But at least you should know now that I am truly grateful.”
“
I know it,” he stated.
Nervously Fallon tucked her hair behind her ear again. “Very well. I’ll let you go about your work then,” she said, turning to leave.
“
I don’t mean to sound so heartless so much of the time, Fallon,” he muttered.
She stood still for a moment and heard his footsteps approaching her. He took her arm, and as he turned her to face him, she feared he might see the thrill his touch gave her brazenly written across her forehead. He slipped his arms through the sleeves of a white shirt, pausing before buttoning the garment to say, “I’m a hard man, and hard men often use hard words when they don’t need to.” Fallon nodded, unable to respond otherwise.
Staring into the dark nothing of the hood was frustrating to Fallon. So dropping her gaze, her eyes fell to his muscular torso, which was still mostly exposed.
“
Why don’t you ever look at me when I’m talking to you?” he demanded.
“
I do!” Fallon defended herself, looking once again into the shadows that hid the man’s face. “But what am I supposed to look at? A gaping hole? A dark nothing? It’s important to see a person’s face when you’re speaking to them. Otherwise, you can’t—”
“
Don’t force this again, Fallon. You know the conditions of our marriage. You said you wouldn’t ask—”
“
I know, I know,” Fallon mumbled, scowling fiercely and putting a hand to her temple, which had begun to throb slightly. “You once gave me a lesson in trust, Trader. Remember?” she asked pointedly.
He stood motionless except for his chest, which swelled as his lungs inhaled a deep, irritated breath.
“
Well, perhaps it is time you had one yourself. What makes you so sure I would go screaming through the house if you were to reveal your…your…physical imperfections to me?”
“
You would. Believe me. I know you would,” he grumbled.
“
Then you don’t know me very well. And what’s perhaps worse is that you don’t trust me. You don’t trust my loyalty to you,” she said. “Look at you! You’re body is perfect! As…as far as I can see.”
“
Really?” he chuckled.
Fallon put her hands to her cheeks to cool her blush and rambled on, “And as for your character—well, everyone that ever lived and died on this earth has faults. The only noticeable flaw in your character is your lack of trusting in good people.”
Taking her roughly by the shoulders, Trader gritted his teeth and said, “Listen here, Fallon—I have shocking deformities above my neck. Don’t imagine I don’t. Accept this as the truth, and know you will never lay eyes on them.”
“
But why? You trust Ben, Patty, Julia…even my own mother. You reveal yourself to all of them. Why not me? Whether you want to accept the fact or not, Trader, I am your wife. At least the law sees it that way.” Fallon felt her soul pleading with him. It wasn’t so much that she was unquenchably curious about his appearance, though that was true. It was more that he didn’t trust her enough to confide in her.
“
Ben, Patty, and Julia are circumstances that are none of your concern at present. As for your mother, as I said—”
“
I know. It was her dying wish.” Then, wrenching her shoulders from his powerful grasp, she turned to leave him again. “The defect obviously doesn’t include your mouth! Your tongue has the sting of a whip.” She halted in her footsteps, however, at his next words.
“
You mean to say the defect isn’t with my mouth because, even though you haven’t set eyes on it, you’ve felt it…tasted it. And you know my mouth, at least, is unblemished and capable of rendering you weak when engaging your own in a scalding kiss.” Fallon spun around to see him standing triumphantly, his arms again folded across his chest.
“
What an arrogant…vain…conceited remark!” she stammered.
“
A truthful remark,” he corrected her.
“
Scalding kiss
,” she mimicked. “Don’t think for one moment, Trader Donavon, that I’m…I may be innocent, inexperienced perhaps…but I certainly do not lose my senses when you…when you…”
“
Yes. You do. Thank the stars I’m not able to take you to my bed as your true husband, Fallon. For if you think my kissing skills are magnificent—” He quit his bragging, stumbling backward and arms flailing, Fallon having shoved him yet again.
“
You are so…so…infuriating!” Fallon cried.
As Trader stood straight again, however, her courage and indignation scattered. “Slap my hand, Fallon. Throw your tiny little fist at my stomach if you must. But stop shoving me,” he said calmly. Then, reaching out and taking hold of one soft, fragrant arm, he pulled Fallon against his brawny form. “Deny it if it makes you feel better, Fallon. But I know the effect my kiss has on you, and I’ll just have to continue to remind you every now and again.”
He was right. She knew he was right, and as his masterful, already peppermint-tainted mouth toyed with her own, she accepted his kiss, enraptured. Liquid warmth seemed to wash over her. Her entire body erupted with goose bumps, and she was once again lost in his arms.
As their lips parted all too soon, Fallon let her body fall weakly against Trader’s and breathlessly whispered, “Why don’t you trust me? Deep within me I know you would protect me from harm at nearly any cost. I know I can trust in you for protection, to provide for my needs, even to comfort me when I need comfort. Whatever your motives may be, I know I can trust you completely. But you don’t return the trust. Have I ever done anything that would make you think you couldn’t trust me? That you couldn’t be free of your confining hood?”
Releasing her, he stepped away and began buttoning his shirt. “I do trust you. That’s the point you seem to be missing, Fallon,” he said flatly. “If I didn’t trust you to respect my decision to stay hooded, I wouldn’t have had you spend the night with me last night. I wouldn’t insist you move into my room.” Fallon experienced the slight, uncomfortable tingling of guilt as it marred her mind. She had tried to see him hoodless once, and she knew it. “I know you will respect my persistence in the fact, no matter what my reason may be, right or wrong in your opinion.”
Casting guilty eyes to the floor, Fallon confessed, “I did try to look at your face once.”
Tucking his shirt into his trousers, Trader chuckled, “I know.” Fallon looked up quickly.
He reached out and pushed her hair back from her face. “And that’s why you won’t try again. Because you know how important it is to me that you don’t.” He patted her cheek teasingly and turned to go. Pausing, however, in the hallway and turning toward her again, he said, “You’re significantly different than other women I’ve known in my lifetime, Fallon.”
“
How?” she couldn’t help asking.
“
You’ve got a conscience for one thing. Your humility is nearly irritating at times, and…well…you have uncommon amounts of the most sought-after virtues.”
“
Thank you,” she mumbled as he left.
Turning back to her own room, she sighed heavily. “What did you expect him to say, Fallon?” she asked herself quietly. In one respect, Trader had issued the highest of compliments. But she had immediately wished he had given her a more insincere compliment, perhaps told her that she was fantastically beautiful in his eyes, that she sent his reason and common sense wafting off with the wind when she was in his arms as she had been only moments before.
Sighing heavily once more, she lay down dejectedly on her bed and closed her eyes in an attempt to blot out his image. But the vision of the tall, hooded figure only came more vividly to mind, and a sudden sharp pain squeezed her heart as she thought of him.
Fallon had long before admitted to herself her love for Trader was infinite. Every thought of every hour of every day was dominated by his presence. She wondered if she would truly be able to endure never holding his heart captive as he held hers. She thrilled at his touch, marveled at his ability to send fear from her mind with his strong embrace. She existed in awe of the perfect form of his physical body and humbly and completely recognized the protection he provided for her in every way.
Turning to lie on her back, she gazed blindly at the ceiling above the bed. Her thoughts wandered back to the conversation she had earlier with Patty—the conversation concerning Trader’s letter to Julia.
“‘
Feel comforted that I, too, hope we will someday have a posterity of our own
,’” she repeated the sentence from his letter aloud. “If it was me he referred to in the letter, why would Julia feel comforted?” she asked herself. “But it wasn’t a very tenderly written letter. Surely if he were referring to Julia the rest of the letter would have hinted at intimacy.” Sighing heavily again, she closed her eyes once more. “But he told me before we married children were not possible. He told me. He didn’t mean me in the letter. How could he have?” Still, her entire being thrilled at the thought of having Trader’s children. She smiled, imagining for a moment several hooded toddlers running about out in the pastures.
As Fallon’s mind slipped into the unconsciousness of sleep, the battle between wanting to believe Trader referred to her in the letter and not being able to believe it raged on.
“
Do you plan to sleep the day away?”
Fallon startled as Patty entered the room. “I must’ve fallen asleep,” she stated unnecessarily.
“
Yes, I’m sure you had trouble sleeping after seeing that man at your window last night,” Patty sighed, shaking her head. “How terrible. It was right you called Trader. It’s a terrible mess out front still. Trader has the hands busy turning over that bloody dirt now that the carcasses are gone.”
“
I can’t believe I’ve been so lazy, Patty!” Fallon exclaimed, jumping to her feet and going to the washbasin. “I’m sure I can help in some way. After all, this is my fault, you know.”
“
No, it’s not. This is between your nasty old uncle and the man he thinks did him wrong. We do need to start moving your things to his room. I’m so glad Trader’s finally come to his senses,” Patty chuckled as she looked around the room, her hands firmly planted on her hips.
“
How can I resist the temptation, Patty?” Fallon muttered, studying herself in the mirror. “It would be so easy just to sit awake until his hood slips a bit from his face. How do I keep from faltering?”
“
Same way he resists temptation where you’re concerned, girl. Though I think he’s a horse’s behind for doing so,” Patty said.