"I think I'm going to lie down for a bit," he said soberly.
"Oh," she jumped to her feet. "Let me help you."
He didn't refuse and though he didn't give verbal approval,
she took his silence as acceptance. Lifting his bad leg as he
swung the good one onto the bed, she carefully set it down
and then pulled the sheet up. She stopped before laying the
material across his chest.
"Do you want to take your britches off?" Her cheeks
warmed.
"No."
She let the cover fall over his chest and carefully tucked it
around his legs. "Would you like some laudanum?"
"No," he said, eyes closed.
An incredible urge to lean down and kiss his forehead like
she did August when she tucked him in overcame her. Jolting
upright, she stepped away from the bed. "I'll be in the
kitchen. Let me know if you need anything."
He didn't make a move, not even an eyelash flickered. All
of a sudden exhaustion settled on her like a winter snowfall.
She rubbed her arms, moving toward the door.
"Summer," he said before she pulled the door shut.
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"Yes?"
"Thank you for rescuing me. I most likely would have died
if you hadn't caught up with me when you did."
"You're welcome, Snake."
He turned his head and opened one eye to look at her. A
tiny smile graced his face before he closed the lid and rolled
his head back onto the pillow.
Regret. Shame. Disgrace. Something of that sort swelled
her throat. She swallowed the huge lump. It hit her stomach
so hard she barely made it outside before losing her lunch.
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The merriment in the other room was enough to wake the
dead. Snake rolled onto his side and using his good arm
worked his body around until he sat on the edge of the bed
again. The nap had helped, he felt stronger and more alive
than earlier today, but a rock of hurt or anger, he wasn't sure
which, still sat in the pit of his stomach.
His mother had always been a bit unseemly to some, but
he'd never doubted she loved him and his brothers, that is
until he'd been told she'd been more worried about a poker
game than his life. More worried about getting him married
off than about him living to see tomorrow.
He slapped the mattress.
Damn, if that don't beat all
.
The door opened just then, and Summer Austin poked her
head around the edge.
His heart skipped a beat or two. Why the hell did Ma have
to marry him off to the prettiest woman around? Couldn't she
have found an ugly toothless creature so he could be really
pissed off?
"Hi," she said, slipping in the room as graceful and
precious as a butterfly. The door clicked shut behind her. "I
wondered if the noise woke you."
"Hi," he greeted, unable to keep a smile from forming. Her
grin was so adorable his stomach did cartwheels. Ignoring the
commotion in his guts, he asked, "What's going on out
there?"
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"The harvest is over for one." She moved closer. "For two,
your brothers just learned that when you woke up today"—
she avoided looking his way as she straightened out the
bedding he'd managed to twist into a tangled mass—"you
weren't very happy with your mother."
The flipping in his insides had worked its way into a laugh
that bubbled out before he had a chance to stop it. "Really?"
She moved to his other side, straightening out the pillows.
A tiny giggle escaped before she answered, "Yes, really."
Her long, black hair hung over her shoulder, blocked him
from seeing her face. He reached up to brush it aside. When
their gazes met, it was as if he'd been shot again, dead
center.
The door opened, and Kid stuck his head in. "You are up."
Pushing the door wide his oldest brother strolled into the
room. "How you feeling?"
"Not so bad," he admitted.
The room filled up quickly. His sister-in-law, Jessie,
wrapped him in a soft hug and kissed his cheek. Bug slapped
him hard enough on the shoulder he almost tumbled off the
bed. His nephew, Joel, ran across the room on chubby little
legs, and Snake caught the child moments before he jumped
up on his bad leg. Placing the child on his good one, he
hugged Joel and realized just how lucky he was that he didn't
die. Overall he had a good family. A damn good family.
Ma hung back, a nervousness he'd never seen before
flittered about her. He stared at her until she couldn't help
but meet his gaze. No matter how mad he was, she was his
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mother, and damn-it-to-hell, but he loved her. He grinned
and winked at her.
Ma let out a little squeal and hopped across the room. She
wrapped both he and Joel in a hug. "Don't scare me like
that," she said. "My heart's getting too old for such
shenanigans."
"It wasn't all my fault." He kissed her wrinkled cheek.
"But, I'll try to not let it happen again."
"You do that." She pinched his chin. "I need my boys, all of
them."
Kid lifted Joel from his knee when Ma stepped aside.
"Come on, little brother. We'll help you out to the table." He
handed the child to Jessie. "Supper's almost ready. Bug, get
his other side."
Summer had disappeared. Snake searched the room for
her as his brothers half-carried him to the door.
"She's cooking," Kid whispered in his ear.
"Yeah, thank God," Bug said in the other.
Both of his brothers hooted like jackals. When they
lowered him into a chair, Snake would have laughed, too, if
their rough movements hadn't made his chest and leg hurt
like hell. No one else restrained themselves, and soon
merriment filled his mother's house.
The meal had been delicious, certainly not prepared by Ma,
Snake conceded. Her foods were either raw or burnt. She'd
never mastered that in-between stage. They'd never noticed
it growing up, not until Hog started cooking anyway, and they
all got a flavor for what food should taste like. Ma said it was
because she didn't like cooking. Which was no surprise given
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she was always in her bedroom, kicking away on her stitching
machine. The thought made his gaze wander to Summer.
A silver colored skirt flanked her hips and fell to the floor,
streamlining her trim form, and a pristine white blouse was
tucked into the waist line. The ties of an apron, long and
white, dangled from the big bow tied in the small of her back.
She and Jessie stood at the sink, doing dishes, talking as they
washed. A single white ribbon held Summer's long black hair
together at the nap of her neck. The glistening strands flowed
down her back like a long rope, swaying now and again as
she moved.
An odd, not unpleasant sensation filled his chest, and he
frowned, wondering what it was. Another consciousness, that
of being watched, tickled his spine, and he turned slightly.
September Austin, as light as her sister was dark, glared
at him across the table. Snake raised a brow, staring back at
the young girl with her faded blue eyes and wheat colored
hair. The girl had yet to speak to him, even when he'd
greeted her earlier; she'd merely sent him a quick and
somewhat disgusted glance.
He smiled and gave her a slight nod. Her eyes narrowed,
and she grabbed the plate in front of her holding a piece of
peach pie they'd had for desert. The legs of her chair scraped
the floor loudly as she pushed away from the table.
Snake continued to watch as the younger sister carried her
dish to the sink. As soon as she set it on the counter,
September turned back to the table.
"August," she snapped haughtily.
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"Uh?" The brother, who'd all but plastered himself against
Snake as soon as he sat down, looked up, chewing the food in
his mouth with all his might.
"We have chores to do," September said, moving to the
door.
"What chores?" Snake asked.
She ignored him. "August!"
"I ain't done eating yet."
September, her blond curls bouncing, stormed across the
room and reached for the boy's plate. "You can finish it later."
August clutched the plate with one hand, shoveling the pie
in his mouth with the other. His mumbled answer couldn't be
understood, but his actions proved he didn't want to go.
"What's so important it can't wait until he's done?" Snake
asked, placing a hand on the boy's shoulder.
September's glare became downright hateful. Her little
nose wrinkled up, and her eyes all but fired buckshot. "We
don't take charity from anyone. We work for our keep."
Snake, taken aback, couldn't come up with a response
quick enough. Or maybe Summer, used to the girl's behavior,
was just that much quicker.
"September," she said with warning. When the girl looked
at her older sister, Summer continued, "You can wait until
he's done with his pie."
"He is done." September grabbed the now empty plate off
the table. She stomped across the room and plopped the dish
on the counter. Her gaze snapped to her brother, and she
tipped her head to the door.
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"Come on, partner, I'll help you," Bug said, lifting August
from his chair.
The glare September sent Bug wasn't any too friendly
either. "We don't need help. We know what needs to be
done."
Kid stood. "Jessie and I should head home. Bug, would you
mind harnessing the horses while I help Snake back into bed?
"
"Sure. You want me to help get him back to bed first?" Bug
asked.
"I'll help," Summer said from her stance near the sink.
The slam of the door, behind September as she bolted
outside, rattled the windows.
Summer, drying her hands on her apron, glanced toward
the door. Jessie laid a hand on her arm. "I'll go see if I can
help her. You help Kid with Snake."
Snake had never been around children much, his nieces
and nephew were little more than babies, but he'd been
around plenty of pissed off people before, and something had
September Austin madder than a hornet. And the fire blazing
in her young eyes had told him her sting would be much
worse than an insect's.
"I don't need any help. I can get back to bed on my own,"
he said.
Shouts of, "No!" filled the room. Summer at least had the
decency to sound nervous. While Ma, Kid, Jessie, and Bug
sounded downright rude. Annoyance vibrated his spine, he'd
been shot, but he wasn't some kind of an invalid. With his
good hand, he pushed away from the table and planted both
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feet on the floor. Agony raced up his leg, he tried to ignore it,
grasping the edge of the table. Everyone stepped forward.
Snake leveled a steely gaze at the crowd.
Kid hooked an arm around his good elbow. "Come on."
Snake wanted to protest, but his injuries said whether he
liked it or not, he needed help getting back to bed. To make
matters worse, he needed to use the water closet.
Sometime later, after he'd grudgingly asked Kid to help
him restore his britches before his older brother helped him
back into his bedroom, Snake laid his head on the pillow and
closed both eyes. His shoulder and leg throbbed as if a good
sized mule kicked him every other second. He gritted his
teeth, breathing through the pain as Kid slid his pants off.
"You need some medicine?" Kid asked, covering Snake's
legs with the sheet.
Snake shook his head.
"It'll help. I have it right here."
His eyelids flew open. Had Summer been in there the
whole time? While Kid undressed him? The undeniable heat of
a blush racing over his face made Snake swallow and close
his eyes again. He didn't have any drawers on beneath his
britches. What was Kid thinking, letting her be in the room
like that?
"No," he snapped. "I don't need any medicine. I just need
to be left the hell alone. That's what I need."
He didn't bother to open his eyes to make sure she left the
room, but at the sound of the door clicking shut the sting of
shame hit his guts. He hadn't meant to sound so rude, Ma
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didn't abide bad manners no matter what the situation and
would probably come storming into the room at any moment.
When the door remained closed and the hushed voices in
the other rooms faded, he let the muscles bunched up around
his neck relax and begged the constant ache surrounding his
wounds to ease. Ma must have put his boorish behavior off to