Authors: Catherine Palmer
“Dream on.” Mara shook her head. “Why don’t you come out for a visit in a week or two? Maybe by that time I’ll even be able to put on a pair of jeans.”
“How about Sunday afternoon? I’ll give you a rundown on the sermon.”
Mara laughed. It was a standing joke with Sherry that their beloved pastor—so good-hearted and genuine—was the most boring preacher in the world.
“It’s a deal. See you then. Bye, Sher.”
“Bye, Mar.”
Mara hung up the receiver and stretched out on the bed among the piles of miniature dresses and nightgowns. She wasn’t the least bit tired, and she knew Abby wouldn’t
wake up for a while. Of course, she couldn’t leave the house, just in case Abby surprised her, but what could she do with all the empty time until dinner?
She had already walked every inch of this place. The art might be beautiful and the architecture noteworthy, but the house was a prison nonetheless. Mara felt trapped, and she could see no way out. In the midst of winter there could be no gardening, no wading in the pool, few warm days for picnics or walks with the stroller.
Indoors, things were only worse. With effort, Mara had convinced Rosa Maria to let her take on some of the laundry duties. But Pierre wouldn’t dream of allowing her in the kitchen, and Ermaline refused to give up her dust rags. They had brought in a stack of jigsaw puzzles.
Mara hauled herself to her feet and crossed to the window. Brock certainly had enough to do. Once or twice she had caught sight of him from a distance. Mostly she had seen his pickup pulling in or out of the drive. If he came home in time for dinner, he ordered the meal sent to his study. If the weather was too bad to work outside, he spent the day in his workshop. Several nights while Mara was up feeding the baby, she realized his light was on. His room was directly across the courtyard from hers, but it might have been a thousand miles.
She had to find something to do or she’d go stark, raving mad. Mara thought about the old days when she had rushed here and there—teaching school all day at the academy, racing to the grocery store, throwing a meal in the oven, wolfing down dinner with her husband, poring over her students’ homework or helping Todd with his research for the fort project before finally falling into bed too tired to move. What she wouldn’t give for one hectic day.
How could God have given her all that and then snatched it away? Had she done something wrong to
deserve this strange, quiet, empty life? On the other hand, Mara couldn’t deny that God had blessed her beyond measure in the past few months. She had a healthy, contented baby. A comfortable place to live. Plenty to eat. Not a care in the world.
Wandering down the hall, she trailed her fingers along the smooth adobe wall. Was this some sort of lesson that God wanted to teach her before He let her back into real life? And if it was, why was she too dense to figure out the message?
Mara reflected on her few blissful years of marriage. She and Todd had naively believed things would go on the same way forever—the two of them together, building a future, a family and a faith that both could rely on to bolster them during the hard times. God had been so real, so ever-present. Where was He now?
Lately when Mara had tried to pray, she felt as if something was stuck in her throat. She just couldn’t make herself really communicate with the Father. How could it be right to feel angry with God when He had given her this perfect child and this great place to live? Yet, she was. Mad at God. Mad at Brock. Even mad at Todd. Why had they all let her down? She had everything she needed, and the whole world felt empty and meaningless.
The fort restoration had been a task Mara and Todd had loved working on together. Though he was in charge of the project, Mara had done much of the research. Her files now lay abandoned in a box in the bedroom closet, awaiting the decision of some bureaucrats.
If Mara were forced to sell her husband’s company, the buyers would be able to claim the research. Brock had assured her he was going to manage Todd’s business. She realized she hadn’t even asked him about the status of the company. Was it possible the project might continue?
The first tingle of enthusiasm she had felt in days ran through Mara’s veins. If Brock could find a way to keep
the restoration company going, find someone to take Todd’s place renovating the old buildings, then Mara’s work was still relevant. Instantly, she recalled a section in Brock’s library devoted to the Civil War and the ensuing settlement of New Mexico. Might there be some mention of the old military forts? Of Fort Selden?
She almost ran down the hall and into the living room. The library formed one whole wall of bookshelves devoted primarily to history, archaeology and anthropology texts. Mara made straight for the section of titles she had glanced over previously.
In moments, she had loaded a stack of books in her arms, mounded a pile of sofa pillows against one wall and created a nook that would allow her hours of quiet reading before dinner. Fort Selden had been built in 1865 to protect settlers moving into the Mesilla Valley and those embarking on the Journey of the Dead into northern New Mexico. Indians had never been much of a threat in that area, so no wall surrounded the fort, but the buildings themselves were distinctive.
Mara flipped open a book and ran her finger down the index. After she dug her files and note cards out of the closet, she would use Brock’s library to add to her research. Todd had always acknowledged that Mara knew more about the history of the fort than he did. His job was engineering and construction, while she provided the background details he needed to make sure the restoration was historically accurate.
“If you’re going to go to the trouble of tracking me down in the middle of a cow pasture,” Brock’s deep voice boomed suddenly from the entry hall, “you might as well come on inside.”
“It’s Saturday afternoon, Brock,” a woman responded lightly. “You’re not supposed to be working. This is playtime, remember?”
Hidden in the shadows of her reading nook, Mara peered around the corner of the library shelving into the living area. A group of young adults—two men and three women—were following Brock into the room. Cheeks bright pink from the cold, they began shrugging out of heavy coats and tugging off leather gloves, rubbing their hands together, stamping their feet.
“It’s freezing out there. Stoke up that fire, Brock.” The woman who spoke was a tall, willowy redhead with copper lipstick and matching nails. She gave Brock a wink. “Do it for Sandy, won’t you?”
“Anything for Sandy,” he said.
Mara gripped the book as he leaned over and gave the redhead a peck on the cheek. Of all the nerve! Brock had just kissed some woman! A flash of outrage surged through Mara…but just as swiftly a drenching reality doused the flame of her anger. She had no claim on Brock. He could do whatever he wanted in his own house with his own friends.
Oh, Lord, please help me,
she lifted up in silent prayer, her head against the wall and her eyes closed. This was exactly what she had dreaded. The marriage was real…but it was nothing. A slip of paper. An arrangement. A deal.
She had known Brock would want to end the marriage—and against all she believed was right and holy, she had married him anyway. What a fool she was! Mara could repent until she was blue in the face, but the deed was done. The Lord had promised to make all things work together for the good of those who loved Him…but this? This flat-out selfish thing she had done just to spare herself a hard life? How would she ever explain the marriage to her daughter? And how could she make herself let go of a relationship that didn’t even exist? Why was it so hard to give Brock to these women and their friends when he didn’t belong to Mara in the first place?
The worst thing possible would be to make Brock sneak around. They needed to be up front with their friends, and with each other. Let him go, Mara, she told herself. Just let him go.
Cringing in embarrassment, Mara knew she should emerge from her niche and introduce herself to these people. Though she felt foolish tucked away with her pillows and books, she debated staying put. That morning she had dressed in a pair of black stretch pants and a turquoise T-shirt that hung almost to her knees. She had bought the oversized men’s shirt at the start of her pregnancy to cover the growing bulge in her stomach. The last thing she wanted was for these suave men and their svelte girlfriends to see that the bulge was still there—even though the baby wasn’t.
“So are you coming with us to the party or not, Brock?” Sandy asked. “Stephanie and I have a bet riding on this. She says you won’t come, and I say you will. You’re not going to disappoint me, are you?”
Brock had thrown a couple of logs on the stack of kindling in the fireplace. He dusted off his hands, set them on his hips and studied the woman without answering.
Mara wondered what he would decide. Brock looked so good in the late-afternoon light, his denim shirt a little dusty and his jeans scuffed at the knees. He had taken off his hat, and she could see the glint of sun that softened his thick black hair. No wonder these women wanted him.
“Come on, Brock,” Sandy said. “Don’t be a party pooper.” She balanced her weight on one leg, which threw her slender hip in Brock’s direction. Clad in a black leather skirt, boots and a purple turtleneck, she might have stepped out of a magazine ad. She certainly hadn’t had a baby two weeks ago.
“Looks to me like you’ve already been doing some partying tonight,” Brock said, turning his attention from
the redhead to her statuesque blond companion. “Stephanie, what possessed you to drive all the way out here?”
“We haven’t seen your hide in six months, honey. You’ve become a regular hermit. When Joe and Travis cooked up the idea of dragging you away from here, I told them you wouldn’t leave.”
Brock shrugged. “I’ve been busy.”
“Busy.” One of the two men picked up a box of long matches and knelt by the fire. “Bunch of cows.”
“Bovines,” the other one hooted. “Brock, what’s going on? You haven’t gone this long without female company since you were five years old.”
“Yeah, Brock,” Sandy cooed, “you used to call me once in a while. What’s up? You found someone you like better?”
Mara held her breath. Did these people have any idea what Brock had been through this past year? What kind of friends wouldn’t know about the rock-climbing incident? Hadn’t it occurred to them that their good buddy might have withdrawn because he was dealing with some personal difficulties? If they did know about the accident, they certainly didn’t know about
her.
Mara knew she had to emerge. Shoving the books off her lap, she stood.
“Well, I have been on the go a lot,” Brock was saying. “There are a few things you might not have heard about, but—”
“Excuse me, Brock,” Mara spoke up. Everyone in the room turned to stare at her. She attempted to smooth the T-shirt over her stomach as she stepped into the light. “I was reading in the corner. Would you introduce me to your friends?”
Five pairs of eyes swiveled to Brock. He jammed his hands in his pockets. “Uh…this is Stephanie, Sandy and Justine’s over there. This is Joe, and that’s Travis.” He
straightened and looked at the guests. “This is Mara. My wife.”
A stunned silence followed as the five pairs of eyes darted back to Mara.
“Brock!” Sandy said with a gasp. “You didn’t! You got married?”
“The other day. But it’s a different kind of deal than—”
“Brock married me to help take care of my baby,” Mara explained.
“Baby!” Sandy’s voice lifted into a near-shriek. “You have a baby?”
“Not Brock’s baby,” Mara said quickly. “My husband died. Brock was his best friend, and he wanted to help out. I was having some difficulties, and he offered to take care of us financially for the time being.”
“You
married
this woman? Is she the wife of the guy who…” Sandy’s blue eyes grew wider. “Brock, you married your best friend’s wife?”
“It’s a long story. Just take it at face value, Sandy. I’m a married man, so I’ve mostly been spending my time here. Seemed the appropriate thing to do under the circumstances.”
“You don’t need to stay here on my account,” Mara said, crossing her arms. “I’m fine. Go and be with your friends, Brock.”
“I don’t believe this!” Sandy plopped onto one of Brock’s long leather couches. She threw her arm over her eyes and laughed without humor. “The man is married. I can’t believe it. Tell me I’m dreaming.”
“Or tipsy,” Brock suggested.
“It’s an arrangement. It’s legal, but it’s not…real.” Mara glanced expectantly at Brock. Instead of clarifying, he turned his back on the group and began prodding the fire with a poker.
“Brock felt responsible for me,” Mara went on. “He knew
I was pregnant, and I was facing some business debts my husband had incurred. The marriage is a way to provide insurance coverage and build some long-term security for Abby.”
“Abby?” Sandy peered out from under her arm.
“My daughter.”
“He’s got a daughter.”
“Abby is my daughter. Brock is her…her financial benefactor. Sort of a guardian or a godfather. Right, Brock?”
“That’s what you keep telling me,” he said to the fire.
She glared at his back. These people were
his
friends, not hers. Why did she feel compelled to explain his behavior?
“He likes to remind me I’m a line item on his budget,” Mara said, forcing a laugh. “That ought to give you some idea of where this marriage thing stands. It’s certainly fine with me if he goes out for a night on the town.”
“Ooh, tension,” Sandy said, sitting up. “This is sounding better. Your husband must have been that archaeology friend of Brock’s. The guy who fell off the cliff.”
“That ‘guy’ was like a brother, Sandy.” Brock swung around, red-hot poker in his hand. He narrowed his eyes at the woman, then he fixed Mara with a cutting stare. “Nobody forced this on me. I offered to take care of you and the baby.”
“And I thank you for that. Brock, you don’t owe me anything. Especially not some misguided sense of spousal loyalty. If you want to go out with your friends, go ahead.”