Read Nighthawk & The Return of Luke McGuire Online
Authors: Rachel Lee,Justine Davis
But heavens, was she attracted to him. Just the mental vision of him could make her knees turn to jelly. Long legs encased in worn denim, a tight butt, hard chest, broad shoulders…and his face, so sharply chiseled with high cheekbones, and those dark eyes that were surprisingly expressive. Dark pools into which she would joyously have leapt.
Except that he didn’t really want her. He was just trying to take care of her.
“You’d better go on up to bed, Esther,” he said huskily. “Don’t worry about anything. I’ll be right here all night.”
She nodded and drew away, wishing that those words meant a whole lot more.
Mop woke him in the morning. It wasn’t an unusual experience when he slept outside, so it was a few minutes before he remembered that he was sleeping on Esther’s porch and that Mop was supposed to be at home.
He opened one eye and looked at the dog. “What are you doing here?” Dawn was barely a faint glow in the east, and dew had formed during the night, leaving his clothes feeling cold and damp. The last thing he needed was to be dragged out of bed at an ungodly hour by a lovesick dog. “You’re supposed to be at home.”
Mop groaned and licked his chin.
“I don’t want to get up, dawg.” What he wanted was never to move again. The worst part of being on the wrong side of thirty was that you began to notice that every broken bone, torn ligament or sprain you’d ever had really hadn’t healed. No, they’d only pretended to. On a damp, chilly morning like this every one of those old injuries lodged a protest.
Mop moaned and lapped his cheek. One big brown eye peered out between thick cords of fur.
“All right, all right.” He sat up slowly, easing his way back into his body. Morning stiffness was no big deal and he refused to give in to it—except for moving a little gingerly until the kinks worked out.
Apparently Mop didn’t think that sitting up was enough. He licked Craig’s cheek again and whined impatiently.
“Okay, okay. I’m coming. Slowly.”
The dog sat on his haunches and waited expectantly. Craig stretched widely, then rose to his feet. Cripes, even his ankles felt stiff this morning.
But, oh, what a beautiful morning it was going to be. The dim light of the dawning day flowed across the breeze-tossed grasses, making them look like a dark, mysterious sea. The mountains, rising up out of the blackness of night, were already rosy at their tops, kissed by the light of the sun he could not yet see. As he watched, the pink slowly descended the mountain slopes, vanquishing the darkness until the sun at last rose above the horizon and bathed the entire world in its warm glow.
“Good morning.”
He turned to find that Esther stood just inside the screen door, and suddenly he was glad he had dawdled to watch the day’s beginning. She looked adorable, he thought, her face still soft and flushed from sleep. Her hair was twisted into a single long braid that draped over her shoulder, but tendrils had escaped to create a soft nimbus around her face. In this light, her eyes looked soft and mysterious.
He wanted to kiss her. Instead he said, “I need to be going.”
“I just started a pot of coffee, and I bought some doughnuts in town yesterday. Can you stay just a few minutes more?”
“For coffee? You bet.” His lips stretched into a smile he didn’t really feel, because there was something about that woman and this morning that made him yearn—positively
ache
—to be in bed with her, holding her. Exploring her. Loving her.
Oh, man, he had lost his mind!
Esther looked at Mop. “How’d he get here?”
“I suspect he flew on the wings of love.”
Esther grinned, then chuckled delightedly. “Do you have
any
animals that behave normally?”
“That depends on what you mean by normal.”
“Well, you have a sheep that seems to be able to teleport through the fence. And now you have a dog that flies….”
His own smile relaxed. “There has to be a hole in the fence somewhere. I just haven’t found it.”
“Of course you haven’t. Both Mop and Cromwell have learned to fly. It’s quite obvious that there can be no other explanation.”
“But how did they learn to fly?”
She cocked her head pensively. “Clearly a wizard must have passed through the county at some time, and cast a spell of enchantment over your dog and your ewe.”
“But why not
every
dog? Or
all
my sheep?”
“Oh, that’s obvious! He only had enough magic powder to sprinkle two animals, and he quite naturally picked the two most enterprising animals he could find.”
“Makes sense to me, if by enterprising you mean that they’re pains in the doofus.”
She giggled. “Please, let’s be kind in our descriptions. I certainly don’t want Cromwell angry with me. She might devour something really important, like my paintings or that beautiful old cottonwood.”
“Please, she’s a sheep, not a goat. She has better taste.”
“I guess marigolds and geraniums qualify as better.”
“They’re certainly more expensive.”
Another gurgle of laughter escaped her. “Some people
do
seem to use cost as a measuring stick.” She looked down at Mop. “I feel awful about leaving you outside, Mop, but really, you can’t come in while Guinevere is confined to quarters. It would defeat the entire purpose.”
Mop wagged his tail then lay down with a “humph.”
Craig stepped into the house with Esther, half expecting Mop to slip right by him, or Guinevere to come charging out around his legs. But Mop kept his post on the porch, and Guinevere was once again leashed to the newel post.
“I hate to do that to her,” Esther remarked, “but it’s the only way I can be absolutely certain she won’t dash out the instant I open the door—even though she’s ordinarily a very well-behaved dog. I’m afraid some impulses are stronger than training.”
He glanced down at her, wondering if she meant anything by that, but the hazel eyes that met his were clear and without guile. No double entendre meant, he decided. Esther Jackson was apparently incapable of it.
He watched her limp ahead of him into the kitchen, and found himself wishing there was something that could be done about her leg. Not for himself, but for her. She couldn’t possibly like having to wear that brace.
The coffee was ready, and she poured two steaming mugs full. He carried them to the table while she retrieved the box of doughnuts.
“These are my worst vice,” she confided as she set out plates and napkins. “Every so often I just
have
to have a doughnut. A chocolate one with icing. Or one filled with strawberry jam. Or a blueberry one.”
A laugh burst out of him as she opened the box and revealed a full dozen doughnuts. “You were going to eat all those?”
She flushed and nodded. “I told you, it’s my worst vice. Once or twice a year I go crazy on doughnuts and don’t eat anything else for a couple of days.”
He couldn’t say why, but that touched him. “Then I shouldn’t eat any. I don’t want to shortchange you.”
She pushed the box toward him with a laugh. “Please. I’d be very grateful if you’d keep me from overdosing.”
“If I try real hard, I might be able to eat three.”
“Then by all means try very hard.” For herself she took only one, a chocolate doughnut with chocolate icing. “The bakery in town makes incredible doughnuts. And bread. I love their sourdough rye.”
“I’ll have to try them sometime.” Sometime when he could afford to buy bread, instead of Paula having to make it several times a week. “Are you going to be all right today?”
She colored faintly. “Yes, I’ll be fine. It’s…only at night that I have a problem. It was the only time I really had to be afraid of him. In the daytime he was either at work or sleeping it off.” She shook her head. “I guess it’s silly to feel that I have nothing to fear from him now in the daylight. I mean, if he wants to hurt me it’s because I put him in jail, and I don’t think that’ll change according to whether it’s day or night.”
“Probably not. If revenge is what he really wants. But have you considered that his time in prison probably dried him out pretty thoroughly?”
“I hear they make some kind of rotgut in prison.”
“I hear that, too. But that doesn’t mean anyone was making it in the prison he was in. Or that he got any even if they were. For all you know, he may have been on the wagon all this time. And he may have done some serious thinking.”
“That’s what I’m afraid of, that he’s spent the last fifteen years thinking seriously about how to get even with me.”
Craig backed off, biting into a blueberry doughnut to keep from pressing the issue. Esther wasn’t being perfectly rational about this, but there was no good reason why she ought to be. The bottom line was that the man had beaten her and her mother for years, and that he had killed her mother and crippled her. If Richard Jackson had turned into some kind of saint and did penance for the rest of his life, he doubted that Esther would ever be able to trust him again.
“Okay,” she said finally. “Maybe he’s quit drinking. Maybe he had even figured out that what he did was wrong. Maybe his apology is sincere. I still don’t want to see him. And I’m still going to be scared to death at night because he might get drunk again and come looking for me.”
She pushed her plate aside and looked at him. “He used to come looking for me, you know. There wasn’t any place I could hide. If I went to a friend’s house to spend the night, he’d call and order me to come home. I mean…when he wanted to beat me, nothing stopped him.”
His gut twisted with pain and sympathy for her. He’d thought he had it rough being a reservation Indian who like as not would get clobbered really good if he wandered into white folks’ territory after dark. Or if he had the nerve to ask a white girl out. Well, none of that amounted to a hill of beans beside being beaten again and again by your own drunken father.
Damn, maybe it was time he got off his own pity pot.
Instinctively he reached out and covered one of her hands with his. Immediately she turned her hand over and clasped his.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “You don’t want to hear this.”
“Cut it out. I wouldn’t be sitting here if I didn’t want to hear whatever you have to say. So just say it, Esther. Tell me how you
really
feel about the bastard.”
She surprised him then with a forlorn little laugh. “You know, Craig, I don’t think there are
words
for how I feel about him. He’s been the bogeyman in my nightmares all my life. Other kids worried about the bear in the closet. I worried about the man who’d come through my bedroom door.”
Craig had a sudden horrible thought. “He didn’t… I mean… Did he ever sexually assault you?”
Esther gasped. “No! Oh, no! Oh, I think I would have killed myself if he had ever…. No. Absolutely not.”
Craig felt an incredible sense of relief. At least there was one injury she hadn’t suffered.
“No,” Esther said again. “That would have been…I don’t think I would have been strong enough to survive that. I’m basically a very weak person.”
“Weak?” He was astonished that she could think any such thing. “If there’s one thing you’re not, it’s weak.”
But Esther knew better, and as she watched Craig drive away a little while later with Mop sitting on the seat beside him, she thought about just how very weak she was.
It wasn’t strength that caused her to keep trying to hide from her father. It wasn’t strength that had made her hide in closets and under beds, or that had made her testify against him. Hell, no! Terror had motivated her and was still motivating her. It had driven her to testify against him, for fear that he would kill her next. It had driven her all the way out into this underpopulated part of the country in the vain hope of evading him.
Oh, she was weak, all right. If she had any gumption she wouldn’t be quailing in the dark at night, she would be making some kind of plan to deal with her father.
Instead of leaving the front door open as she usually did when the weather was warm, she locked it. Guinevere eyed her hopefully from where she was leashed to the newel post.
“Come on, girl, let’s get your breakfast. Then we’ll go out to paint.”
Guin appeared to like that idea, thumping her tail eagerly. She always liked to go out to the studio. Evidently, from its days as a barn, the building contained a great many delightful odors. Guin never tired of nosing around.
The phone rang while Guinevere was still eating. Esther answered it, for some reason expecting it to be Craig Nighthawk. The voice she heard chilled her to the bone.
“Hello, Esther. It’s Dad.”
S
weat was rolling down Craig Nighthawk’s brow, running into his eyes and burning, despite the bandanna he had knotted around his head. The August day had soared above ninety, and even though it was dry heat, it was damned uncomfortable for heavy work. The sun was beating mercilessly down, frying his neck. Finally he gave up and put his hat on again.
There was a pile of sheep manure nearby, fresh enough to draw nasty, stinging flies. Cromwell, the only one of the sheep curious enough to pay him any mind, stood a few feet away, contentedly munching on greenery, and watching Craig work.
Some days, Craig thought, that damn ewe would look a whole sight better roasting over a big fire. Or stewing in a pot. There were limits, and that damn ewe was pushing them.
He hadn’t a doubt in his mind that Cromwell had something to do with the fence being down. In fact, he was getting paranoid enough to think she might have just leaned on it and rolled over, pulling it down with her. Theoretically her wool ought to be stuck all over the barbs, and she ought to have a cut or two to show for the encounter, but there was nothing. Okay, so she knew better than to press right where the barbs were….
The sun was frying his brain. It was far more likely that something besides Cromwell had taken down the fence, though he damn well couldn’t figure what. This section wasn’t anywhere near a road and there was no sign a truck had come this way recently. So maybe it was a UFO.
Or some kids. Yeah, it was probably kids. School didn’t start until next week, and by this point in the summer they were probably bored enough to do just about anything.
Anything was likelier than Cromwell doing this herself. Although… He looked at her as she stood placidly chewing greenery, and thought that she looked a damn sight more intelligent than most people would credit a sheep.
Craig snorted at himself and returned his attention to stretching the barbed wire from post to post. It was easier to concentrate on the difficult task of repairing the fencing than to think about what Cromwell might or might not be capable of.
It was his damn upbringing rearing its head again. Fact was, he’d had a traditional upbringing, steeped in the magic and mysticism of his people. It wasn’t that he scorned it, but he had come to think it had very little bearing on the world in which he had chosen to live: the white man’s world.
It was as if there were two entirely different realities coexisting side by side, and the rules were different in each one. In his childhood he had come to respect the world and all its denizens from the rocks beneath his feet to the birds winging through the sky. He never cut a tree without thanking it for its sacrifice, and when he looked at Cromwell he saw another intelligent resident of this planet, one worthy of respect.
But this was the white man’s world, and here the rock was cold and without life, and the birds and sheep were merely dumb animals to be used. It was sometimes a struggle to keep that in mind. And sometimes he didn’t even try.
But the fact was, he had to function in this world, and the ways of his people didn’t fit here. He’d figured that out a long time ago, and while on the road as a trucker he lived according to the white man’s rules and beliefs.
So he ignored the feeling that Cromwell was playing a game with him, and tried to ignore a niggling feeling of worry about Esther Jackson.
But finally he couldn’t ignore it anymore. It distracted him more and more until the wire he was stretching snapped back on him and ripped the sleeve of his shirt and the skin beneath. He swore and threw down his pliers. Mop, who had been dozing in the bed of the pickup, sat up and looked inquisitively at him.
Yanking at the bandanna around his head, he pulled it off and scoured his hot, sweaty face with it. If his thoughts didn’t quit wandering over to Esther’s place, he was apt to cut his throat on this stuff. Barbed wire was nasty, and it couldn’t be strung loosely if it was to do its job, which was to keep the sheep inside the pasture without them getting all tangled up in the stuff. But he needed to pay attention, and paying attention was growing increasingly difficult.
Swearing again, he wrung out the bandanna, twisted it and tied it around his head again. If he did nothing else today, he had to finish repairing this section of fence. It wouldn’t be safe to leave the sheep here otherwise, not only because they might stray but because predators would find it easier to get to them. His worry about Esther was just going to have to wait.
But as his worry increased, so did his speed. Impelled by need, his hands grew swifter and stronger. He nicked himself a few extra times on the wire, but he got it strung in record time nonetheless.
This break was a new one, and it worried him considerably. He still hadn’t found the break where Cromwell had initially escaped to eat Esther’s flowers, and that worried him even more. He’d been over the whole damn fence line since then. Was somebody playing some kind of game with his fence and his sheep?
Well, it wouldn’t do any good to fuss about it until he could be sure something was being done deliberately. After all, fencing did manage to come down all on its own.
He threw his tools into the back of the truck, along with the roll of wire, and took Mop into the cab with him. Before he did anything else, he was going over to see Esther and make sure she was okay.
Damn his mystical soul anyway.
His truck bucked wildly over the open ground until he reached the fence-line road he and Enoch had been working steadily on extending. Some day they were going to have a graded road around every inch of the fence, but for now they could work on it only as time permitted—like so much in their lives. It would sure be a whole lot more efficient to keep up with the fence if they could do it in a truck, though.
Maybe by the end of next summer.
When he reached the front gate he didn’t even head up to the house to change, just hit the road and drove around to Esther’s house. Although their houses weren’t all that far apart, it wound up being about five miles by car. He lived off Willis road, and her driveway was off county road 93.
Nothing appeared to be amiss when he pulled up to her house. Her car was parked in front of the garage, as if she had just come back from somewhere. The mail truck was pulled up outside the barn, and he figured that must be where Esther was.
He left Mop sitting in the truck and went to find out. Just before he reached the barn, the side door opened and Verna Wilcox stepped out. When she saw him, she nodded. “Afternoon.”
“Afternoon, Verna. How’s it going?”
“Not bad, not bad at all. Ain’t seen you much lately. Paula says you been out herding them sheep.”
“And mending fences.”
She grinned. “Always some of that to be done.”
“Isn’t that the truth. Is Esther in?”
“Busy painting.” She hesitated. “You know her real well?”
“I’m getting to.” Which he didn’t think was stretching it a bit. Hell, he’d slept on the woman’s porch last night and was still aching this afternoon as a result. Someday maybe he would figure out how a plank floor could be harder than the lumpy ground.
“Well, something has her upset if you ask me. She won’t tell me nothin’, and it’s none of my business, but she’s real upset.”
He nodded. “I’ll see what I can do.”
Verna nodded, wagging a finger at him. “See that you do. She’s got a lot of painting to do before her show next month and she doesn’t have time for this.” She cocked a brow. “Maybe you did something?”
“Couldn’t have.”
Apparently satisfied, Verna drove away.
Craig hesitated then knocked on the door and stepped into the studio.
He was surprised by the amount of light that flooded the old barn. He hadn’t known that she had replaced so much of the roof with skylights turning this musty old place into a bright work space.
But he was even more surprised by the picture Esther was painting. From the top down, in washes of blue, lavender and gold, mountains were appearing on a huge sheet of white paper. Colors at once vivid and translucent caught his eye and filled him with wonder.
“That’s gorgeous,” he blurted.
Startled, Esther whirled around. “Oh! I thought it was just Verna coming back because she’d forgotten to give me something.”
“I’m sorry I disturbed you.”
“No, no, it’s all right. I’m beginning to lose the best light and I’d need to stop soon anyway.” She dropped her brush in a jar of water and set her palette aside on a sawhorse table. “Is something wrong?”
“I’ve been worrying about you all day. Just couldn’t shake the feeling that something was wrong with you.” And now she would laugh at him and make him feel like an utter fool, he thought.
She looked down and tugged at a paint-splattered towel she had tucked into the waistband of her jeans. It came free and she held it in one hand while she reached for the brush she had dumped in the jar of water. Gently she swished the brush in the water, rinsing it. Finally, apparently satisfied, she began to dry it gently with the towel, twirling it so the bristles came to a point.
Just as Craig was about to apologize again for bothering her, she looked at him.
“My father called this morning.”
He felt his heart thud. “What did he want?”
“To see me.”
“What did you say?”
“That I never, ever want to see him again. That I wanted him to just leave me alone. Then I hung up on him.” She grimaced. “It wasn’t a very adult conversation.”
“What the hell difference does it make?”
“None, I guess.” She shrugged one shoulder and set the brush down along with the stained towel.
She looked so tired, he found himself thinking. Utterly exhausted as if life had completely worn her out. She took a step toward him and winced, betraying the fact that her leg hurt.
“What’s wrong?” he asked.
“Nothing, really.” She smiled wanly. “I’m just tired. I’ve been painting like a demon, trying to forget that damn phone call, and I guess I’ve been standing too long—”
Before she finished, he swept her right off her feet into his arms. Instinctively she grabbed for his shoulders. “Craig…”
“How about I carry you to the house, set you on one of your kitchen chairs, and make you something to drink? You look hot and tired.”
“No!” In a rush, unreasoning fear rose inside her, causing her to pummel his shoulders with her hands and try to wriggle free.
“Esther…” Stunned, afraid she would hurt herself, he tightened his grip. In her current position if she fell to the hard floor, she might get seriously injured. “Esther, stop….”
“Let me go! Damn it, let me go now!”
She was fighting wildly, hitting and scratching, and at any moment he was going to lose his grip on her. Having no other choice, he dropped to his knees, wincing a little as they cracked against the hard wood floor. At least he was able to set her down.
She twisted away, sobbing, crying out as her injured leg protested, her brace scraping as she dragged herself across the floor away from him. “Don’t,” she gasped. “Don’t ever…don’t….”
He stayed where he was, kneeling, ignoring the stinging of his right cheek where she must have scratched him, ignoring the dull ache of one of his shoulders where she had punched him, ignoring the sharp pain in his kneecaps. He watched her, at once cautious and concerned as she continued to struggle across the floor to get away from him. God, what had he unleashed?
Suddenly she collapsed facedown on the floor, burying her face in her hands and crying so hard that her shoulders shook.
He hesitated, reluctant to approach her again in her present state, but genuinely worried about her. It would have taken a much duller man not to realize that lifting her into his arms had triggered this terror, and that it must have something to do with the horrors of her childhood.
God, he felt so helpless! He was afraid that if he touched her again he would just scare her more, but she was so upset he felt an urgent desire to comfort her somehow. Finally, when her sobs seemed to be easing, he took a chance and stretched out beside her on the floor. Gently he laid a hand on her shoulder.
“Esther? Esther, I’m sorry. As God is my witness, I didn’t mean to scare you.”
Another hiccuping sob escaped her. “I—I know. I know.”
He squeezed her shoulder, wishing he dared to turn her over and pull her into his arms. In the last few minutes, however, he had learned that Esther Jackson wasn’t very different from a vial of nitroglycerin. A wrong shake could cause an explosion.
So he waited patiently, with his hand on her shoulder, hoping she would eventually feel comfortable enough to turn to him. Although why should she? As far as he could tell, little in life had given her cause to trust anyone at all.
God, something inside him curdled when he thought of her not even being able to turn to her mother for security. On top of that, society had turned a blind eye to the mistreatment she had received.
It wasn’t that his own childhood had been sheltered. Living on an impoverished reservation as he had, he’d seen the evils of alcohol and child neglect and abuse, though he’d been spared himself. He’d also seen plenty of other evils, having largely to do with poverty and racism. But none of that meant he couldn’t still hurt for a little girl who’d once been abused by the two people in the world she should have been able to trust absolutely.
Nor did it mean he couldn’t hurt for this isolated woman with her deep scars and still-tender wounds. In his own life he’d managed to make peace with most things in his past, but that was just his nature. For him it was easier to shed hurtful things than to let them keep torturing him. For some people, though, shedding those things could be next to impossible.
Finally, taking a huge chance, he gripped her other shoulder and drew her into his arms. He was tensed in expectation of another explosion, but instead she settled against him, even as she gave in to another burst of sobs.
But her sobs quickly eased, and finally she lay exhausted against him. She was soft and warm, and he had to resist an urge to pull her closer. He’d forgotten how good it felt to hold a woman, and for some reason Esther felt especially good.