about the mud on the road and Wednesday say she was hungry.
Brother Aaron claimed if she ate any more, she’d pop, but Wednesday only laughed and said she had to eat
because Mrs. O’Daniel said so.
A hand touched Jacob’s and, without looking, he knew it was Nel . When he closed his fingers around hers, she
jerked in surprise.
“You’re awake.”
He smiled up at her. “I’m awake.”
She looked more beautiful than when he’d left. Her face was flushed with color, and her brown eyes were filled
with worry. He’d always thought her pretty but never to the point that he couldn’t stop staring. The memory of
how she’d looked that first night in her underthings flashed through his mind. Her skin had been like cream, and
he’d had no trouble making out the outline of her breasts. She had nice breasts, not too big, not too small.
Jacob swore and closed his eyes. He must have been out on the trail too long. This was Two Bits he was looking
at. He’d known her most of her life. It was probably just the lack of blood to his brain that made him think of
such things. If the outlaw had cut him one more time, Jacob would probably think Gypsy was good-looking.
Jacob glanced at the little pixie of a woman still dusting the shelves. Her gray hair was like a fuzzy dandelion ball
around her head, and the skin on her arms kept wiggling long after she’d stopped. No, he decided, he’d never
lose enough blood to find her pretty.
“Want a little soup?” Nell asked.
He looked back to her. “I want a lot of soup and a steak if there’s one handy. Tell Marla she doesn’t even have to
cook it, just warm it up and I’ll eat it.”
Nell smiled. “You’re definitely feeling better.”
Two bowls of soup and half a pie later, Jacob stopped eating. He’d moved to the couch by the fire in the big, airy
room to eat. The old nurse buzzed around him like a dragonfly.
“If you eat any more, you’l split your stitches.” Mrs. O’Daniel checked his bandages as if she expected to see
blood.
“I’m fine,” he assured her. “You’ve got enough patients around this place. Don’t think you can add me to your
list.”
Nell leaned forward and ran her hand over the bandage that covered his ribs. “Take care, Jacob.” Her fingers
brushed his skin above the cotton. “You’ve lost enough blood for a while. No more.”
He met her eyes as her warm touch crossed his heart. He wondered how many times in the past three days
she’d brushed her hand over his skin, maybe just making sure his heart was still beating, maybe feeling to see if
he had a temperature. It didn’t matter; he was sorry he hadn’t been awake to enjoy her every touch.
Then, unexpectedly, he saw something in her eyes. She enjoyed the contact as much as he did. The knowledge
that she saw him as a man as well as a friend surprised him.
Gypsy offered him a clean shirt, and Nell leaned away. The moment was gone.
The old hooker helped him into the shirt. “We had to toss al your old clothes.”
Jacob tried to button it, but the bandages across his hands slowed his progress. Final y, frustrated, he mumbled
an oath.
Nell leaned forward and began buttoning his shirt from the bottom. As she moved up, he took a deep breath,
breathing her in and wishing he knew how to tel her he wouldn’t mind if she reversed the action sometime.
“Thanks,” he managed to say when she’d finished. He no longer tried to keep his thoughts away. He didn’t care
if she could read what he was thinking when she looked at him.
“You’re welcome.” She smiled.
The thought crossed his mind that she might be thinking the same thing. But she didn’t say anything. She just
moved away and picked her sewing back up.
Jacob glanced around the room at the others, wondering if anyone had noticed him staring at Nel . The ranger
decided he agreed with the old hooker; sometimes there did seem to be a crowd always around.
He would have liked to talk to Nell or Rand Harrison in private, but there wasn’t much chance of that. After an
hour of mil ing around, the preacher, Wednesday, and Gypsy moved to the dining table to have a snack. Jacob
caught Harrison’s eye. “Fil me in on what’s happened here since I’ve been gone.”
Harrison sat beside Nel . As Jacob expected, the bookkeeper answered without adding any unnecessary details.
He told of the robbery in the house and of Hank’s arrest.
“How’s the boy holding up?” Jacob asked.
“Not well.” Harrison shook his head. “I talked to Parker, and he said one of the deputies got a little rough with
him last night. Claimed Hank tried to jump him, but Parker admitted the deputy’s sister had been on the train,
and the robbers scared her half to death. The kid’s lip is swol en and one of his eyes blackened. I got him to lift
his shirt so Mrs. O’Daniel could make sure he didn’t have any broken ribs.”
Jacob nodded. He’d seen the way prisoners were sometimes treated in small jails before.
Harrison continued, “When Mrs. O’Daniel saw Hank this morning, she cried, then demanded to be al owed to
look after his wounds.” Harrison showed no emotion as he added, “She feels bad for turning him in since he may
have kept her alive during the robbery and probably saved you.”
“But he was part of the crime,” Jacob admitted. “And I promised I’d stand by him if there’s a trial.”
“The sheriff said they caught three others. They were almost at the Red River.” Nell broke her silence. “They had
the loot but only one mule. Another mule had died. One of the posse rode in a few days ago to get a wagon. He
said they just fol owed the circling buzzards and found the dead mule, then the tracks where the outlaws were
dragging the loot was easy to follow.”
Harrison continued, “Parker thinks the posse will lock the gang up in his jail for a day or two, then head to Fort
Worth for trial. He doesn’t want them staying here any longer than necessary. A lot of the town had kin on the
train, and Parker fears the hanging will outrun the trial.”
An uneasiness settled over Jacob. He knew his job, back the law, but he didn’t like the idea of Hank being mixed
in with the three outlaws stil alive. The boy could have run a hundred times instead of bringing Jacob back here.
Hank could have col ected the horses, left Jacob for dead, and ridden to join his pa and the others. Or he could
have ridden west and disappeared without a trace. He was old enough to hire on as a cowhand with only a few
lies.
But he hadn’t. He’d brought Jacob home.
“I need a little fresh air. Harrison, will you join me?” Jacob stood slowly, testing his legs as he nodded once to
Nell.
She turned her chair toward the dining area, but he didn’t miss the question in her gaze.
His body felt stiff, but he managed to walk to the front door. Harrison opened it for him, and they stepped into
the sunshine.
When they were alone, Jacob said, “Thanks for taking care of Nell while I was gone.”
“I didn’t do it for you.”
Jacob smiled. “I know.”
For a few minutes the two men stood in silence. Final y, Jacob added, “About the boy, I’ve got to ask you
something I have no right to ask.”
Harrison leaned against the railing. “You’re wanting to know if I’ll help you break him out if a mob forms.”
Jacob raised an eyebrow. That was exactly what he planned to ask. He couldn’t believe Harrison guessed.
The bookkeeper shrugged. “I was thinking the same thing, but I would have never mentioned it to a Texas
Ranger.”
“Smart idea.” Jacob laughed. “If you help, it might be dangerous.”
Harrison crossed his arms over his chest and stared down. Jacob wasn’t sure Harrison would go along with any
plan. After all, they would be breaking the law. Any other time, he’d stay in the jail and protect the prisoner, but
he wasn’t sure he had the strength to ride. In a week, maybe less, he’d be able to fight any mob that came
along, but right now, he wasn’t sure. “Al I’d be asking you to do, Rand, was cover my back if the time came.
Nothing more. Nothing illegal.”
Harrison took a breath and said in a low voice. “I was in Kansas once when a drunken mob decided to break into
the jail and hold a midnight trial on a man who’d murdered his wife. They rushed the guard. Got a prisoner out
with nothing but threats. I rode up just as they dropped him from the second floor of the saloon. His neck
snapped when he reached the end of the rope. They went back to drinking, figuring they’d done their duty. The
prisoner swung there til dawn.”
The bookkeeper looked up at the ranger. “The next morning we found out that the mob opened the wrong cel
that night. They hung the wrong man.”
No hesitance shown in Harrison’s gaze. “I’l not help you let him escape, but I’l do whatever it takes to see he
has a fair trail.”
Jacob nodded once.
The door opened, and Nel , flanked by her nurse, stepped out. “Afternoon, gentlemen,” she said. “We’re out for
our walk.”
Jacob couldn’t believe it. The nurse might be holding her tightly about the waist and letting Nel lean on her for
balance, but Nell was walking. He watched her grab one hand to the railing as she moved in baby steps along the
length of the porch and back.
When she reached them, she looked exhausted, but she smiled, “Mrs. O’Daniel says another few days and I can
go swimming.”
“You look grand,” Jacob said, and before he realized everyone was watching, he leaned and kissed her cheek.
“Now none of that,” Mrs. O’Daniel yelled in his ear. “Neither one of you are solid on your feet.”
She was right, he realized, and was thankful when Harrison moved to his side. Jacob placed his hand on Rand’s
shoulder. “How about we go back in?”
Harrison understood and slowly walked inside with Jacob leaning on him for support.
Three hours later, when Jacob awoke from his nap on the couch, Wednesday was keeping watch over him.
“Hello.” He smiled. Nell might look more beautiful, but Wednesday only looked rounder. “How are you, Miss
May?”
She giggled. “I’m fine. They told me to keep an eye on you while I sew. Miss Nell is napping. Mr. Harrison is
working on the books.”
“Where are the preacher and Mrs. O’Daniel?” Jacob asked, realizing keeping up with everyone in this house
wasn’t easy.
“They went back to town. Mrs. O’Daniel is worried about a cut over that boy’s eye. She wanted to ask the doctor
to check it.” Wednesday looked down at the sewing. “I was in the kitchen, but Marla ran me out, telling me you
needed watching more than she needed talking to.”
Jacob laughed, remembering how much the girl talked. “How about we go in the kitchen and see if Marla has
anything to eat? I’m starving.”
“Me, too,” Wednesday said as she set down her sewing.
Once they were at the kitchen table, Wednesday did most of the talking while Jacob ate everything Marla set in
front of him. He felt sure the shy cook didn’t real y want him taking up room in her kitchen, but as always, she
didn’t say anything.
After a while, Harrison joined them for a cup of coffee while he unfolded the weekly paper.
“Feeling better?” he asked Jacob as he sat on a stool beside where Marla was cutting apples.
Jacob nodded. “Much. Good food is all I needed.” He glanced up to see Harrison smile briefly at Marla.
“She’s quite a cook. That’s a fact.” He straightened out his paper on the corner of the cutting board.
The thin cook’s cheeks were as red as the apple peels she sliced. Then, to Jacob’s total surprise, Harrison held his
palm up beside the bowl, and Marla sliced off a piece of apple into his hand.
The action was a smal one, looking as though she’d done it many times before. No big deal. A silent request
granted.
Harrison ate the apple and read. Jacob wondered if he tried the same action would he lose a finger.
Wednesday chatted on about how frightened she was after the robbery, and Jacob watched the bookkeeper
and the cook over the rim of his cup. Neither showed any sign of even being aware that the other one was in the
room. But, after a few minutes, Harrison, without even glancing up, repeated his request. An apple slice landed
in his hand.
A few hours later at dinner, Jacob managed to sit at the table without too much pain. He talked with Parker
about al the news and told the sheriff how Hank had helped him. But, despite al he needed to tel the lawman,
Jacob kept an eye on Marla.
She moved about as silently as always. Once everything was in place, she slipped into her chair beside Gypsy and
ate her meal without looking up from her plate more than a few times.
Jacob was about to decide he’d been seeing things earlier in the kitchen, when Marla stood and began serving
dessert with coffee. Harrison, at the other end of the table, also stood and col ected plates. He never looked at
Marla, yet he silently helped her and she thanked him with a brief nod when they passed one another.
Jacob pushed away from the table and excused himself. He’d eaten dessert in the kitchen as his appetizer. He
walked slowly to the front porch, stretching his muscles and wondering how many days it would be before he
felt like himself.
The night was warm for a change. Spring couldn’t be far. That was one thing he liked about this part of the
country. The seasons changed al at once sometimes. He’d seen spring poke through snow and winter freeze
leaves still green on the trees.
Relaxing on the porch swing, he lit a thin cigar and watched the night sky.
The door opened and closed, but he didn’t stand to peer around the corner to see who fol owed him out. He