by Tracy Sumner
"This is different," is what he finally came up with. Great, Zach, just great.
"Different? Do tell."
"I can control myself. Some of the men interested in asking you to supper at Christabel's or out for a walk along the wharf may not be able to. They see a pretty woman climbing up on a crate, shaking her fist and riling up the whole town, they hear that clipped accent and the snappy words, and think, she'll be a hell of a time in bed. You're confounding the lot of them." Didn't this happen in New York City? How naïve was she?
"Is that what you thought the first time you saw me? A hell of a time in bed?"
"Irish, I haven't put woman and bed in the same sentence for over two years. Thinking or speaking." He pulled at his bottom lip, trying to recall the first time he laid eyes on her. "Okay, what did I think? Was it, 'looks like she's gonna be a damned nuisance'? Yeah, that was it. I remember distinctly, to use one of your favorite words. Dis-tinct-ly." He'd also thought, slim ankles, round bottom, magnificent lips.
And glorious hair. Oh, the woman had a fine head of hair.
He watched her caked-up, robin's red cheeks crinkle with displeasure. "If we're only friends, why worry if another man is up here with me? Isn't that permissible? Are we establishing restrictions, Constable?"
"No!" He leapt from the chair, reaching to steady it as it rocked from side to side. "No." Striding to the window, he flicked the curtain aside, gauging how much longer until sundown. Knowing women the tiny bit he did, he reckoned one whose face looked like hers wouldn't want to leave her hiding place before dark. Opening the window, he breathed deeply of the fresh air pouring into the room. "That isn't it."
"Then what is it?"
Jealousy? Close.
Mixed with a healthy dose of rage. He rather felt as if he'd discovered Savannah M. Connor, uncovered this tremendously valuable treasure that no one else truly understood. Other men saw her beauty, sure, who wouldn't? But did they see that she was funny and bright and so incredibly earnest that it made your teeth ache? Did they see the yearning in her wide emerald eyes when she looked at a child as if she was afraid to touch for fear they'd reject her? Did they hear the passion in her voice when she talked about all those damned women she thought she was helping?
He had.
And he didn't want any of the salty bastards in town to hurt her, is all. A piercing dart of guilt pricked him. Was it so dreadful for him to feel something for another woman? Nothing like love but... respect and concern? Did that mean he didn't love Hannah any longer? Did it mean she was finally, truly gone from his life?
Glancing at Savannah, he studied her as she wiped her face with the rag he'd brought from the washroom. A feeling like the one he often felt when he looked at Rory swept over him. Affection and contentment and misery wrapped into one cumbersome bundle.
Boy, that just beat all.
Why her? Why not Mrs. Brand, who had been widowed for longer than he had and had made her interest known on more than one occasion? At the spring picnic and last month at the Gillard's wedding reception.
Why not her?
He grunted. Something about Savannah Connor got to him. That was about as simply as he could put it.
Sighing, he turned, propping his hip on the window ledge. So he cared about her in a friendly fashion. Wasn't that better if their relationship became intimate? Better that than pretending, just to get close to her. He had never been good at feigning feeling, even during his wild days. What you saw was what you got. It hurt him more often than it helped but caused less confusion.
Besides, it was useless to try and hide anything. The old Garrett protective instinct was kicking like a healthy mule. No doubt about it. He knew that feeling.
"I don't want you to get hurt," he snapped, mostly directing the statement out the window. "Anything wrong with that?"
Her eyes appeared above the limp rag—stunned, if her expression told the right story.
"My mother died when I was twenty. I came home from piloting to find myself instant papa to Noah and Caleb. Lord, they used to fight something awful. About the most contrary two you'd ever want to meet. Body size, looks, interests. All of it." Pushing off the ledge, he paced to Noah's desk and fingered a letter opener he remembered his brother having as a kid. "One day, about ten years back, Caleb lost his temper and got into it with Noah, who, hurt and angry, ran off. I gave them both bad advice, and Noah didn't come back for ten years. For ten years, I didn't know if he was dead or alive. Nothing. But I did know I had failed them. Caleb, Noah, and my mother."
Then there was Hannah. That failure was too hard to talk about, too painful by far.
He traced the letter opener along a jagged scratch in the desk. "I hardly had time to grow up before I was taking care of people. My mother, my brothers, my wife." He wiped at the moisture on his brow. "And of course, Rory. Add to that the entire town and every crew that sails inside my boundaries. So if I throw some of that caring your way, I mean to tell you that that's just the way it'll have to be. If we are, or we become, involved. Cause I won't be able to change it."
Savannah folded the washrag into a tight square, her lips pressed to hide what he suspected was a smile. "What would you compare this caring to? Friend? Sister? Mother?"
Nodding, he clicked his tongue against his teeth. "The first one sounds good to me. The last two kinda make me feel funny." His gaze sharpened. "Is that fine? It's not insulting, is it? I mean, I'm not good at lying, and we both know we're not in—"
"Whoa, whoa, to use one of your favorite words." Savannah walked across the room, halting only when the tips of her shoes touched his boots. Extending her hand, she smiled. Despite the gritty white smudges on her face, she looked gorgeous. "Friends sounds lovely. Nothing more, nothing less. When one of us wants out, we tell the other. No pretences, no games, complete discretion. End of story."
Zach tilted his head, studying her, thinking it sounded too good to be true. When had any man ever had a relationship with a woman packaged up as neat and tidy as this one? It sure sounded nice. Even—no, especially—the friends part.
He had friends, of course, and family.
But he'd be damned if he wasn't tired of Caleb teasing him about getting married again. What about Christabel sending her unattached women friends to the jail with cakes, cookies, and those simpering smiles? And he loved Rory to death, but a person couldn't expect broad levels of companionship from a seven-year-old. Come to think of it, he couldn't picture a soul he acted himself around. That man who didn't feel like being Mr. Responsible all the time, who wanted to be normal.
Before he changed his mind, Zach took her hand and sealed his deal with his Irish devil.
He lay in bed later that night, estimating how long it would take a tolerable case of sunburn to heal. Two days? Three? Had to give her at least that much time. Even if Savannah wasn't in pain, she wouldn't feel pretty. And there wasn't much you could do with a woman who didn't feel pretty.
Especially what he had in mind.
Acting the friend and keeping his lustful thoughts to himself, he had escorted her home under cover of darkness, the glow from what Savannah agreed were too few streetlamps lighting their way. She had told him about her family in New York. Bits and pieces, nothing substantial. As if she couldn't bear to talk about it for long. Her father and brother sounded like narrow-minded bullies. Zach had kept his opinions—and the sorrow he felt for her—to himself.
Actually, once he stopped trying to catch a glimpse of her trim ankles below her flapping skirt, or the curve of her breast when she was looking the other direction, he had really enjoyed talking to her. He hated struggling to fill every moment with meaningless chatter. Savannah wasn't bothered by brief lulls in conversation. Men couldn't think as quickly as women when it came to talking. It was one of the reasons Zach avoided social functions.
Avoided women, he supposed.
She told him about an article she'd written for some women's journal, detailing a proposal for the vote in South Dakota or
Utah or somewhere out west. With her eyes shining and her hands flapping to punctuate each comment, he had found himself thinking, Jesus, she's exquisite. Most of it was just imagination at this point, but he imaged a lush body with a surprising bit of muscle thrown in. A flat tummy. Long legs. From the looking and touching he'd done, he was pretty sure about those two.
And her breasts... ah, he had missed breasts. Cupping them, tasting them, drawing a taut nipple into his mouth and rolling it between his teeth. He didn't understand exactly what was so fascinating about nipples.
But he understood he was fascinated.
Dimming the lamp, he rolled to his side. The crackle of paper reminded him. Tossing the magazine to the floor, he sighed in the darkness. The article Savannah had written discussed the possibility for more equal partnerships between men and women after the turn of the century. It was the one she had danced in the street with excitement about. She had insisted he take it home and read it, had even run inside while he waited on the walk outside Miss Vin's, avoiding the curious glances and knowing smiles. He'd have to be careful about escorting her home too often. She would have to be careful, too.
He grunted. Yeah, right.
Laughing, he stacked his hands behind his head.
He hadn't felt like this over a woman—itchy and feverish and impatient—in a long time. Maybe ever. A positive change from his feelings before Savannah arrived: restless, cranky, and dissatisfied. Hannah had made him feel loved and secure but never antsy. Whatever Savannah Connor had done to him, whatever spell she'd cast, he hoped she could undo.
Her loving better be some kind of a strong antidote.
She was too smart not to realize what she was doing to him, wasn't she? Those big words weren't just for show. Though she was a curious mix of innocence and experience. She seemed to know things, things he figured a woman was simply born knowing.
Other things brought a completely blank look.
Savannah's article rolled to the front of his mind. Along with it came a considerable twinge of guilt. Was what he was planning to do going to keep her from having a chance to marry? Maybe even an eligible man in this very town? Men still liked to wed virgins, he assumed. Dr. Leland had been searching for one high and low since Elle broke his heart.
Puffed-up, arrogant peacock, the doctor was. Not a friend of any Garrett, but he and his tailored pinstripes might be the type to suit a woman like her. On the outside, it wouldn't seem that way. Why she'd agreed to test the water with him, he couldn't say. His education ran an inch to her mile, and he surely wasn't the handsomest man she'd had the pleasure to meet. Not counting all that, she actually seemed as attracted to him as he was to her. Maybe that saying about opposites had a kernel of truth to it.
Picturing Savannah in the snappy green skirt and shirtwaist she'd worn today, looking fresh as a flower even with the baking-soda paste slathered on, he couldn't help but wonder what it would be like to undress her.
"Oh, hell," he groaned and kicked the sheet to the floor.
Stalking to the wardrobe, he tugged on a pair of trousers and a ragged shirt he kept for garden duty and painting. A walk along the wharf would calm him. It always did. Being near the water, enveloped in a thick, salty mist, tasting it on his lips and feeling it coat his skin, made him breathe easier. It made troubles fade into the distance when his mind was filled with the roar of the sea.
He must have spent a hundred nights since Hannah's death sitting on a scarred dock and staring into inky-black waves. At least this time, a goddamn nightmare wasn't driving him from his bed.
Getting Savannah Connor into it was the problem.
8
A sip is the most that mortals are permitted from any goblet of delight.
~A. Bronson Alcott
"Zachariah Garrett, you gotta stop that woman. She's causing a ruckus over at my house. A ruckus, I say!"
Zach sighed, the number of ale barrels found on the beach during the last shipwreck drying up in his mind like a puddle in the blazing summer sun.
Lord have mercy, what had the woman done now? "Festus, what's the problem?" He held on to his calm smile while jotting the initials S.C. in the margin of the cargo ledger and underlining them twice.
With enough force to tear the page.
Festus Bellamy, owner of Pilot Isle's net shop, stood in front of Zach, the belly drooping over his faded trousers bumping the desk with each word. "That city woman. Something has to be done about her!" Festus slapped a crumpled wad of white calico on the desk. The man looked like he'd run the half-mile to the jail, a feat Zach would have paid two bits to see.
"Maybe this is fine and dandy in New York City, Constable, but it ain't fine here. Alvin came and told me, and I went on home, tripped over my own feet trying to get there before my Shirley got involved in that woman's business."
Spreading out the cloth, Zach squinted, making out one word in smeared black stain. A word that chilled him to the bone. Vote. "What is this?"
Festus blew a tense breath through his nose. "One of them fabric signs. I grabbed it outta my senseless daughter's hands. Imagine my fine, upstanding Shirley getting mixed up with that crazy city woman. After all Elma and I have done for her. Piano lessons, a new dress every time she asks for one, and don't let me start on all the hair gigs and feminine fripperies I buy." Slipping his thumbs inside his braces, he yanked, then let them slap back against his chest. "This has got to stop. You know I can't be a part of a disruptive predicament, being a businessman myself."
Zach shoved back his chair, feeling the sudden urge to throttle Savannah Connor. Or kiss her silly. "I'll handle it. I'll handle her. You go on back to your store."
"You'd better get over there. Got your son painting away like some miniature soldier in a female camp."
Zach paused, his arm jammed halfway down his coat sleeve. "My boy's over there?"
Festus tapped the tips of his fingers together and rocked back on his heels, his smile growing. "Oh, yes. Oh, yes. Got him in the middle of the pack, like wolves, they are. I swear that city woman nearly took my head off when I told her my Shirley wasn't about to take classes at her silly school. I can't guess what they're learning over there."
"Waywardness," Zach muttered, slamming the door behind him.
"Uh-oh. He's spittin' mad."
Savannah paused, a black dribble running down her paper. Rory stood beside her, still as a stone, his paintbrush stuck in the middle of the letter L. Blond hair dried by salt and sun hung like crisp wheat past his brow, tangling with lashes as delicate as a spider's web. Red specks of paint sprinkled his cheeks, giving the appearance of a rampant rash.
"Who?" she asked.
Rory stretched his skinny arm, his index finger rising to a point. "Pa."
Savannah felt the prickle of awareness before she turned. Zach crossed the yard at a furious stride, threading in and out of the small clusters of women and cloth posters without missing a beat.
Without tearing his gaze from her.
Idly, she noted the blades of moist green grass sticking to his boots, the slight sheen of perspiration on his brow, wondering why she felt nothing but excitement. Not a solitary trace of fear. "Rory, you'd better go stand with Miss Caroline. I think your father would like a private word with me."
Zach's gray eyes were drawn into narrow slits, his brows angry slashes above. A shadow of day-old stubble lined the jaw he clenched as he came toward her. Cheeks flushed and fists bunched, he looked spittin' mad indeed.
And more devastatingly handsome than any man she had ever seen.
"He's gonna cuss," Rory warned in a calm tone, resting his paintbrush neatly on the edge of the paper and climbing to his feet. "But it won't last long."
Savannah laughed, amused and charmed. "Yes, more than likely." Brushing his hair from his eyes, she made a mental note to tell Zachariah that his son needed a haircut. "Run along, now, so you don't have to witness my scolding."
Rory left her with a brave wink, as if to say, he's all bluster, don't wo
rry. It was the first confidence in her twenty-five years she had shared with a child. The flood of delight spreading through her almost made her miss what Zach's arrival did to her once-steady heartbeat. She smiled, though, in spite of his glower, in spite of the rattle in her chest. It lifted her lips and her mood.
She was delighted to see him. Was this what missing a man felt like?
He didn't say a word, or politely return her greeting, just took her upper arm in his calloused grip and hauled her around the side of the house and into a lean-to storage shed.
"Unhand me at once, Constable," she panted. Struggling to break his hold, her gaze located his in the semi-darkness of the enclosure. "This is reprehensible behav—"
Interrupting with an abrupt movement, he backed her into the shed's wall. She saw his eyes for a moment in a slash of sunlight: wild and so dark they looked black. Then his head lowered, blocking vision and thought. When his hands tangled in her hair, tilting her face to better fit her mouth to his, she didn't pull away. Rather, she stretched up on her toes to crowd him, to claim him, her arms circling his neck and holding on for dear life.
Finesse forgotten, he thrust his tongue into her mouth, his hands kneading her scalp, sending a delicious rush of awareness through her body. Her nipples hardened, her stomach jumped. And for the first time, the area between her thighs flared to life, demanding attention. Hmmm, she thought, remembering the pictures in her books and squirming against him, I'm beginning to see how this might work.
Hungrily, she followed him move for move, battling to deepen the kiss with her budding skill. She recalled what he liked and set about using it for her benefit.
She had paid attention.
Gentle bites to his lips, her tongue tracing the edges just after. Hands sliding into his hair and tugging. Nails gently digging into his skin. A murmured plea against his lips, his animal growl of a reply.