Not a minute later, his eyes were closed. He was resting. For now.
She let her gaze move over his brow and temple, then along his bearded jaw. By outward standards, he was a plain man, not one who would turn a woman’s head as he walked down the street. But thinking back on the more handsome men she’d known in her life, she realized that none of them matched the goodness of the man with her now.
She took his large work-roughened hand in hers. He didn’t stir. How I wish I desired you the way a wife should desire her husband, Jonathan McCutchens. On their wedding night Jonathan had loved her as though she were a fresh young girl, untried and unspoiled. She’d sought to give him what she thought he wanted, fast and sure like she’d been taught, but she hadn’t counted on his patience or his earnestness in seeking her pleasure. Never had she counted on that. And there, too, she’d disappointed him.
Though she’d only meant to spare him hurt, that was the first— and last—time she’d ever tried to deceive him.
She slowly let out the breath she’d been holding.
His hand tightened around her fingers, and only then did Annabelle realize he’d been watching her. The depth of his obvious devotion, so thoroughly undeserved, sliced through her heart.
‘‘Will you lie down beside me, Annie?’’
A soft breeze flapped the wagon canvas. ‘‘Are you cold? Do you want another blanket?’’ She half rose to get it from a crate near the front.
He gently held her wrist and urged her down beside him. ‘‘No. . . . I just want to feel my wife beside me, for you to be with me for a while.’’
For a while.
The naked supplication of his simple request only deepened the thrumming inside her. Until the end, is what you mean. She lifted the cotton blanket and tucked herself against him. Careful not to put her weight on his chest, Annabelle pressed close, aware that he wanted to feel her body next to his. She strained to hear the beat of his heart, to memorize its rhythm.
‘‘I need to say some things to you, Annie, and I—’’ Pausing midsentence, he held his right arm against his chest for a moment, taking in shallow breaths, before finally relaxing again. ‘‘And I know you’re not keen on this kind of talk.’’ His voice came gentle in the encroaching darkness, resonating through the wall of his chest in her ear. ‘‘My brother’s young. He didn’t have the best of chances when he was a boy, like I told you before. The hurt he took on then, bein’ so young, stayed with him and went deep. I was older, so I think I bore it better than he did. He still has a lot to learn, but he will. You and me, Annie, we—’’ He gave an unexpected chuckle, and Annabelle remembered her reaction the first time she’d ever heard him laugh. Like a sudden rain shower on a dusty summer day, the sound shimmered through her and eased the burden of the moment. ‘‘You and me, we got an advantage over Matthew in a way. At least that’s how I see it.’’
‘‘Advantage?’’ She huffed a laugh. ‘‘Oh yes, I can see what an advantage a man like you and a wh—’’ His arm tightened around her. Annabelle caught herself and pressed her lips together. So often Jonathan could quiet a sharp reply with the slightest look or touch.
Jonathan was no saint and neither was she, but Matthew Taylor struck her as being an upstanding citizen, well liked and respected—despite his opinion of her. The few times she’d seen Matthew when he was helping Kathryn Jennings, he’d been outwardly cordial, but she’d read the truth in his eyes, reminding her of how far she’d fallen. What advantage they had over a man like him, she couldn’t imagine.
As though reading her thoughts, Jonathan cradled her head with his hand. ‘‘We’ve both been forgiven so much, and we know it. We’ve seen who we are without Jesus, what we look like with all our stains coverin’ us. Until a person realizes that, I don’t think they can be near as grateful as they should be. They can’t give other people the mercy they need because they haven’t seen their own need yet.’’
Nestling into his embrace, she let the truth of his words seep into her. The pastor’s wife back in Willow Springs had said much the same thing to her the morning Larson and Kathryn Jennings remarried a year and a half ago. Annabelle could still remember the chill of snow stinging her cheeks the day of their wedding, after Larson Jennings had, in essence, returned to his wife from the grave.
‘‘Someone who has been forgiven much, loves much.’’ Wisdom shown in Hannah Carlson’s eyes as they watched the happy couple. ‘‘Take Larson there. He was so filled with jealousy and distrust that it nearly blinded him a second time to the woman God had chosen for him. But now his love for her is greater than it ever was because he’s seen his own weaknesses, as well as Kathryn’s. They love each other in spite of those weaknesses. Actually more, because of them—if that makes any sense.’’ Hannah’s gaze had moved to settle on her husband. ‘‘A couple can’t really love each other like they’re called to until they truly know each other, and a love like that takes a while to happen. Most times it takes a lifetime, coming slowly. Then at other times, the swift power of it can take your breath away.’’
Annabelle envied the love shared by Larson and Kathryn Jennings—the couple who first started her down this new road leading away from who she’d been to who she was now.
Someone who has been forgiven much loves much.
Hannah had eventually shown her the passage of Scripture where that thought came from, and Annabelle had tucked a hair ribbon between the pages to mark the spot. It was still there. She considered getting up to retrieve her Bible, but she didn’t want to leave Jonathan’s side. She remained quiet beside him, carefully tracking the slow rise and fall of his chest.
She reached up and fingered the thick brown hair at his temples, brushing it back with soft strokes. He turned his head into her touch, and she marveled again at the depth of his feeling for her.
‘‘You redeemed me, Jonathan,’’ she whispered, not knowing if he could hear her or not. ‘‘You saw past what I was, who I’ve been.’’ Who you’ll always be, came a familiar whisper. But as Hannah had taught her, Annabelle pushed it aside. ‘‘You ransomed me in a way, Jonathan. I would’ve died in that brothel without you.’’
Then it struck her, and the irony of the moment crowded the silence of the wagon bed. Here they were, abandoned and alone on the prairie. She, finally ransomed and free of her old life, and Jonathan—the one who’d paid the price for her freedom—facing death. Life simply wasn’t fair.
‘‘I didn’t ransom you, Annie girl. Jesus had already done that.’’ He brushed her cheeks with roughened fingers. ‘‘All I did was love you, and that was the easy part.’’
As he cradled her clenched jaw in his palm, Annabelle fought the emotion rising like a vast tide from somewhere deep inside her. Tears were foreign to her. Traitorous in a way. She’d spent so many years hiding her emotions, masking what she felt in order to survive. But now the tears forced their way out, as if there were no more room inside to contain the pain. Or perhaps no reason left to hide them.
‘‘You were exactly what I wanted, Annie, no matter that you might see me in a different way. You were honest with me from the start. I knew how you felt about me. But you see . . . a person can’t give what they haven’t got.’’ His voice went low, his tone harboring not a trace of bitterness. ‘‘A person can’t love someone else until they’ve learned to love themselves first. God dug that truth deep into me a long time ago. You have the seed to love inside you, Annie. It just needs some time to take root, is all. Guess I figured that’’—he gave a slight shrug—‘‘ ’til that time came, I loved enough for the both of us.’’
Annabelle closed her eyes for a moment and let his words wash over her. Grateful for the kindness in them, she also felt a quickening inside her and couldn’t explain the ache in her chest. Nor could she deny that part of what he implied might be true.
That she didn’t know how to love . . .
‘‘A person can’t give what they haven’t got.’’ That’s what he’d said, and how she wished she could c
hange that, especially in light of how undemanding, patient, and giving he had been. Her relationship with him was so different from her experiences with other men.
As she tried to sift through his meaning, something buried deep inside her began to unfurl—like a wood shaving tossed into the flame, seconds before it’s consumed. The response was unexpected, and unnerving. Knowing she might not get another chance to say it, she slowly rose on one elbow and looked into his face, hoping she could put into words what was inside her. ‘‘I’ve never done anything in my life that would warrant your affection, Jonathan.’’ She rested a trembling hand on his chest and watched his eyes narrow ever so slightly. ‘‘But if I could, I want you to know . . . I’d spend the rest of it learning to love you the way I wish I could right now in this moment.’’
She blinked and a tear slipped down her cheek.
Jonathan’s expression clouded. He stared at her, and then gradually the lines of his forehead smoothed, and he smiled. ‘‘There it is, Annie girl.’’ He brushed away the tear, laughing softly. ‘‘I can see the start of it now . . . in your eyes.’’
Wishing that could be true, Annabelle leaned down and kissed his mouth, tasting the lingering honeyed whiskey on his lips. Despite her former profession, this kind of intimacy was foreign to her as well. She brushed her lips against her husband’s again, seeing how much it meant to him, and silently conceding that he was probably right. About one thing anyway—she did have a lot to learn about love. How did one go about learning to love themselves? Especially someone like her. And didn’t a person have to be worthy first, before they could be loved?
She tucked herself back against him, and for a while neither of them spoke. Then Jonathan sighed slow and long. The effort seemed to come from somewhere so deep within that Annabelle rose slightly to make sure he was still with her. Death was a familiar stranger. She knew the works of his hands, and though she’d never seen his face close up, she sensed his coming.
Twilight descended, and on its heels came darkness, but she could tell Jonathan was watching her.
‘‘I love you, Annabelle McCutchens, and where I’m going . . . I’ll go on lovin’ you.’’
Rising up for a second time, she leaned close and placed a feather-soft kiss on his brow, her throat threatening to close. ‘‘I love you too, Jonathan.’’ And she did, in her own way. ‘‘I’m grateful you made me your wife, and I’m privileged to be carrying your child. Be assured I’ll make certain our baby knows what a fine man his father was.’’
Jonathan took a quick breath. ‘‘Or her father. I’d’ve been happy with either.’’
She smiled, then hesitated, sensing him drifting from her in a way she couldn’t explain. An old fear rose up inside. ‘‘Are you afraid at all?’’ she whispered.
He looked over at her, his brow knit together. ‘‘Of dyin’?’’
She gave a slow nod.
He answered after a minute, shaking his head. ‘‘No. But bein’ this close to it makes me wish I’d lived more of my days with this particular one in mind.’’ He grimaced, then let out a breath and grew relaxed once again. ‘‘I think maybe I would’ve done a better job at life that way.’’
They both fell silent.
Wishing she could do more for him, Annabelle lay back down and stared out the back of the wagon into the night sky. Stars like tiny pinpricks sprinkled the heavens, and the softest whisper of wind blew across their bodies. Though Jonathan had redeemed her in so many ways, her salvation wasn’t found in the arms of the man who held her now, or in his love, however much that had rescued her. It was in another man, a man she’d never really met—not face-to-face, anyway—but she knew He was real.
She huddled closer to Jonathan and his arm tightened around her.
‘‘You cold?’’
She shrugged slightly. ‘‘Only a bit.’’ Even now, he thought of her. What she wanted from Jonathan, what she needed before he died, was not the warmth from his body but the flame that flickered within him steady and strong. That made a man like him look twice at a woman like her. That made her want to be a better person just by being with him.
Annabelle awakened sometime later in the night with a feeling she couldn’t quite place. A cool May wind whipped the wagon’s arched canopy in the darkness and she lay still for a while, listening to the steady patter of raindrops pelting the canopy overhead.
She reached up to check on Jonathan. And then she knew.
Just as quietly as he’d come into her life, Jonathan McCutchens had slipped away.
Through the night, Annabelle lay fully awake, silent and unmoving, but with her body no longer touching Jonathan’s. As the faintest purple haze of dawn hovered over the Colorado plains, she pulled the blanket up closer around her and curled onto her side away from him, unable to drive away the chill.
Night rains scented the cool morning air with an unaccustomed sweetness, yet it couldn’t stave off the loneliness crouching in the world that waited beyond the confines of the wagon.
With the rhythmic beating of Jonathan’s heart now silenced, she shamefully wished she could join him in death. At the same time, she could almost hear him telling her to press on, to not give up. But the imagined voice paled against the fear swelling inside her.
Closing her eyes, she forced herself to focus on what lay beyond the cocooned silence of the wagon, to the wakening life outside— the skittering of some small animal rustling in the sparse prairie grass, a gentle breeze flapping the tented covering, and the distant lowing of their milk cow, followed by a dissonant clang of the bell looped around the animal’s neck. She had tethered the milk cow to the wagon late yesterday afternoon, but the animal’s stubborn persistence had apparently won out. Again. Jonathan had been right— her square knot did need some practice.
Thinking of how he’d often poked fun with her on that point, Annabelle slowly drew herself to a sitting position and turned. With a most tentative touch she smoothed a hand over her husband’s stilled chest, not allowing her hand to linger overlong.
She rose slightly to peer into his face. Peaceful, serene. And gone.
Her voice came out a whisper. ‘‘What will I do without you in this new world, Jonathan? How will I find my way?’’
Truth was, she didn’t want to. Not without him to guide her.
A dull ache running the length of her spine spurred her to shift positions, and she heard something crinkle.
The letter.
Holding the folded sheet of paper up to the early morning light, she made out the barest trace of Jonathan’s script showing through the page. She could almost read the words. . . .
It wasn’t sealed. No envelope.
She squinted for a second, then slowly looked away from the page. She lowered the letter, folded the piece of paper yet again, and tucked it inside her shirtwaist. Along with the spoken promise to deliver the missive addressed to Pastor Carlson, she’d made an unspoken one of trust as well, and that vow to her husband was as binding in death as it had been in life.
CHAPTER | ONE
ANNABELLE PUSHED HARD ON the southern route back to Pikes Peak, stopping in Denver only long enough to have Jonathan’s body prepared for burial. She reached the edge of Willow Springs shortly before sundown on the seventh day after Jonathan’s passing. Relief, mingled with sadness, settled in her chest upon seeing the familiar town again. She thought she’d left this place for good. The sight nudged her memory, and she recalled something Jonathan had said to her as they prepared to make their move to Denver last fall.
‘‘You’re a new woman now, Annabelle McCutchens. The people in Denver don’t know us.’’ He always spoke as though she’d been his equal, something she’d never gotten used to. ‘‘They’ll assume you are what you look like on the outside, and they’ll be right.’’ He ran his hand lightly over her dark hair washed clean of the fraudulent scarlet dye and cradled her face, her blue eyes absent of smudged kohl. ‘‘They’ll see what I see . . . a lady. A beautiful young wife comin’ to t
own with her handsome catch of a husband.’’
Annabelle warmed at the memory and the playful wink he’d given her. In his final hours, Jonathan had made it clear that he wanted to be laid to rest here in Willow Springs. Driving on through town, toward the pastor’s home, she couldn’t help but think of how they’d met, courted, and married here near the banks of Fountain Creek. She was glad to bring her husband back to their first home, after all he’d done for her. But in her heart, she knew with certainty that Jonathan McCutchens was already Home.
She pictured the fine pinewood dresser he had fashioned as a wedding present now sitting abandoned on the plains, along with other items they’d been forced to leave behind. The afternoon Jonathan’s chest pains had worsened, only days out of Denver, men from Jack Brennan’s group had helped remove the piece of furniture from the cramped wagon so he could rest inside, sheltered from the heat of the day. With the load of provisions they carried, there still had barely been enough room for Jonathan. If he were here, he would tell her not to worry about the furniture, that it was foolishness to dwell on what she couldn’t change. On what wouldn’t last. And he would be right, of course. And yet . . .
She guided the wagon down a side street and, while still some distance away, spotted Pastor Carlson. He was chopping wood by the side of the white-framed house.
He turned and briefly glanced in her direction before refocusing on his task. Then he went absolutely still. His head came back around a second time. The ax in his hand slipped to the earth.
He met her at the wagon and helped her down, his expression mirroring question and concern. Patrick Carlson looked past her toward the wagon bed. Annabelle watched his face as the shock over hearing about Jonathan’s death mingled with disbelief, then gradually gave way to grieved acceptance.
He took the letter from her hand, and as he read, his shoulders took on an invisible weight. ‘‘When did Jonathan write this?’’
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