Outside, it had turned much hotter. The air was humid and still, and they could hear the screech of locusts in the cattails by the river. Delia paused on the porch, wanting to ask Ty something, wondering if she dared.
Tildy, her cheeks bulging with molasses cookies, chased the black cat beneath the steps. Delia’s glance flickered briefly toward the river and the strange conical-shaped hut. “What is that?” she said, although it wasn’t what she had wanted to ask.
It had been a mistake to look at him. His thumbs were hooked into the waistband of his breeches, his legs were splayed wide. His magnificent naked chest rose and fell with his slow breathing. He exuded pure masculine sexuality and she jerked her eyes quickly away from him.
“It’s a wigwam,” he finally said. “My own private sweat lodge.”
“Oh…” She breathed, swallowed, sighed. She had no idea what either a wigwam or a sweat lodge was. She blurted out the question that was really on her mind. “Did you promise Nat that the woman you brought him would be a virgin?”
The question startled him. But only for a moment. “What’s the matter,” he sneered, “was he disappointed?”
She sucked in a sharp breath. “How dare you—”
“Or were you the one who was disappointed?” He took a step to plant himself right in front of her. Angry heat seemed to pour off him in waves. “Didn’t Nat manage to please you in bed?”
Their eyes clashed and Delia’s chin came up. “Are you always such a bastard with every woman you know … or do I bring out the worst in you?”
He gave a harsh, bitter laugh. “Aw hell, Delia. The truth is I’m j—” He cut himself off.
“What? What is the truth?”
“Nothing. Nat asked me if you’d been a whore back in Boston. I set him straight. That was all I told him.”
She barely heard his explanation. She was sure he had been about to admit that he was jealous. Jealous of her and Nat? The thought thrilled, confused, and frightened her all at once.
Tildy scooted out from beneath the steps, dragging the cat by its hind legs. The cat came reluctantly, hissing and digging its claws into the soft ground, and leaving tiny, twin furrows in its wake.
“Come on, little puss,” Delia said, laughing. Ty didn’t move, so she stepped around him. “We’ve got to be getting home now. Your da needs help with the haying.”
At the edge of the clearing they turned and looked back. Tildy flapped her hand in a vigorous wave. “Goodbye, Dr. Ty! Thank you for the cookies!”
Ty lifted his hand in a brief farewell. He looked lonely to Delia, standing by himself on his porch in the hot, glaring sun.
Delia stared at Meg in disbelief. “Do you mean to tell me I’m to drop a couple of chickens down the chimney?”
Meg nodded, her thin face serious. “Ma always cleaned it that way. When it got to smoking bad. They flap their wings, you see, and that knocks the soot out.”
“Chickens down the chimney!” Tildy confirmed. “My eyes hurt!”
The fireplace was definitely smoking. It was now pouring in the keeping room in soft, wispy drifts, causing their eyes to burn and tear. Earlier Nat and the girls had had to finish their breakfast outside and the way Nat had stared at Delia, disapproval all over his face, she knew he blamed her for it. Although why it should be her fault, she couldn’t imagine.
Still, he had gone to his work in the fields that morning, leaving her with no doubt that he expected her to rectify the situation and that, after over a month of marriage, she was still a failure as a wife.
Now she eyed Meg suspiciously. “You wouldn’t by any chance be trying to play a trick on me?”
Meg’s eyes went round with wounded surprise. “Of course not. I’m only telling you what Ma used to do. Just ask Papa.”
Delia had no intention of asking Nat. Things were so strained between them, they couldn’t speak to each other without it ending in an argument. They had gone from feeling awkward and shy, to active dislike. At night, he still slept on the shakedown in the linter. And he spent an hour every day before sundown up on the hill in back of the barn, speaking to his dead wife’s grave.
“All right …” Delia said reluctantly. “Tell me how it’s done.”
At Meg’s direction, Delia doused the fire with buckets of sawdust and water, which naturally caused the smoke to billow out in dark, choking clouds, covering the keeping room and everything in it with a layer of gray soot. Delia wanted to sob with despair—she’d be all day cleaning the mess, and she’d miss her lesson with Anne Bishop.
Next she went out to the yard and lured the chickens over with a handful of corn kernels. She snatched at a hen, grasping it by the wings and gingerly holding it away from her body. “Now what do I do?” she asked a giggling Meg, as the chicken flapped frantically in her arms, squawking madly. Tildy danced around them, squealing with laughter.
“You carry her up onto the roof and drop her down the chimney.”
Delia looked up, way up, at the chimney stack poking through the cedar-shingled roof. She swallowed hard; she’d always been a little afraid of heights. But she felt Meg’s judging, challenging eyes on her and so she said, “Fetch me a grist sack then. I can’t climb a ladder and carry this bloo—blasted chicken both at the same time.”
After some difficulty, Delia and Meg got two of the biggest hens into the sack. They brought the ladder from the barn and leaned it against the lower side of the house. After first taking off her slippery leather-soled shoes, Delia climbed with shaky legs, muttering to herself about how she should have had the sense to stay in Boston where, when a chimney smoked, you hired a sweep.
The roof had been built with a sharp pitch because of the heavy winter snows and she had to claw her way up it on her hands and knees, dragging the squirming sack with her. She didn’t dare let her eyes drift toward the ground. Once at the top she straddled the peak and looked down the chimney stack, but all she could see was blackness.
She hollered to Meg, who still stood alongside the ladder. “Meg, go on inside, will you? So’s you can catch the hen when she comes down!”
“Catch the hen?” Meg shouted back at her.
“Aye!”
After a moment’s hesitation, Meg disappeared inside.
“Delia, don’t fall!” Tildy called up to her.
“I won’t,” Delia said in a reedy voice and offered up a silent prayer, asking God to watch over this poor Boston grog shop girl who had wandered onto a Maine farm by mistake.
Taking a ruffled, clucking hen out of the sack, she peered down the chimney again. “Are you ready?” she called out to Meg, her voice tumbling down, then echoing back at her.
She heard a muffled reply, which she took to be an affirmative. Her thighs gripping the roof, she leaned way over and, fighting a silly impulse to shut her eyes, dropped the chicken down the chimney. There was a frantic squawking and flapping sound and then sudden silence.
“Meg?”
“It’s stuck! The hen is stuck!”
Delia pushed wisps of sweaty hair out of her face. Lord above us, Delia, how do ye manage t’ get yersel’ into these situations?
She inched her way across the roof and back down the ladder. She paused a moment to saver the blessed feel of solid ground beneath her feet before she hurried inside, and she and Meg looked up the chimney. Blackness.
“It’s not making a sound,” Meg whispered. “Do you think it’s dead?”
“If it is we’ll have chicken stew for supper.”
“But how are we going to cook anything with a chicken stuck up there?”
That was, Delia admitted, a problem. “I know,” she said. “I can try to poke her down with something.”
She went onto the porch, searching for the most likely looking instrument from among the tools kept hanging on the wall. She decided on her garden hoe.
She thrust the hoe handle up the chimney, but met only empty space. “I can’t reach. You’ll have to get on my shoulders, Meg, and poke it up there.”
<
br /> Meg’s eyes went wide, but she nodded vigorously.
Meg got on Delia’s back, holding the hoe. Hunching over, Delia shuffled into the hearth. She straightened slowly. “Give it a good poke, Meg.”
Meg gave it a good poke. The chicken screeched, flapped. Soot and feathers rained down.
Suddenly the chicken came hurtling at them, bringing clumps of cinders and soot in its wake. Shrieking, Meg reared back. Delia’s legs shot out from under her, and she and Meg went flying backward, tripping over a spider pan that skidded across the floor, knocking over a half-dozen ax helves Nat had been seasoning by the hearth, and sending them rolling and clattering like bowling pins across the room. Delia landed on her back with a bone-rattling jar. Meg landed on Delia’s chest, knocking the wind out of her.
For a moment Delia could only lie there, wheezing and wondering if she would suffocate before she began breathing again. At last she was able to draw in a gasping mouthful of precious air. Pushing herself up onto her elbows, she stared at Meg, who stared back at her—two pairs of white eyes in charcoal-black faces. “Are you all right?” Delia croaked.
Meg sat up, rubbing her forehead. “I bumped my head.” She giggled. Delia bit her lip.
Soon their loud, breathless whoops filled the house. The chicken, which had miraculously managed to survive the fall, raced around them, trailing a broken wing and clucking indignantly.
Suddenly from the yard came the sound of Tildy screaming.
Thoughts of wolves and Indians and other such horrors sent Delia lurching awkwardly to her feet. Grabbing the hoe as the only handy weapon, she raced outside, with Meg following.
At the sight of them, Tildy began hopping up and down and pointing. “Nanny goat’s in the garden! Nanny goat’s in the garden!”
“Aooow!” Delia shouted, enraged, raising the hoe above her head and running to the rescue of the precious garden that she had been slaving over these past weeks. “I’ll get ye for this, ye bloody she-devil!”
Delia fully intended to brain the hateful beast, but she had to get within striking distance of it first. She chased the goat around the garden, growing angrier by the moment as it trampled what was left of the vegetables with its sharp hooves … and then the sound of a man’s laughter penetrated her fuming consciousness.
She stopped abruptly and whipped around. Tyler Savitch stood there laughing. Laughing at her.
She sucked in her breath at the sight of him. He was naked— or as near to naked as he could be without scandalizing the countryside. He wore only a pair of high moccasins with fringed tops tied around his legs just below the knee and an Indian-style breechclout that was so brief it covered only the necessities, leaving the vast expanse of his long muscular thighs completely bare. A butchered haunch of some enormous, black-haired animal was slung over his shoulders and rivulets of blood trickled down his brown, naked chest.
She stared openmouthed at him, at the magnificent, naked savage sight of him, and her throat went dry, her breasts drew up tight. Then she realized what she was doing and came to herself with an expulsion of pent-up breath and a sharp jerk.
She advanced on him, brandishing the hoe. “What the bloody hell are ye laughing at, ye jackass!”
Ty laughed some more. “I swear, Delia-girl, you have been as hot-tempered lately as a kettle of fat.”
How dare he accuse her of being hot-tempered? she fumed, stalking toward him and waving the hoe menacingly in the air. He hadn’t been around in weeks, so how could he know the state of her temper?
But when she got within smelling distance of him, she recoiled from the reek of the meat he carried. “Pee-uw!” she exclaimed.
Ty’s eyes moved insolently over her, starting with her hair, which had tumbled out of her cap, roaming across the angry features of her soot-stained face, dropping down to linger when they encountered the hoe handle pressed tightly between her full, and quivering breasts—and his lips pursed slightly as if, Lord above us, he was thinking of kissing her there!
Finally, his eyes fell down to her bare feet, which caused a tiny twitch of his lips. They traveled back upward, pausing again at her breasts before settling on her face. He grinned. “Been cleaning the chimney?”
“What are you … Why are you … Damnation!” Her fingers clenched around the hoe handle. She wanted to hit him —but then, that might do serious damage to that beautiful body. “What is that awful, smelly meat?” she asked instead.
“I thought you and Nat might want a piece of the bear that’s been raiding your corn.”
Delia remembered Nat mentioning a few days ago that a bear and her cub had been at the corn rows all along this end of the river. She looked askance at the huge piece of meat, wrinkling her nose. “What do I do with it?”
“Well,” he drawled, his smile widening irresistibly, “you scorch off the hair and hide, spit her on a birch pole, and roast her over a big, hot fire. Then you eat her.”
“Eat a bear!” Delia snorted. “Not bloody likely, I will!”
Meg and Tildy had managed to shoo the goat out of the garden and now they came running up. Tildy’s eyes grew huge at the sight of the bear haunch. “Did you kill that big bear all by yourself, Dr. Ty?”
“Yup. Wrestled her down with my bare hands.”
Tildy’s eyes filled her face. “Golly!”
“Go on with ye!” Delia scoffed.
Ty cocked a brow at her. “What? Don’t you believe me?”
He couldn’t have … surely he couldn’t have … but then he was awfully brave and strong. And raised by the Indians…
“You didn’t!” she protested.
He threw back his head and laughed with delight. “No, brat, I didn’t. I shot her from behind the safety of a nice big rock from a good ten yards away.”
She couldn’t help laughing with him. Oh, but it was so good just to look at him. She hadn’t seen him in so long, since a few days after her wedding, although she had hoped every Sabbath day he might decide to come to the Meeting. And every time she went into Merrymeeting, her heart beat wildly at the possibility that she might run into him—at the Bishops’, or the general store, or the grist mill. Yet she never had. Just let me see him, she had prayed. Just let me see him and talk to him, if only for a few minutes.
Yet when her prayers had gone unanswered, she knew it was for the best. She had no right to be thinking of Tyler Savitch in that way.
“Girls,” Ty said, although he kept his eyes fastened on Delia, “why don’t you run into the house and see if you can find me an old scrap of flannel to wrap around this meat?”
The girls ran off, eager to be of help and chattering excitedly between themselves.
A sudden silence descended on the clearing. It was so quiet Delia could hear the drone of the bees around the timothy and paintbrush. The sun was a hot silver ball in the sky. A warm, moist breeze carried the smell of newly mown hay.
Ty stared at her with avid intensity, his eyes boring into her. “How have you been, Delia?”
“Fine … Oh, fine, fine…” She realized she was nodding like a fool and made herself stop it. But it wasn’t as easy to control what was happening inside her: the familiar pounding of her heart, the turmoil of emotions that made her throat ache and her eyes burn.
“Has Nat been treating you well?”
“Yes, yes,” she lied. Or partly lied. At least Nat didn’t beat her, but that was the best of what could be said about what went on between them. “He’s out clearing a new field over yonder ridge just now.”
Ty nodded, his face impassive. “That’s good.” He hefted the meat on his shoulders, the tendons of his strong hands flexing. “I’d like to put this into the springhouse, if you don’t mind. The damn bitch is heavy,” he added, his lips slanting into a lopsided smile.
Delia blushed—more from the effect of the smile than his profanity.
Behind the house was a natural spring well covered by a cedar-shingled shed. Delia leaned her hoe against the shed’s wall and pulled open the do
or, which protested with a loud squeal of its rawhide hinges. It was cool inside the spring-house, but it offered Delia little relief. She felt hot from the inside out, as if her blood were boiling.
Ty slung the bear haunch over a branched iron hook. The muscles of his back bunched as he lifted the heavy meat above his head. His dark hair was plastered in damp tendrils against his neck. The skin of his chest and thighs had been browned by the summer sun. Shamelessly she wondered if he was brown all over.
“We, that is, Nat and I were wondering why we never see you at the Meeting,” she blurted out and was instantly sorry. He would know now that she looked for him there.
He turned and smiled mockingly at her. “I’m not much of a believer.”
“You don’t believe in God?”
He shrugged. “I believe in the gitche manitou, who is not a god but the spiritual force that dwells in all things.” His eyes flickered to the carcass hanging from the hook and a strange sadness came over his face. “That’s why I sang a song of apology to the bear’s spirit, explaining why I had to kill her.”
Apologize to the bear’s spirit? She looked at the leather bag nestled against his chest that he had said contained a symbol of his guardian spirit. He was an educated physician, yet he believed in heathen things. What a strange man he was. Delia wondered if she would ever understand him. But then, he was two men really and she doubted he understood himself.
Kneeling by the spring, Ty drew a bucket of water and sluiced it over his chest, washing off the blood. The water ran through his chest hair, funneling into a narrow line that disappeared beneath his breechclout. Delia watched his hands as they moved over his own hard, corded muscles. She longed to brush them aside and do it for him. She knew such a thought was wicked, forbidden, a sin. But she couldn’t help it.
She handed him the rag that hung from a nail on the wall and was used as a towel. But he didn’t dry himself. Instead, he dipped the rag in the bucket and stretched to his feet, coming up right in front of her. Flustered by his nearness, Delia made an inadvertent choking sound low in her throat.
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