Love Thine Enemy

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Love Thine Enemy Page 13

by Patricia Davids


  Cheryl shot him a skeptical look. “How do you know what a prairie chicken prefers?”

  Sam pushed the brim of his hat up with one finger and grinned. “Well, ma’am, I asked them.”

  She tried, but couldn’t smother a chuckle.

  Walter came to stand beside Sam. “I think we’re ready.”

  Both men moved away to talk with the rest of the crew.

  Cheryl pulled her sunglasses off and looked for the twins. They were busy gathering long branches of snowy blossoms from a thicket of wild sand plums growing along the pasture fence.

  After a detailed check of all his equipment, Sam ordered the burning started. He watched as the sprayer truck followed closely behind Walter, then he headed back toward his pickup and called to the twins. A small gust of wind crossed the freshly burned strip and carried a flurry of ashes toward the truck.

  Cheryl pulled back from the window and gave a cry of pain as she covered one eye with her hand.

  Sam was beside her in an instant. “What’s the matter?”

  “Something blew in my eye.”

  “Don’t rub it. Let me see.” He opened the truck door, jerked off his gloves, and bent close. With gentle fingers, he removed a cinder from the corner of her eye.

  Cheryl blinked rapidly. “Thanks, cowboy.”

  “You’re welcome, New York,” he replied softly. His gaze was drawn to her tempting lips. Ever so slowly, he bent toward her.

  “Cheryl, look at—”

  “—all the flowers we found.”

  The twins squirmed in between them and held up grubby hands filled with flowers and clumps of clinging dirt. Sam drew back.

  “They’re beautiful, girls,” Cheryl said, taking the offered bouquet. “These wild plums smell wonderful, don’t they? But I’m afraid this old milkweed will make me sneeze.”

  Sam frowned. “I didn’t think they had milkweed in New England. It’s a prairie plant.”

  Cheryl’s gaze shot to his, and her eyes widened. Suddenly, she smacked the flowers into his chest, and he jumped. “What on earth?”

  “Bee! Sam, there’s a bee on you. I’ll get it.” She hit him again, spreading dirt and petals across his shirt.

  The twins watched with puzzled faces. Lindy said, “I don’t see a bee.”

  “Me neither,” Kayla added.

  “It’s gone now.” Cheryl dropped the tattered remains of her bouquet and put her sunglasses on. “Don’t you think we had better catch up with the others, Sam? Come on, girls, get in the truck.”

  Sam brushed the dirt from his shirt as he walked around to the driver’s side. What had that been all about? He didn’t have time to ponder the question. The other trucks were pulling ahead of them.

  The twins climbed in with Cheryl. They both wanted to sit beside her, and she forestalled an argument by lifting Kayla over her lap and placing one child on each side. She looked at Sam as he got behind the wheel, and he gave her a rueful grin.

  “Can we—” Lindy started.

  “—see the fire?” Kayla asked.

  “Will it make—”

  “—lots of smoke?”

  “What makes the smoke go up?”

  “Where does it go after it goes up?”

  Sam said, “Remind me to leave them at home next time.”

  Cheryl grinned at him. “I would have had to stay at home with them.”

  “You’re right. Remind me to let them ride with Walter.”

  “Now that’s a good idea, cowboy.”

  By late afternoon, the thrill had worn off for the twins, and Sam looked over to see both girls asleep as they leaned on Cheryl. Even Cheryl’s head was nodding as he followed slowly behind the others occasionally stopping to put out a small fire the main water truck had missed. It was boring work, but the entire pasture perimeter had to be backfired carefully before the main fires could be lit.

  The trucks were nearly back at the starting point when a movement off to his right caught Sam’s attention. A white-tailed doe sprang out of a brushy ravine as the wind carried the smoke in her direction. Sam watched as she bounded back into cover only to reappear a moment later. Nervously, she watched the trucks and stamped her front leg in a signal of alarm. After a moment, she bounded back down the ravine.

  She’s got a fawn down there, Sam thought, slowing his truck. He glanced at Cheryl and the girls. The twins dozed quietly, and only Cheryl’s eyes opened when the truck stopped.

  “Are we done?” she asked, trying to stifle a yawn.

  “We’re back where we started from, but we’re a long way from done.” He smiled as she gave a sleepy nod and closed her eyes again.

  “I’ll be back in a minute,” he said, stepping out of the truck. He didn’t want Cheryl or the girls to know about the deer. Area wildlife would head for the creeks and ponds when the grass started burning, but a newborn fawn wouldn’t stand much of a chance. He decided to check the ravine and see if the doe had hidden a baby too young to run.

  Cheryl heard Sam leave the truck. She opened her eyes long enough to see him start toward a deep gully that cut between two loaf-shaped hills. She sat up and rubbed her eyes. The twins slept soundly as they leaned against her.

  Several minutes had passed when the radio crackled, and Walter’s voice came over the speaker. “The wind is gusting a bit harder now, Sam. I’m going to get started.”

  It was a moment before her sleepy brain processed the fact that Walter’s truck had turned and was coming back toward them. He had set fire to the grass inside the burnt strip, and the breeze was already pushing the flames out across the prairie.

  She grabbed the mike and fumbled with it an instant before she was able to call out, “Walter, stop! Sam went down into that ravine.”

  His truck veered off the grass and stopped.

  His voice barked over the radio to the other truck. “Get the sprayer going and put this out. Sam’s in front of the fire!”

  Cheryl saw the men on the second truck scrambling to get the water sprayer started again. The wind kicked up in a sudden brisk gust, and the fire gained momentum, crackling and snapping as the flames swept through the tall, dry grass.

  Walter jumped out of his truck and began running toward the gully, yelling Sam’s name. Thick gray-white smoke rose in a dense curtain from the flames and obscured everything beyond it. A swirling column of hot air sprang up in the blazing grass, and a spark-laden whirlwind danced ahead of Walter spreading the fire even faster. He threw his arms in front of his face and backed away as a wall of flames flared in front of him. He was still shouting Sam’s name.

  Sam walked down the ravine slowly scanning the underbrush for the white dotted pattern of a fawn’s back. A rustling in the brush ahead of him and the flash of a white tail bounding away gave him a clue, but he nearly stepped on the little thing before he saw it.

  “Your mama did a good job of hiding you, didn’t she?” he spoke softly as he knelt down beside the huddled fawn.

  He gathered the quivering infant into his arms. “You can’t be more than a few hours old. It’s just your bad luck to be born so early in the spring. Someone forgot to tell your mama you weren’t supposed to be born for another month. Let’s get you out of harm’s way, shall we?”

  He looked into its liquid brown eyes and sighed. “Those girls of mine will want to keep you. I can just see it. In a year’s time, I’ll have a six-point buck in the house with a big red bow around his neck. I hope you like cats.”

  Sam heard Walter calling him as he made his way back up the steep ravine. Suddenly, the crackling of fire drowned out Walter’s voice. Smoke swirled down into the draw, and the fawn began to struggle in his arms.

  Sam spun around and sprinted down the gully away from the fire. Of all the witless blunders he had pulled in his life, this was the stupidest. He’d walked off without telling Walter, and he’d assumed the men in the other trucks had seen him. It was a careless mistake that might cost him his life.

  He knew a small creek curved across the pr
airie a quarter of a mile from the base of these hills. It was a slim chance but it was all he had. To make it, he’d have to run the race of his life. He wasn’t going to die without a fight—his girls needed him. He glanced down at the tiny deer. If he was going to have any chance, he knew he’d have to leave the fawn behind.

  Cheryl watched as Walter backed away from the blaze. She stared in stunned disbelief as the fire engulfed the ravine Sam had entered. Her mind recoiled in horror as the flames shot higher when they reached the thick brush that grew there.

  A moan escaped her lips, and she swayed in the seat. The radio mike dropped from her nerveless fingers. She clapped her hands over her own mouth to keep from screaming. Tearing her gaze away from the fire, she looked down at the twins. They continued to sleep quietly on either side of her. Dear God, please don’t let them wake up and see this.

  The men on the water truck fought a losing battle as the fire spread out in front of them. One man jumped from the truck and ran to pull Walter away from the fire’s edge. Walter shook him off and staggered back to his pickup. He braced both arms on the hood and bowed his head. After a long moment, he walked to the open truck door, leaned in and grabbed the radio mike. Cheryl didn’t hear any sound from her set. He’d turned the radio to the emergency channel, she realized, and he was calling for help. He dropped his head onto his arms when he finished and leaned on the truck door as if it were the only thing in the world that could hold him up.

  The other cowboy took the mike from him and laid a hand on his shoulder. Walter straightened and looked toward Cheryl. He began to walk slowly toward her.

  At the bottom of the ravine, Sam paused and looked back. The flames were gaining on him. Upward and to his left, he saw the hill ended in a rocky outcropping. The crumbling limestone cliff was free of brush, and a shelf of stone jutted out like a small cave. It was a better gamble than the creek, and he scrambled upward with the fawn still cradled in his arms.

  He stretched out under the low rock shelf and prayed he didn’t find himself sharing it with a copperhead. It would be just his luck to survive the fire and die of snakebite. The fawn squirmed in his arms, but he held it tightly as the fire swept around the hill below them. Thick smoke choked him, and he pulled his bandanna up to cover his nose and mouth.

  A picture of Cheryl with her arms full of plum blossoms flashed into his mind. He regretted now he hadn’t kissed her at the truck. If he were going to die, he’d much rather die with the memory of her sweet kiss still on his lips.

  He huddled under the rock ledge as burning embers fell beside him from the hilltop’s grassy overhang. Heavy smoke billowed around him, the heat became intense as the fire devoured the heavy brush at the foot of the cliff a few feet below him. The fawn stopped struggling, and he wondered if it had passed out from the smoke. He sheltered its small body as best he could and he prayed for deliverance.

  Walter stopped at the open window beside Cheryl. She saw the agony in his ancient eyes, and her heart trembled.

  “It’s good that they’re asleep. They shouldn’t see this,” he said when he saw the girls on the seat beside her.

  “Sam?” she whispered.

  “He’s got a chance. There’s a creek a little ways below these bluffs.” From the look in his eyes, Cheryl knew the chance wasn’t a good one.

  “I want you to take the girls home and wait for us.”

  “No! Walter, don’t make me leave. I can’t.”

  His lips thinned in a tight grimace of pain, and she read the determination in his face. “Sam wouldn’t want his children here no matter what happens, and you know it.”

  She glanced at the twins and nodded in resignation. “Yes, you’re right.”

  She had to take care of Sam’s children even if her soul screamed out the need to stay.

  As one of the young cowboys drove them back toward the ranch, Cheryl turned in her seat and looked through the rear window. Towering columns of smoke obscured the hills as the line of orange flames raced across the prairie leaving behind only flat, black ash smoldering with a thousand tiny plumes of white smoke. The other cowboys gathered beside Walter. It was a grim-faced group of men who stood together and waited for the fire to sweep past the base of the hills before they began their grisly search.

  Chapter Eleven

  “Where’s Daddy?”

  Cheryl turned away from the balcony door to see Kayla and Lindy standing in the middle of the room. Sirens sounded in the distance, and she slid the door closed against the eerie wailing. “He’s still out at the pasture with Grandpa Walter.”

  Cheryl tried to keep the twins occupied, but she couldn’t keep her eyes off the clock. Sam had to be all right. He was a strong man, he could have outrun the fire and made it to safety. Any minute now, he would come through the door and tell some exciting tale about sharing the creek with catfish and rabbits. Any minute now.

  Please, dear Lord, he is such a good man. Bring him home safe to his children.

  The minutes became an hour, then two, and still no word. She refused to give in to the despair that threatened her. She couldn’t accept that she would never see him again. Her nerves were stretched to the breaking point when she heard the sound of a car pulling into the driveway, and she hurried to the open front door.

  It wasn’t Sam or even Walter who got out of the car in the drive, it was Merci Slader.

  She didn’t try to hide her dislike of Cheryl. “I was on my way home and Sam asked me to come by and tell you and the girls that he’s okay.”

  “He’s safe?” The welcome fact penetrated Cheryl’s mind, and her knees nearly buckled with relief.

  “He has a few scrapes and bruises and some mild smoke inhalation, but when I left the hospital, he was getting cleaned up and ready to leave. They were able to save the fawn, but the vet wants to keep it a few more days.”

  Cheryl stared at her in confusion. “What fawn?”

  Merci walked past Cheryl into the house. “I’ll let Sam tell you that story. I still can’t believe he risked his life to save a stupid deer.”

  The twins came racing up the stairs, then stopped short. “Hi, Mrs. Slader,” Kayla said.

  “Hello, girls. I have a treat for you. How would you like to come and spend the night at my house? Your dad thought it was a great idea.”

  “I guess.” They cast each other a dubious glance.

  She bent toward them. “We’re going to have pizza and go to a movie. Doesn’t that sound like fun?”

  The girls looked at Cheryl. She smiled and nodded. “A movie sounds like lots of fun. It was very nice of Mrs. Slader to offer. Go get your pj’s and toothbrushes.”

  The twins went back downstairs without arguing, and Merci turned to Cheryl. “I thought Sam might need some time to recover from his ordeal. Obviously, he’s going to need some rest and quiet. I know he can’t get that with those girls in the house. I mean, I’m sure you do your best, but they do need a firm hand.”

  “Are you sure Sam is all right?”

  Merci studied her closely. “I’m sure.”

  Cheryl knew her relief must be plastered across her face. She only hoped her love for Sam wasn’t plain to see, as well.

  Sam saw Cheryl standing out on the balcony when he came in later that evening. He watched her for a long moment through the windows. She stood with her arms clasped tightly across her middle as she faced the night. Beyond her, the southern sky glowed with the eerie orange light of prairie fires.

  A soft south wind carried the faint scent of smoke drifting to him through the open sliding glass door. The same breeze fluttered the edges of her blue skirt and toyed with her loose hair. Her pale curls seemed to reach out and beckon him.

  “It does look as if the whole world is on fire.” She spoke without turning.

  “It’s a long way off. You don’t have to worry about it coming this way,” he said, moving to stand behind her. Her scent filled his nostrils and stirred a fierce longing to hold her in his arms once more. He closed his eyes
and bowed his head. He was tired of fighting this attraction to her.

  He placed his hands gently on her shoulders and pulled her against his chest. She leaned back with a sigh as he folded his arms around her and rested his cheek against the softness of her hair. The silky strands caressed his face as the breeze stirred them. He didn’t want to let her go, not tonight, not ever.

  “Oh Sam, I was so frightened,” her voice trembled.

  “Hush, don’t talk. Just let me hold you,” he whispered. For a long time they stood together and watched the distant hills burning brightly in the night.

  Cheryl welcomed Sam’s warmth and strength. She needed to be held in his arms. She needed to feel that he was real and whole. After a time, she turned in his arms. “I prayed you would come to back to me safe and sound.”

  “And I prayed for a chance to do this.” He lowered his head and captured her lips in a sweet and thrilling kiss that sent her heart flying with happiness.

  When they drew apart at last, Cheryl looked up into his eyes. They glittered with reflected starlight. She had never felt like this about anyone before in her life. The power of the emotions he stirred scared her to death.

  She drew away from him unsure of what to say. In spite of how she felt, she knew any relationship between them was doomed. She didn’t want to hurt him. Not ever.

  No, what she wanted was to throw herself back in his arms and hang on to the first good thing that had come into her life in a long time. But staying here would mean facing her past, her grandmother and the community that once shunned her.

  “I’m sorry,” Sam said, dropping his arms to his sides. “Maybe the kiss was out of line, but I don’t regret it. I care for you a great deal.”

  It was so much more than she deserved.

  He spoke again quickly. “It won’t happen again. I hope this doesn’t drive you away.”

  “No, of course not.” Because she wanted to be near him for whatever time she had left. “I know you need help watching the girls. I’ll stay another week, but I can’t promise more. My sister will be home from her honeymoon then. After that, I’ll be going to stay with her.”

 

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