Today she'd let Mad Dog get too close. Far too close. Just thinking about it made her feel queasy and vulnerable and afraid. She'd let him inside her today, just a little bit and for no longer than a heartbeat, but she'd let him in all the same.
A tremor passed through her, made her fingers tremble. His quiet confession had touched something in her, made her feel warm and liquid inside, as if maybe things would someday be all right again. It was a thought she hadn't had in years, hadn't let herself have.
For a few precious, magical moments, she had almost believed in her old dreams, almost believed her life could be different.
She sighed. Feeling infinitely tired and old, she left her bedroom and descended the stairs. In the kitchen, she went through the motions ... started a fire in the stove and pulled the food from the ice rack. But even as she buried herself in the familiar, comforting routine, she couldn't make herself forget.
What a fool she'd been.
It had been crazy to let herself pretend. She knew the cost of looking at life through rose-colored spectacles. Mad Dog Stone offered her an easy smile and a moment's comfort. Nothing she needed, nothing she could count on. She had to remember that. Always. He wasn't the answer to the aching loneliness that gripped her in the long hours of the night.
He was a drifter, just passing through her life.
Maybe he wasn't exactly like Stephen, but in the end that wouldn't matter, wouldn't save her from heartache. Because he was enough like Stephen.
He'd leave.
Her heart gave a tiny lurch at the thought. Without him around, she'd go back to her old life, lonely and isolated and afraid of everything.
But that was what she wanted, she reminded herself. What made her feel safe. She had to protect herself from Mad Dog and from herself. She had to make sure that when he left—and he would leave—he didn't take her heart with him. She couldn't survive that again. She wasn't strong enough.
And the only way to be sure he didn't take her heart with him was not to give it to him.
She hauled a big cast-iron skillet from beneath the stove and dropped it on the range top. It landed with a loud clang. She added a dollop of lard and a bunch of sausage and leftover mashed potatoes and onions. The foods slid together in a splattering, popping mixture.
Suddenly the front door creaked open. "Go on into the kitchen. I'll be right back,"
came her father's voice from the foyer.
Mariah's heartbeat sped up at the thought of seeing Mad Dog again. Please help me be strong. ...
Stiffening, she picked up the pepper sprinkler and added a healthy dose to the food.
"Hi, Rass. Mad Dog," she called out, careful not to look their way. "Supper's almost ready."
The front door clicked shut. Quiet footsteps moved through the foyer and into the kitchen. "H-Hi."
Mariah glanced at the doorway. And found herself staring into the face of a young boy with large, frightened green eyes and tousled red-gold hair. He was thin, too thin, his face all hollows and sharp points, looked almost elfin. But he had strong cheekbones and a squared jaw that would someday make him a handsome man. He was wearing a dirty, patched blue work shirt and oversize wool trousers, hitched around his small waist with a thick black belt.
Her heart skidded to a stop. The aluminum pepper sprinkler slipped through her nerveless fingers and clanked on the hardwood floor. For one crazy, terrifying moment, she thought she was looking at a ghost—an image created by her own guilty, lonely mind. "Thomas," she whispered throatily.
The boy licked his lips nervously. "I'm Jake," he said in an unsteady voice. "Mr.
Throckmorton invited me to supper. I'm his new assistant."
Mariah blinked in confusion. "I don't understand. .. ."
Rass shuffled into the room. "Ah, Mariah, I see you've met our young guest."
Slowly the tilting world righted itself. Mariah's hopeful, impossible image slid into reality.
She stared at the boy, really seeing him this time. Disappointment poured through her, leaving her shaken and desperately sad in its backwash. No ghost, she realized; just a young man. A dirty, ragged-clothed boy with strawberry blond hair and green eyes.
Not Thomas.
Of course it couldn't be Thomas. .. .
She swallowed hard, fighting to regain her equilibrium. "Jake." As hard as she tried, she couldn't make her voice anything but a tremulous whisper.
"He's going to help me catalog my fossils."
Marian nodded, too stunned to even point out that she cataloged her father's fossils.
Too dumbfounded to even feel criticized. "That's ... wonderful." She moved hesitantly toward the boy. Her fingers stung with the need to touch his cheek, to push the dirty hair from his eyes. To be the mother she never had been, never could be.
She came up short, stopping before she made a complete fool of herself. She glanced at her father. "Where did you find him?"
Jake threw a frightened look a Rass.
Rass shrugged. "He ... uh ... answered my other ad at Ma's Diner. He's just passing through and needed some extra money."
Just passing through. Mariah tried not to be hurt by the familiar words. She shrugged, wondering what she could say to this boy. He was probably at least fifteen years old; far too old to need a mother or mothering. And yet her instincts were so strong, almost overwhelming. It took all her strength and self-control not to move toward him or offer to wash his clothes. "Oh . . ."
"I-Is that okay with you?" Jake asked.
Mariah looked at the boy, seeing the nervous tensing of his mouth and the way he kept rubbing his palms along his wool pant legs. An aching tenderness unfolded within her. He was alone in the world; somehow she was sure of it. As alone as she and Rass. She wished she could take the pain of that away from him. No one so young should ever be alone or lonely or afraid.