"Oh, my God!" Her hand flew to her mouth. Rass was going to see the damage she'd done to Mad Dog's back. And he was going to know what had gone on last night.
"Oh, my God."
She ducked back in the window and ran for her ar-moire. Yanking out a plain brown skirt and shirtwaist, she dressed quickly and raced down the stairs, her bare feet thumping on the sagging steps.
She lurched into the kitchen and saw the remains of breakfast sitting on the table.
God, she'd missed breakfast.
She ran through the room and half stumbled down the porch steps. When she finally reached Mad Dog and her father, she was red-faced and winded, clutching the stitch in her side.
"Hi." The word came out as a high-pitched squeak.
Rass looked at her briefly, frowning. "Mornin', Mariah. We missed you at breakfast." He started to say something to Mad Dog, then slowly turned back to Mariah. "Your hair's down."
She gasped, plastering a hand to her unbound hair. "I ... I misplaced my hairpins."
Rass gave her an odd look. "Now, that's a first."
Mad Dog laughed. "Not precisely."
Mariah rammed her elbow into Mad Dog's side. He made a satisfying grunt of pain and covered it with a cough.
She tried to smile at her father.
Rass stared back at her. A small frown pleated his forehead. "Everything go okay around here last night?"
Mariah felt the color drain from her cheeks. "Fine."
They all stood there for a moment longer, staring at one another, nodding. No one said a word.
Finally Mad Dog turned to leave. "Well, I'd best—"
Mariah grabbed his arm. "Don't go."
He frowned at her.
She realized suddenly how foolish she must look. A middle-aged spinster, hair a tangled mess, clinging to the naked arm of a man she barely knew. As if she had a right to touch him.
Forcibly, gritting out a smile, she released her hold on Mad Dog and reached for the black shirt heaped on the ground. "I simply wanted to remind Mr. Stone to wear a shirt." She turned to him, shoved the shirt at him with a pointed look. "It isn't fitting to go about half-clothed."
"Really?" The single word was steeped in irony. She had no doubt whatsoever that he was picturing her as she was last night—naked, laughing, astride him.
Heat splashed across her face. "Really."
Rass whistled cheerily and shook his head. "Why is it I feel like I'm missing something?"
"Can't imagine, Rass," Mad Dog said, slipping into his shirt.
Mariah let out a relieved sigh as his back was covered. "So," she said, searching for something to say, "did I hear the word 'clouds'?"
Rass nodded. "I was just about to tell Mad Dog about cloud-watching. It's a grand day for it."
Cloud-watching. Mariah felt a warm rush of bittersweet memories. "We haven't done that in years. Not since . . ." Her voice snagged, caught.
Rass gave her a smile. "Not since you were a child." He turned to Mad Dog. "It used to be one of our favorite pastimes."
Mad Dog turned to Mariah. "Do you want to do it?"
His words were spoken quietly, with a concern that wrenched Mariah's heart. She looked at him, wanting desperately to touch him, to say thank you for so many things. But all she said was "Yes."
In companionable silence, the three of them walked toward the knoll alongside the river. As they passed the barn, they saw Jake, painting fences. Rass called out to him, waving the boy over. "Come on, Jake. We're going on an adventure."
Jake set down his paintbrush and hurried over to the group, falling into step between Rass and Mad Dog.
Rass led them all to the grassy rise and then stopped. "Okay, everyone lay down.
We want to make a cross formation, with the tips of our heads touching."
The four of them lay down, forming a cross in which Rass lay north; Jake west; Mad Dog south; and Mariah east. In the center, their heads touched in a connecting circle.
"You start us off, Mariah," Rass said quietly.
Mariah closed her eyes. The chilly wind rippled across her skirts and fluttered against her cheeks. As she lay there in the cold, drying grass, she felt herself falling back into the past. Once again she was a child. ...
They had done this for endless hours, she and her parents; it had been one of their great family adventures, a time to explore hidden dreams and find forgotten laughter.
A tine to share and talk and giggle.
Their heads had to be touching, she remembered, because Rass believe! they could meld their thoughts that way, that within th; family, a magical, timeless connection could somehow be made.
She smiled at the memory. As a child, she'd believed absolutely that they could read one another's minds; it seemed as if they could. But then, as she got older, she stopped believing. Her adolescent mind questioned everything, and her heart began to see the truth. Somehow, in some quiet, intangible way, she was excluded from the circle o; love. Even though her head was touching, she read her parent's thoughts anymore. But they could read each other's, always.
That's when she'd stopped playing this game. She told her parents it was because she was too old, that she didn't—couldn't—Jelieve anymore, that it was a silly waste of time. It was the first of many self-protective lies she told herself, and them.
She thought that they'd stop playing, but, of course, they hadn't. They'd played on without her.
Somehow, that had been the most painful part of all. She remembered standing on the porch, watching them walk, hand in hand across the fields, lying down together.
They didn't seem to miss her at all.
"Mariah?" Rass's soft voice brought her back to the present.