~Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs; Being purged, a fire sparkling in loversâ eyes; Being vexed, a sea nourished with loversâ tears.~ âWilliam Shakespeare
Jake watched Dannie bury the dried forget-me-nots in the ashes with eyebrows raised in surprise. She seemed pretty angry at those petals.
âYouâd think those flowers were from a man who did you wrong,â he joked.
Dannie frowned at him. âI have to say, Jake, that you are terribly good at guessing things.â
âOh, so you were wronged?â Jake asked with a laugh.
âYes, actually, I was.â
âYou wereâwhat?â Jake stopped laughing and looked over at Dannie.
âIf you must know, I was engaged.â
âBut?â
âObviously not anymore. If I were engaged, do you think I would be stuck with you in the middle of nowhere?â
âOh.â For some reason, Jake wanted to know more, but he didnât feel comfortable asking.
Dannie, of course, wasnât going to volunteer the information, and busied herself with putting her carpetbag in the wagon and climbing up front. Jake climbed up next to her, and soon they were back on the road.
âSoâ¦Mr. Jake, have you lived in Hopewing long?â
âWhy is the Mr. Jake back?â Jake growled.
âWhy do you have such a problem with it?â
âWhy do you have a problem being called missy?â
âBecause it is disrespectful,â Dannie answered. âWhen you call me that it makes me feel cheap.â
âYeah, well, ~mister~ is my late father.â
âOh, Iâm sorry, my condolences.â
âIt was a long time ago.â Jake shrugged. âAnd no,â he quickly added just as Dannie opened her mouth, âI donât want to talk about it! You were askinâ me about Hopewing.â
âI just wanted to know if you could tell me something about the town I find myself quite unexpectedly traveling to.â
âItâs all right, I suppose, if you like town life. Itâs a small town, tiny compared to Clearbrook. No train station, but itâs quaint in its own way.â
âI see. Mistââ
Jake glared at her.
âJake,â Dannie hastily switched, âwhat is your full name?â
Jake was taken aback by the question. âYou already asked me that. Like I said before, Iâm a private man. I donât go bandying my name around.â
âBut it would be so handy to know,â she said. âNext time I get very mad at you and want to call you something terrible, I could just switch to your full name and save myself from having to say something nasty.â
âNo way, Miss Preston, there is no way I am giving you my name so you can use it as a substitute for profane language.â
âOh, that is not how I meant it. I never use profane language. Is it really so hard to tell me your full name? Iâll give you mine. Itâs Danielle Frances Preston.â
âFrances huh?â An amused smile appeared on Jakeâs face.
âWhatâs so funny?â Dannie became indignant.
âDanielle Frances, so for short you would be Danny Fanny?â
âJake!â The color rushed to her face. âHow wretched of you!â
He chuckled at her embarrassment. âIâm warninâ ya, Miss Preston, the men out here are rough, and many of them ainât educated. Youâd better get used to crude language. But donât worry, Reverend Simmens is a good man. Heâll look after ya.â
âThank you for the comfort,â she said with a small smile.
He shrugged in reply.
âDo you have any family, Jake?â
âI donât talk about the past, Miss Preston, so please stop askinâ.â
âWhy not?â Dannie was taken aback at his forceful statement.
âJust because.â
âAll right.â Dannie frowned and said no more.
***
They spent the better part of the day, and in the late afternoon they drove up to a small wooden building. âWhy are we stopping?â Dannie asked in surprise as Jake pulled the horses to a halt.
âThis is a trading post, and I need to do some business. Wait here till I come out.â Before Dannie could protest, he hopped down from the wagon and reached over to pull out some supplies to trade.
âDamn it,â Jake growled when his finger caught on a loose nail. He expected to hear a loud reprimand from Dannie on the subject of swearing, but he only heard a quick gasp. Looking over at her, he saw that she had turned away.
âSomethinâ wrong, Miss Preston,â he asked, not quite understanding her reaction to his bad language.
âIâm sorry, Jake,â Dannie mumbled, keeping her face averted, âbut I cannot stand the sight of blood.â
âOh, but this is just a little cut,â Jake said, reaching out his hand to show her it was nothing serious.
âDonât show it to me,â Dannie gasped. âI get nauseous just from the thought of it. Here.â She handed him her handkerchief without looking his way. âWrap it up, please.â
Jake shrugged and, grabbing the hankie, bound up the little cut. âYouâd make a terrible nurse, you know,â he said.
âOh, I know.â Dannie peeked to make sure the cut was truly bound up, then turned her pale face back to Jake. âMy fear of blood was the only reason I didnât go to study nursing.â
Trying to hide just how amused he was by her squeamishness, Jake grabbed his supplies and stepped inside the little door.
Dannie waited nervously for him to come back out, praying nonstop all the while that nothing terrible would happen to her. After what seemed like forever, Jake finally came out with a couple of blankets in his hands.
âIndian blankets,â he explained to Dannie. âThis here is an Indian trading post.â
âOh?â
âYup, at the moment we are on an Indian reservation, but weâre nearly at the end of it, so donât go getting all scared.â
âScared of what?â
âYouâre not afraid of the Indians?â
âShould I be?â
Jake shrugged. âMost everyone out here is.â
âI would have thought youâd noticed by now that Iâm not like ~most everyone out here~.â
âGood point,â Jake chuckled as he tickled the horses into motion with the reins.
âWhat took you so long?â
âHad to bargain these here, and to top it off, the little fellow there didnât know a word of English. Only Apache and Spanish, and I donât know neither language. You donât happen to know Spanish by any chance, do you?â
âNo, sorry, only French and Italian.â
Jake shook his head. âWhere did you learn them? I thought you said you never traveled.â
âI never traveled. My mother used to be a governess, and I learned French from her. As for Italian, my father was a vicar in the Church of England. One of the women in Papaâs parish, a Mrs. Lancer, had two daughters, and she was bringing them up in the way of fashion.
âThree times a week, I would go to the Lancers and act as companion to Mrs. Lancerâs invalid mother-in-law. Instead of Mrs. Lancer paying me for all the time I spent reading and playing music to the old lady, Mamma arranged that I should also be tutored in Italian with the young Miss Lancers. Hence I know both languages.â
âSeems like your momma was a very prudent woman.â
âShe was.â Dannie sighed and fought to keep the tears away. âItâs hard to believe sheâs gone. Deep down, Iâm waiting for her to come running after me, asking if Iâve completely lost my mindâand if I remember anything she ever taught me about looking before you leap.â
âWas her death very unexpected?â Jake felt stupid for asking the question.
âPapa got sick with scarlet fever,â Dannie said softly, staring out at the barren landscape. âNone of us had had it before, and Mamma sent me away so I wouldnât get it. But she herself stayed to look after fatherâand she caught the fever.
âThe two of them died on the same day. Mamma even went before Papa. I buried them together. That really was the beginning of the endâ¦â
Dannieâs voice broke, but she fought to keep her composure.
âCan I ask how long since they died?â
âAlmost two months.â
He had figured someone in her family had died due to her mourning attire, but he hadnât realized it was people so close to her, and so recent. No wonder she wept at night.
âIâm sorry, Miss Preston, I shouldnât have brought it up.â Jake felt bad about prying into a subject that was obviously still very hard for Dannie to talk about.
For the first time since he had met her, Jake found himself feeling something other than dislike for Miss Preston. Suddenly, his hostility was diluted by a large measure of pity.
And, also, a touch of admiration.
How many women, or men even, could hold themselves together so well after so much personal tragedy and upheaval?