She hoped he would read it and understand what she was trying to say.
A knock on the door downstairs pulled her away from her tangled, tiring thoughts.
“Come on in,” she called out, getting up. Her back throbbed more than when she had sat down. She arched her back against the pain, then shuffled to her bedroom across the hall to get ready.
She pulled her hair back again, tightening the elastic that held it in place. She did a quick check in the mirror. Her eyes looked too big, her mascara was smudged and she needed some more lipstick.
She grabbed a tube from her makeup basket, then caught herself. She was just going to the hospital. She dropped the lipstick tube, then spun away from the mirror and got the card.
As she carefully made her way down the stairs, Nick hurried forward and took her by the elbow. She was about to pull away, then realized how foolish that would be.
“Thank you,” she murmured, avoiding looking up at him.
“Is this your coat?” he asked, pulling it off the newel post of the staircase.
She nodded and reached for it but he already held it up for her. Again she felt a brush of disquiet when he settled the coat on her shoulders.
“Are you okay?” he asked when she pulled away again.
“Just not used to being treated like this,” she said with a jerky laugh, hoping to dispel the curious feelings he created in her.
“Really?” he asked with a puzzled frown. “Jim struck me as such a gentleman. He was always helping out the women at the base.”
Beth slipped the card she’d finished into her coat pocket and emitted a humorless laugh. “Of course he was.”
Nick’s frown deepened and Beth realized how that must have sounded.
Nick reached past her and opened the door. She tried not to look at him as she went through. Tried not to be aware of him as he walked beside her.
He made her uncomfortable because his presence brought up memories of Jim. That’s all, she told herself.
But as she gave him another sidelong glance and caught him looking at her, the faint quickening of her heart told her something else.
Chapter Four
Nick tapped his fingers on the steering wheel of the truck he had borrowed from Bob. His eyes were on the road ahead, but part of his attention was on the woman sitting beside him.
He didn’t usually have a hard time making conversation with women, but Beth was a puzzle he didn’t know how to solve.
Bob and Ellen eagerly listened to any story he had to tell about Jim, tears slipping down their cheeks at times. Beth didn’t seem to want to hear anything he had to say about Jim.
Maybe this was her way of grieving but there was something unhealthy about her reaction.
“So, how long have you been on the ranch?” he asked finally, wanting to make some kind of conversation to fill the awkward silence.
“Jim moved me here three weeks before he shipped out to Afghanistan.”
“He was based at Suffield, wasn’t he?”
Beth nodded, staring straight ahead, her arms folded over her stomach.
“I know he said it made him feel more relaxed, knowing you were at the ranch with his parents. He said he would have worried so much more if you had been somewhere else.”
In spite of Beth’s lack of response, Nick carried on. It was as if he had to keep Jim present between him and Beth.
Because, if he was honest with himself, his own feelings for Beth were shifting, changing. And not in a way he wanted to acknowledge.
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