Shelter Me Home (17 page)

Read Shelter Me Home Online

Authors: T. S. Joyce

Tags: #Romance, #Adult, #Erotic Romance Fiction

BOOK: Shelter Me Home
7.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Silence stretched between them as he studied his shoes.

“I brought us dinner,” Mayva pressed on. “It’s just chicken fingers and french fries, but the diner closed early on account of the ice and Briney’s was the only place open this late. He said he’ll stop by to check on Farrah after he closes up. He’s real worried.”

“Thanks,” he said, taking the offered meal with as much of a smile as he could muster. He could respect a person who owned up to their mistakes, and as long as she was sincere, which she seemed to be, she was okay by him.

By the time Dr. Janson returned with an update, the others had gone home. Aanon sat watching a news report on the waiting room television with the volume off.

The smile on the doctor’s face settled something ugly inside of him. “She’s okay to go home. We stopped the labor hours ago but didn’t want to get your hopes up. As long as she takes it easy, she and the baby should be all right. Are you going to take responsibility for taking care of her after she checks out?”

“Of course.” He’d do anything to keep her safe and healthy. The smile that crept to his face at the relief was unavoidable.

“She has one cracked rib for sure, possibly two, but we can’t tell without x-rays. We don’t want to take them while she’s pregnant if we can avoid it. Now, I’ve taped her up, but there’s not really much more we can do for her other than manage the pain. It should be nice and healed up by the time she delivers, full-term if we’re lucky.” He sat in the chair next to Aanon and handed him a packet of information. “Here’s instructions on what to do if the contractions start up again. I think we’re out of the woods, but this is just a precaution. She’s to rest up for the next few weeks. I know she’s been helping you with your place, but she can’t do any kind of physical work until we’re sure she’s not going to have a repeat of today. If she has pain, use children’s Tylenol. Here’s a sample, but maybe pick up some more from the pharmacy tomorrow. No high dose stuff because of the baby, okay? She’s going to be bruised from head to toe over the next few days, and sore, too, so make sure she’s not overexerting herself. Pain means she’s doing too much.” Dr. Janson gripped his shoulder and shook it gently. “She protected her belly well, and you did good getting her here as fast as you did. It may have saved that little baby’s life. Keep her away from the cows, all right?”

Dr. Janson offered his hand to shake, and Aanon gripped it in relief.

Meryl wheeled Farrah into the waiting room just as the doctor took his leave. She looked pale and shaken, but a tremulous smile that curved her lips was all it took to lift the rest of the fear he’d been carrying.

She was all right.

Chapter Seventeen

Farrah had longed to see Aanon as the hours had passed in the clinic room. Dr. Janson had told her he didn’t want her excited until they knew for sure the labor had stopped, so she’d enjoyed red popsicles and watched reruns of
I Love Lucy
.

Even if they weren’t allowed to talk or be around each other, the circumstance had been extreme, and she had been borderline wild for his comfort. He had a way of making her feel like everything would work out when he was around.

He stood frozen, his jacket dangling from his hand when Meryl wheeled her in. As soon as she gifted him a smile, it mirrored on his face, beautiful, alluring, and satisfying.

He didn’t say anything, just wheeled her to the truck outside with Meryl spouting last minute instructions on preventing future pre-term labor. When she was buckled into the Chevy to the sound of the happily whining dogs tied in back, she turned to him to thank him for getting her to the doctor in time. The wrinkle of worry in his brow stopped the words, and she faced front again.

It had been so nice to ignore Erin’s ultimatum for a little while, but nothing had changed for them. She and Aanon were still trapped on separate sides of the pond.

The drive was slow as it seemed he didn’t want to jostle her in the least and, for that, she was grateful. Her body felt like she’d been shoved through an antique sawmill and had come out a different shape. The baby moved languidly beneath her cradling fingers. She leaned her head against the cold window. She was alive and her baby safe. It was her heart that was breaking.

When the truck came to a rocking stop in front of the big house, Aanon rushed to her door before she even had the chance to open it.

Her lip trembled, and she bit it as she prepared to say goodnight. What she would give to be wrapped in the strength of his arms just to wash the day away. Instead, she handed him a strip of ultrasound photos. “It’s a girl.” Her voice dipped low. “She’s a girl.”

“A girl,” he murmured, holding the photos like they were precious and studying each one. The smile on his face as he looked up from the pictures was the most stunning sight she’d ever seen. “You’re having a girl,” he said, louder.

A bubble of excitement took her, and she clenched her hands in front of her stomach to repress the squeal of joy that threatened to wrench from her throat. “Yes, Dr. Janson said he’s ninety-eight percent sure it’s a girl. She was moving the whole time, and her vitals are completely normal. Doctor said she wasn’t under any stress. It was just me they had to take care of.”

“A little girl,” he repeated, in a soft, reverent voice. “She’s already beautiful, just like her momma.”

If the moon weren’t full and illuminating the entire clearing, she could have done it by her inner glow from that compliment.

Heart hammering against her ribcage painfully, she struggled to draw breath and lowered her eyes. “I love you, Aanon.” She couldn’t help the words any more than she could help the weather. The two were simply beyond her control. Scared he’d disappear, she stared at the snow dusted hem of his jeans.

He placed a finger under her chin, slow and gentle, lifting until her eyes met his. “I love you, too.”

“What a mess we’ve found ourselves in, huh?” She laughed, but a pair of warm tears streaked down her cheeks.

The pad of his thumb brushed them away, and he leaned in until his lips pressed hers. “Messy love is the best kind.”

“Can I just…spend time with you tonight? I know tomorrow it’ll change, and we’ll have to ignore each other again, but I just want one night where this doesn’t hurt.”

“It won’t change tomorrow. I’m going to figure something out. Tonight, I want you sleeping in my bed, beside me. I won’t be able to sleep unless I know you’re okay and, dammit, I miss the feel of you near me.”

She waited for the rush of nerves to settle. “Okay.”

He led her by the hand and helped her up the porch steps before opening the door. The dogs rushed by her legs, and she laughed as Luna and Bruno piled onto a giant dog bed near the stove.

The big house opened to a living room off the kitchen, and between the two sat the antique stove. Aanon fed logs into it and started a fire as she brushed her fingertips over the worn paperbacks that decorated the bookshelf near the front window. It seemed Aanon liked adventure novels.

“I’m not very sleepy,” she admitted.

“Good, I’m starving. Mayva brought dinner but I couldn’t do more than pick at it, and Ben ended up eating the rest.”

“Mayva was there?”

“Yeah, along with half the danged town. All those people shoved into the waiting room.” He shook his head and closed the stove door. “It was downright suffocating. Mayva’s real sorry for how she treated you, by the way.”

“So she doesn’t think I’m a skank anymore?”

“I think you’ve been at least downgraded to floozy.”

“Ha! Smart-ass. I’m hungry, too.”

“Griddle cakes?”

“Oooh, that sounds divine. Do you have maple syrup?”

“Pshhh, you are talking to a maple syrup connoisseur. I have three different flavors.”

“There’s different flavors?”

“Oh, you better believe it. Sit on down in that chair closest to the heat, and I’ll cook.”

“Aanon?” she said quietly as he pulled ingredients. “Thank you for getting me to Dr. Janson like you did.”

The color of his eyes was shielded, his expression almost shy as he gripped a bowl he’d pulled from a cabinet. “Doc said you did well protecting the baby when 417 was after you. We make a good team,” he said with the ghost of a smile.

“We do.”

If griddle cakes were served in heaven, they’d use Aanon’s recipe. Slathered in butter and syrup, every mouthful burst with rich flavor.

“My mom used to make these for me and Dad on Saturday mornings,” Aanon said as he set a glass of milk in front of her and took the seat across the table.

“What happened to your mom?”

“She got sick when I was really young. Most of my life it was just me and my dad.”

“I’m so sorry.”

“It was a long time ago and, besides, at least I got time with her. You didn’t even know your father. I can’t imagine what that must have been like.”

“It wasn’t as bad as everyone thinks. I never knew differently, so maybe I just didn’t know what I was missing. And my mom kept me busy enough with her crap to worry over a missing father too much. Sometimes, I swear I was raising her instead of the other way around.”

“I remember in school the kids used to talk about how she drank a lot.”

“Drank a lot is a colossal understatement. But she’s sober now, or so she says. I’m happy for her. I hope she finds some peace in her life.”

“Do you think you’ll ever let her see the baby?”

She lifted one shoulder and swallowed a bite. “I haven’t thought about it. Mostly because I’m scared to think about it. She just wasn’t very nice to me when I was growing up. I love that she seems to be changing, but she can’t be trusted. Not ever.” Erin swindling information out of her about Miles was proof of that.

“So, does that mean you’ve made up your mind on keeping the baby?”

“I think so. I want her. Watching you fight so hard for Dodge is inspiring. And I already love her so much, I don’t know what to do with myself. I’d already made up my mind last week, but if I hadn’t, today would’ve sealed it for me. I’ve never been so scared for someone other than myself in my entire life. She’s my world now.”

“It’s so crazy calling her
she
now,” he mused.

“Isn’t it? I’ve been saying
the baby
or
it
for so long, it’s a relief to finally know.”

“Did you want a girl?” he asked.

“Yes. Mostly I just want a healthy baby, but I was really happy when Dr. Janson told me. What about you? Do you ever want baby girls running around the homestead?”

Dropping his gaze to his plate, he said, “Yes. I’d like that very much.”

Those words stirred within her a vision of everything that could be. Years stretching before them, children playing around the homestead, and holiday meals surrounded by family. The imaginings were so beautiful, she couldn’t take her eyes from Aanon. He had the capability to give her a life she hadn’t dared to dream about. And if the emotion churning in his gaze was anything to go by, he felt the same.

The moment was interrupted by Luna scratching on the front door and whining. “I still can’t believe you had the patience to potty train a half-grown wolf pup,” he said with a smile in his voice. “I’ve got her.”

He stood and opened the door, then disappeared onto the front porch. When she joined him, she slipped her hand into his and stared at the moon with the man she loved. He leaned into her, wrapped a strong arm around her shoulders, kissed her hair, and sighed. Moments like these were meant to be savored and remembered.

“I’m still not tired,” she said.

His breath came out a huff of steam as he chuckled. “I know what we can do to relax you.”

She cocked an eyebrow. “I don’t think Dr. Janson okayed me for that kind of activity.”

His surprised laugh filled the clearing. “No, I’m sure he didn’t. I was thinking along the lines of a warm bath.”

“With you?”

His smile lifted and fell in question. “If you want.”

“I do,” she said, tugging his hand toward the cattleman’s cabin.

A sudden shyness took her as she and Aanon stood in her small living room. His arms flexed as he pulled the sweater over his head, and she traced the curving tattoo on his shoulder with her eyes. Steam frothed from the water buckets on the stove, and she shifted her weight, stalling.

“Do you know, when I saw your silhouette against those thin sheets you were using as curtains, I knew I was done for,” he murmured.

With a trembling sigh, she lifted her shirt and tugged it from the dark waves of her hair. She hadn’t been naked in front of a man for some time, and she’d never asked a man to enjoy her figure while pregnant. Her ribs were bound and her body felt like a bruised peach, but bearing witness to the growing hunger in Aanon’s eyes, none of that mattered.

Water splashed as it was poured into the tub, and he added a fifth bucket of cold water to temper the heat.

After he unwrapped her ribcage, she undressed the rest of the way, then slipped into the tub, hissing at the heat that lapped at her battered body. Eyes closed in bliss, she smiled as Aanon slipped in behind her. The intimacy of his skin against hers sent delicious tingling sensations down her arms. If she’d been modest before, any hesitation was erased with Aanon’s obvious attraction to her pressed against her spine. Leaning into him, she sighed as her body fit perfectly to his. He trickled water and smoothed her hair with his hands until her tresses were soaked through.

“Do you ever get bored out here?” He whispered the question, as if any louder and the beauty of the moment would be tainted.

“If all Alaskan winters were just like this, I’d live and die happily here.”

His chuckle resonated off her shoulder blades, and the scent of cherry blossoms and lavender filled her lungs as he poured shampoo into his hands. Lathering her hair, his gentle rhythmic hands did all the talking. How could a man be so strong, yet so soft all at once? He was wild, a man with the ability to top the food chain in an unforgiveable landscape, yet he was tame for her.

“I had a crush on you in high school,” she admitted.

“Oh, yeah? Then why didn’t you say anything to me?”

“You weren’t exactly approachable back then, Falk.”

“I reckon I’ll always regret that.”

With her hair rinsed, she rested her head on his chest and watched water race from her dangling fingertips.

Aanon cupped a hand and caught the tiny waterfalls until it pooled, then overflowed. “You scared me today. I thought the baby would be hurt or worse. I can’t lose you.”

“You won’t,” she promised.

“I don’t want you in the cattle pens anymore without a horse under you. I know you can handle yourself in there, but what happened today can’t happen again. After the baby comes, maybe we can ease you back in there, but for now, I don’t want you doing anything that’ll put you at risk. I can handle the work around the homestead. I’m not picking up any construction jobs this late in the season unless I have to. I love you helping me, and if you need to get out and do work that won’t be too hard on your body, you should. Whatever you’re comfortable with. But if you need to lie in a bed from now until the baby arrives, I’m completely okay with that. In fact,” he said, nibbling her ear, “I’d prefer to see you in my bed as often as possible.”

“Mmm, is that where we’re sleeping tonight?”

He eyed the small cattleman’s bed. “I think we have to. We both won’t fit in yours.”

A vision of his long legs dangling off the end brought a smile to her lips. Gooseflesh rose across her skin as his finger drew languidly toward her face, and she bent and kissed his knuckle. The day had been both the worst and best of her life.

****

Crisp sheets rustled as she moved her legs in the dawn light that streamed through the window. She was stiff, painfully so, and so sore it hurt to move, but she was alive. Searching for warmth, there was none from Aanon’s side of the bed. With a stretch, she rolled over and found an empty pillow. Her arm bent under her, she propped up and listened for his muffled sounds around the house.

Other books

Counternarratives by John Keene
Sharon Sobel by Lady Larkspur Declines (v5.0) (epub)
Slow Sculpture by Theodore Sturgeon
Stella by Siegfried Lenz