Clean sheets meant putting on a washing, of course, which meant heating up the kitchen, and firing up the boiler for the washing machine, which she only did on Sunday afternoons, but there hadn’t been the volume of washing in the house in, oh, a long time.
And those curtains were due a laundering.
That took a good deal of time, and when the sun had gotten to the window in Faye’s room she made hot soup and arranged a napkin to protect Faye’s pretty gown, and ever so carefully fed the girl. The sun came through, bright and blinding, and made the white sheets into snowbanks and the girl’s hair into golden glass. Darcy fed her young patient, and the girl ate as she would eat if she was coaxed.
But at the second sip the girl blinked, and blinked again and passed a glance around the room.
“Where is this?” she asked then.
“Evergreen, honey. You’re all right.”
“How did I get here?” she asked. She was porcelain and gold, wind-blushed and delicate despite the signs of exposure. Darcy scarcely dared breathe, feared to say something that might drive her back into that silent world and shatter this tenuous contact.
“Honey, your brothers brought you. They carried you up the mountain.”
“Who are you?”
“My name’s Darcy. This is my house. I’m the village doctor.”
“Are you?” The eyes drifted shut again. And opened, and wandered across the details of the room. “Can I stay here?”
“Honey, you can stay here as long as you want to. Would you like some cereal?”
A thin, pale hand explored the crocheted white roses. “It’s a pretty room.”
“It was my daughter’s room. Now it’s yours.”
“Did your daughter grow up?”
“No. She died. So you see—” Darcy set the bowl and the spoon down on the table. And the girl didn’t slip away. She touched the white coverlets and explored a ribbon in an eyelet cutaway. Darcy couldn’t resist the curls. And Darcy found she could say the hard truth about Faye without a lump in her throat now. She wound a curl around her finger and made it perfect. “There’s no one to use the room now. I’d like you to stay, sweet. I would.”
“I want my mama,” the girl said. “I want my mama.” But white-gowned arms reached for her and hugged her, the way no one had since Faye died. Not even Mark. And the girl was so thin, so weak. “I want to go home,”‘ the girl said.
Not Faye. Brionne Goss. From Tarmin. Which didn’t exist anymore.
“Honey, I don’t think you cango home. This is Evergreen. I’m afraid nobody’s left in Tarmin. That’s what they say. So you can stay here as long as you like.”
“Where’s my mama?”
“I think she must be dead, honey, like my daughter. Like my husband. —Like your papa.”
“Not my papa!” It was an angry voice. Terribly angry, weak as it was. “ Notlike my papa!”
“I think everybody’s gone, honey, except your brothers. They brought you here.”
Darcy watched tears start. She sat down on the edge of the bed and brushed the wind blushed cheek with a gentle finger and let the tears run for a moment before she gathered the frail body against her and let the child cry her eyes dry.
Then she mopped the child’s wet lashes and gave her a handkerchief from Faye’s bureau and let her blow her nose.
“I could make you a bowl of cereal,” she said, “if you don’t want soup.”
The blond head turned away.
“A sandwich.”
“No.” A frail fist wiped at a tear.
“Do you want me to bring your brothers?”
“No!”
“There might be cookies. I might have some.”
The girl turned her head toward her. Sniffed.
“Would you like some cookies, sweet?”
A nod.
“All right. I think I could do that, sweet. I certainly could. It’ll take me a bit. But you’ll have cookies.”
She hadn’t the makings of cookies. It meant a trip outside and asking the shopkeepers on a Sunday afternoon, at which time some were open and some weren’t. But she was willing. She put on her coat and her scarf and went out to the bakers’ house and roused Alice Raigur out and bought cookies, as the fastest course to produce them. She went and called on the grocer’s house and bought dried beef, ferociously expensive, and pasta and sugar-sweets, which the grocer just happened to have. She went back with her arms full of groceries and to her own surprise found herself nodding and being pleasant to one of her less-liked neighbors in the passage coming back.
The child was asleep when she got back. When Brionne waked to her urging she seemed listless as before and didn’t remember her name, but all the same Darcy kept her word and served Brionne the cookies with hot tea—Brionne ate half of a cookie.
Danny couldn’t say exactly there was peace in the barracks, or that the business with the horse was settled. It hadn’t come around last night. Maybe it had been scared off by the shot Ridley had fired. < Gunfire> was part of its personal nightmare; and maybe with guns going off it just hadn’t wanted to stay.
But Ridley hadn’t proposed going out on a Sunday, maybe village custom: Danny didn’t ask. He spent a lot of time out in the den, taking the occasion to do some clean-up around the place, raking and turning the bedding, doing a lot of things that weren’t needful, exactly, but they’d have to be done later, if he didn’t do them sooner, and he really wanted to make Ridley and Callie happier with him than he’d merited.
He didn’t know what Ridley might have said to Callie. His spending time out at the den at least gave Ridley and Callie a chance to talk matters over without him hearing it in any sense, and he figured if he’d moderately won Ridley’s better opinion, he couldn’t have a better lawyer with Callie.
He hadn’t heard any explosions.
Cloud followed him about, getting him to <scratch Cloud’s chin> and finally to <brush Cloud,> of which Cloud never, ever tired.
Jenniecame outside to tend to Rain, and brushed Rain—well, as high as Jennie could reach.
“Was that girl bad?” Jennie wanted to know, and the ambient carried thoughts of <girl on floor in furs> and <mama and papa talking and yelling.>
“That girl didn’t mind the way she was supposed to,” Danny said. Having a kid brother, he knew the tracks an eight-year-old mind wandered, and knew not to make it too complicated—or too lacking in detail. “A rider who knew told her to stay inside the gate and she went out anyway. And that’s what happened.”
“I wouldn’t go out the gate,” Jennie said.
“You’re smart.” Compliments never hurt. In his experience. Once you were praised as good for one thing, you didn’t so readily do the opposite. “That horse out there is dangerous. If a gate got open Rain might go out to fight him.”
“Why?”
“Because boy horses do that. And if Rain got in a fight, that’s a big mean horse, and he might hurt Rain real bad. So we have to be real careful that one of the boy horses doesn’t get out the gate.”
“What about Shimmer?”
“Shimmer, too. The horse out there might try to come inside where Shimmer’s den is, and she’d fight him, and she might lose the baby.”
“I’d get the hoe. I’d hit him.”
“If that horse ever gets in here, youget into the barracks and you bolt the door and you let the horses handle it. Our three boy horses together can put a strange horse out of the yard. And they would. But Shimmer could still get hurt. That’s why your papa and I want that horse to leave.”
“Would you shoothim?”
Delicate question. “Wouldn’t you shoot him,” he asked, “if he was going to kill Rain?”
“Yeah.” A reluctant and unhappy yeah, that was, but Jennie did agree to the premise.
“Your papa would never shoot anything if he didn’t have to. He’s real smart. So if he ever did, you’d know he did the right thing.”
“Yeah.” Not enthusiastically.