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He had to think about that for a minute. “It sounds different from how it looks?”

She nodded again.

Matthew put a pan lid over the crackle of his eggs and sausage. “Takes a heap of brains to do that.”

If anybody knew about brains, it was Matthew. He’d always been the sort to read books most other folks had never even heard of. He was smart enough to have been more than a farmer—just not rich enough. Or maybe brave enough.

Matthew brought the first plate of flapjacks over to the table and set them next to a small blue ceramic pitcher of maple syrup. “Here you are, my dear.”

“Tonk you.” She looked at the plate, then picked up one of the flapjacks. It was so fluffy it compressed by nearly half between her fingers. She tore off a piece, glanced questioningly at Matthew, then dunked it in the syrup pitcher.

“Whoops, not like that.” Hitch reached across the table and poured the syrup over the top of the flapjacks, then handed her the fork.

She took a bite of the pancake. When it hit her tongue, her eyes lit up. “_Prekrasno._”

“You don’t have to look so surprised,” Matthew said.

Hitch hiked his chair a little closer. “So… where do you come from?”

She kept right on eating and pointed toward the ceiling.

Hitch glanced apologetically at Matthew. “She keeps saying she’s from the sky.” He turned back to her. “Meaning you work with flyers?” Or maybe just meaning she’d snorted a little too much water when she’d hit the lake last night.

Her delight in the airplanes flying over just now might not be the reaction of somebody who was afraid of them—but it also wasn’t the reaction of somebody accustomed to spending a lot of time around them.

Matthew turned all the way around and gave her an appraising look.

“What about your friend?” Hitch asked. “The trigger-happy fella from last night? What happened to him? And how come nobody taught him about not using flare guns around a silk parachute?”

She flashed a look up and clenched her fist around her fork. “He is not friend.”

“Okay.” So the guy had been trying to light her on fire. “What happened to him?”

She curled her lip and shrugged. “Everything, I have hope.”

Hitch glanced at Matthew.

But Matthew seemed absorbed in his own thoughts, shooting the girl a sideways look or two. In a moment, he put a folded towel down in the center of the table, then set the pan of sausages and eggs on top of it. After he’d pulled up his own chair, he served first Hitch, then himself.

Hitch got up and turned his chair around so he could eat.

The girl looked at each of the three plates, then at the empty fourth spot. She pointed at it, then at the door, toward J.W.’s place. “What about… gromkiy chelovek?”

“My brother prefers to eat in his own kitchen.”

She didn’t seem to quite get that, but Matthew didn’t volunteer anymore and Hitch didn’t blame him.

The Berringer brothers had been feuding for as long as he could remember. Something about a girl—Ginny Lou Thatcher, a fiery redhead of a gal. The story went that both of them had been crazy about her, but their competition to win her hand had spilled the bounds of brotherly affection. As it turned out, neither of them got the girl.

After their father died, they split the farm in two. Matthew kept his family’s old farmhouse, and J.W. built that crazy mansion across the property line. Life had been a competition ever since, although J.W. seemed to take it a mite more seriously than Matthew.

Matthew poured milk for each of them. “I’m afraid my brother and I aren’t exactly on friendly terms.”

Footsteps stomped on the porch. Rifle still in one hand and a basket in the other, J.W. loomed outside the screen door. “If we ain’t friendly, I reckon it’s because certain parties think they can hide away the pretty misses at their table. Now, what’s your name, girl?”

She stopped shoveling in the pancakes and licked a drop of syrup off her lower lip. She looked around the room, stopping to study each of their faces.

Then she swallowed. “Jael.”

“Name like that, I’d say she’s not from here,” J.W. said.

Matthew had grace enough to refrain from pointing out they’d already covered that. He didn’t invite J.W. in.

“You got any family around here?” J.W. asked. “Friends?”

She shook her head.

“You headed someplace?”

“To home.”

Hitch stabbed another medallion of sausage. “Great.”

“What’s so bad about it?” J.W. asked.

Matthew salted his eggs. “She claims she lives in the sky.”

“So what?” J.W. jutted his chin at Hitch. “You’re a birdman, aren’t you?”

“Not that good a one.”

Jael finished her last bite of pancake and ran her finger around the edge of her plate to catch the remaining syrup. She licked it off, then looked at Hitch. She hesitated, her eyes dark with something: fear, uncertainty, desperation maybe.

She pointed at the floor. “Groundsworld.” She pointed at the ceiling. “Schturming. To Groundsworld I am falling. Now I am having to go home before time is too late. Please. But you cannot be talking of this—to any persons on ground.”

Hitch cleared his throat. “Right. Well, we won’t say a word.” He glanced at Matthew and J.W. “But in the meantime, you got any place to stay?”

She shook her head.

“She could stay here,” Matthew said. “A bit of company wouldn’t go amiss.”

J.W. scoffed. “Where would you keep her in this mousetrap? I’m the one who’s got plenty of empty rooms.”

“That, J.W. Berringer, is your own fault.”

“Like thunder it is.”

Hitch swiped up a dollop of yolk with the last of his sausage. “Maybe she should stay closer to town. In case somebody she knows comes looking for her.”

Matthew thought for a second, then nodded. “You’re right. The gossips wouldn’t find it proper anyway, a girl like her staying out here with two old bachelors.”

J.W. harrumphed.

Hitch rocked his chair back to its hind legs. “Well, then, you know somebody who will take her?”

“You’re the one that found her, son,” Matthew said.

“Me?” He looked at her, then at J.W. and Matthew in turn.

“If she’s from upwards, that would certainly seem to be more your purview than anybody’s, don’t you think?”

“Probably,” J.W. said, “she’s with that fancy flying outfit that just buzzed over. You best take her over that way and see if she belongs.”

Hitch shook his head. “She’s not a flyer.” She wasn’t a jumper either, unless he missed his guess. “So when I get her out there to the pilots’ camp and nobody has a notion who she is, what do you think I’m going to do with her then?”

“Find her a place to stay.”

He laughed. “I haven’t got time for that. I’ve got to make some money. You wouldn’t know of any day jobs around, would you?”

“That ain’t the point here,” J.W. said. “The point is you found this girl, so you gotta do something about it.”

Hitch didn’t have time to deal with this. He could barely find bedrolls and meals for his own crew, much less an addled girl. “I found her in Matthew’s backyard.”

She looked at him from across the table, steadily. Who knew if she understood what was going on, but those smoky gray eyes seemed to look right through him—still fearful, still distrusting.

And that was ever so slightly irritating. Most girls thought the devil-may-care lifestyle of a gypsy pilot was the most romantic thing ever. But of course, most girls weren’t crazy.