~Some of us think holding on makes us strong; but sometimes it is letting go.~âHermann Hesse
It was perhaps the first dinner Jake and Dannie ate together without glaring at each other and feeling resentful. It had grown quite dark by now, and the only light came from the fire. The rain continued to come down, but it was no longer as heavy as before. The storm had subsided and turned into a light drizzle.
âBy tomorrow, it will all be done, and we can continue without a hitch,â Jake said. Dannie gave an absent nod.
âIâm not working for Calhoon, just so you know,â she suddenly declared.
It took Jake a moment to react.
âOh, that, yeah,â he said with a laugh at last. âI sort of figured it out, by now. You donât exactly behave the way a girl of Calhoonâs would. Right from the start, Bessie made herself appealinâ to me, while you seemed determined to make me dislike you.â
âI did nothing of the sort!â Dannie argued. âI was only disagreeable because you insisted on being so cross. Admit it, Jake, you were mean to me on purpose.â
âYeah, I guess I was.â Jake scratched the back of his neck in embarrassment. âIâm known in these parts to be less than kind to the female race. The ladies of Hopewing will gladly tell you that.
âI donât go into the town much, but when I do, I keep to myself and never speak to women. And thatâs not because Iâm afraid someone will give me away to Calhoon. Itâs because I know theyâll all jump at me with advice and âwords of comfortâ that will only add to the sting. People mean well, but I know they canât understand.â
âIf it is any comfort, Jake, I think I do understand.â Dannieâs voice was gentle and sweet. It was a tone she had never used with him before, and something in it touched his heart.
They were both leaning against a large boulder, watching the Arizona night as it spread out from the entrance of the cave.
âWhat do you mean?â he asked in an equally gentle voice.
â~Who comforteth us in all our tribulation~,â Dannie softly quoted, â~that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble, by the comfort wherewith we ourselves are comforted of God~.
âI know what it is like to suddenly lose your entire family and be stranded all alone with no idea of where to go. Not to mention, there are people out there who think my education and gentle breeding make me a useless person.â
Jakeâs face burned red at the last sentence.
âI know we come from very different worlds, Jake, and that our life stories have been very different, but I too know what it means to have your heart broken; to be betrayed by one you loved and trusted.
âI also know God has a plan, Jake, and I know He is watching over youâand someday, Heâll make all the wrongs right again.â
Dannie fell silent. She suddenly felt very silly; this was no time for sermons.
Jake looked at her in the faint glow of the fire. Her hair was still down, reaching to the lower half of her back. Her eyes were fixed on her fingers as they played with a little twig.
There was something different about herâhe couldnât exactly say what. But somehow, the Danielle Preston he was looking at right now didnât at all remind him of the Danielle Preston he had met at the Callawaysâ.
âYouâve got a stick in yer hair,â he suddenly noticed. âHold on a sec, Iâll get it out.â Reaching over, he played with the twig until he freed it from the knots. Dannieâs hair was silky and soft. He liked the feel of it.
âThatâs what happens when you dance about in the rain,â he joked, throwing the twig away. âMaybe next time youâll listen to the voice of reason before you run around doing silly things.â
She laughed at his words. âI can do whatever pleases me, thank you very much, Paul.â
âJake.â
Dannie gasped and turned beet red. âGood heavens, did I just call you Paul again?â
âYup, seems you have quite the habit.â
âOh dear, how dreadfully embarrassing!â Dannie buried her face in her hands. âIâve never mixed up peopleâs names before. Iâm so sorry, Jake, this is the third time Iâve done it in one day.â
Inwardly, Jake had to admit it was getting rather annoying that Dannie kept calling him Paul, and it was even more annoying that she did it when there was something of a tender moment between the two of them.
He didnât want her to feel bad though, so he gave a kind chuckle. âDonât worry, Iâm not offended, though I am wonderinâ why you keep doing it.â
âI wish I knew,â Dannie tried to keep her blush under control. âI suppose itâs because the only time Iâve ever been alone with a man was when I was with Paul, and so I just call that name out of habit.â
âAh,â Jake nodded his head. âSo where did you meet him, if he was from New York?â
âWith all due respect, it is not something I enjoy talking about.â
âYeah, well, I donât like talking about my life either, but I told you the whole thing from cover to cover. Come on, return the favor, tell me somethinâ about yourself and the man you keep confusinâ me with.â
The much-hated blush came rushing back. âI am not confusing you with him,â Dannie stammered. âIt is justâ¦wellâ¦Iâmâ¦that is⦠I bumped into Paul two weeks after my sixteenth birthday.â
âYou bumped into each other?â
âYes, quite literally. It was in Oxford. My father had gone there to visit a friend, and I had accompanied him. I had gone for a walk and taken a book with me. I got so engrossed reading it that I wasnât watching where I was going. I walked straight into him.â
âYou were walkinâ down a street readinâ a book?â
âNot a street. It was in one of the parks. Oxford is a wonderful old city, so full of history and education. Paul was finding the place quite dull, had gone in search of some amusement.â
âBut instead, he found you.â
Dannie frowned. âYes, instead he found me.â Despite herself, Dannie found her mind wandering back to the day she first fell in love. It was a bitter memory, but there was some sweetness to it as well.
âWhat does he look like?â
âPaul? Many call him a handsome man. Not quite as tall as you, but of good stature, with dark brown hair and the bluest eyes you could ever imagine. Heâs from an affluent family, greatly respected in New York society. Always well-dressed, extremely good manners. And how smart he is, so very smart. If Mamma ever worried about me outsmarting a man, that was not possible with Paul.â
Dannie gave a sad laugh. âI suppose thatâs why I thought we were right for each other. We liked the same books, we liked to converse on the same subjects.
âMore than once, Paul told me I was the only girl who could carry on an educated and sensible conversation. I didnât gabble on and on about the weather or try to fill him in on the latest gossip. I could speak of things that had meaning and worth.
âI still remember the day he got down on one knee and asked me to be his wife. I was the happiest girl in England that day.â
Jake didnât know why, but the image of some smart and well-dressed New Yorker going down on his knee to Dannie made him want to jump up and punch the boulder. Instead, he poked the fire viciously with a stick, stirring up sparks and smoke.
One or two people had called Jacob Wade a handsome man. A few had even called him smart. But nobody, not even his mother, had ever called him well-dressed, well-read, or good-mannered.
One thing he did know, though. He could outride any ninny of a New Yorker any day of the week.