before they needed replacing due to growth.
She
had
been careless in that respect and still was, but then her appearance as perceived by others had never been high on her list of concerns.When there wasn’t much to work with or improve upon, why waste time trying?
She removed her bonnet and set it aside on the ground next to her. It would have blown away if the ribbons weren’t still in her hand, but it did bounce around on the ground, unnoticed by her, getting quite demolished. She had closed her eyes, to better feel the wind as it caught her hair and sent it flying in all directions about her head. She chuckled as a strand whisked across her nose, tickling.
That her eyes were closed, though, and the wind loud in her ears, wasn’t the reason she didn’t see or hear the rider coming and was nearly run over. He had simply come up so quickly from the other side of the hill behind her that he was upon her before either of them noticed.
It really was a close call, so close that when the horse reared up and was jerked to the side to avoid her, its hooves came down right on top of her bonnet. Not that she noticed that—yet. She was too busy rolling out of the way, which had been quicker to do than to try and find her footing under her heavy skirts.
But she wasn’t the only one to do some rolling on the ground. The rider had been unseated when his horse reared up, and landing where the hill started to sharply decline, he’d found no flat purchase and so had rolled a bit before he could stop himself.
Sabrina was the first to recover, though, and get back to her feet. The man was sitting therewith his legs spread wide, looking somewhat dazed, or at least he was probably wondering what had happened. The horse wandered off, snorting, but not far. He took Sabrina’s bonnet with him, still stuck to his foot as it was, and was now trying to eat the silk flowers he noticed on it.
It was a big man sitting there. She took note of that first, couldn’t help but note it, the thickness of his short winter coat emphasizing it across some very broad shoulders. But it was his legs she stared at. She couldn’t help it, they were somewhat bare, at least the knees were, between the kilt he wore and his high boots.
A kilt in winter—how unusual. She’d seen Scotsmen in kilts before, as they passed through Oxbow on their way south or back north, but only in the summer. Most of them preferred to dress warmer for the more brisk seasons. Did he not feel the cold?
She knew who he might be, Ophelia’s fiancé. The kilt and the dark red hair suggested that he was at least Scottish, and Summers Glade, the direction he’d been heading, was expecting a Scotsman. And oh, my, was Ophelia going to be surprised and likely change her mind real quick about wanting to be rid of him. How could she not, when he was so very handsome, he took even Sabrina’s breath away?
He stood up, surprising her that he wasn’t just big, but very tall as well. And he dusted off his kilt in such a way that some thigh became visible, causing Sabrina to blush. He hadn’t noticed her yet, though, and even so, her cheeks were likelypinkened enough by the wind for a blush not to make much difference.
“Are you all right?”
He swung about to face her. “Och, so there you are. I should be asking you that. I didna see you sitting there till it was almost tae late.”
She smiled at him. His brogue was light and pleasant, if his voice somewhat deep. She liked the sound of it, though, strange to her ears, but lyrical. And those eyes, so dark a blue, quite disconcerting now that they were gazing directly at her.
“Sol gathered.”
“I mun apologize. The beastie and I dinna get along tae well,” he said, giving the horse a disgruntled glower. “But then I’m no’ much of a horsemon tae begin wi’, preferring tae walk if the distance isna tae far.”
How coincidental. Her sentiments exactly. She could ride, and very well. She’d been taught as a child as a
Robert Wilson
Heather C. Hudak
Juliet Barker
Loree Lough
Penny Watson
Robert Brockway
Rachel Alexander
Jessica Wood
Tammy Falkner
Marilyn Lee