touch of his tongue, which led to a nip of his teeth. Biting the plump curve at the base of her thumb made her fingertips dance against his cheek.
This wasnât how their reunion should be. Heâd been gone nearly a month, trading, checking traps. Heâd returned to find her asleep in the middle of the day, feverish. The only outward sign of illness had been a tender redness on the sole of her foot. Heâd ridden for Nan that afternoon.
The abstinence created by their time apart always snarled him. Made him surly. And strangely tired, as if life wore him down more easily. Heâd decided that Polly was a nourishment. Her company, of course, but also her skin, the sweep of her hair, her buried heat. When he hadnât wet his mouth with hers, used her until they both dripped with exhaustion, when he hadnât disappeared into the soft darkness of their bed, of her body, he simply wasnât himself.
She knew it, too. She was always waiting when he returned. Always welcoming.
Still, he never knew she burned the same. His cock throbbed to the beat of his heart. She touched herself and called for him. He must have nourished something in her, as well.
Hale had to clear his throat to form the words. âHas she taken any broth?â
âNot since morning.â
Pollyâs head twisted against the pillow, disturbing the blankets that covered her. The sheer white cloth of her gown revealed the shadowed curves of her breasts. The darker rose of her nipples had tightened to stiffness. The keen memory of that little pebble against his tongue sent a rush of liquid to his mouth.
âHale?â his wife whispered.
âIâm here. Can you hear me, Poll? Open your eyes.â
âI donât think she can, dear. Itâs fever talking now.â
Hale touched the back of his hand to her forehead and then, her cheek. âSheâs soâ¦hot.â
âPoisonâs spread.â The squeak of the rocking chair stopped. âBe a while before we know.â
âKnow?â
Impossible. He wouldnât hear it.
âNo! What else can we do? Anything. Everything. Tell me.â
âWeâre an ocean and some odd miles from the nearest Papist miracle well, Mr. Hale. Short of that, you need to prepare yourself.â
He would need more than a miracle well to survive without Polly. From that thought, an idea bubbled. A miracle well.
âThe spring.â
Nan shook her sad slowly. âIf the poison takes her, she wonât last the week, much less until theââ
âThe hot spring. Up north of the lake. Where the Abenaki take their sick.â
The womanâs embroidery hoop clacked against the pine floor. âYouâre not serious.â
âCanât believe I didnât think of it before.â He stood, already ordering his mind to what they would need. âItâs a hot spring. Iâve seen it heal men with wounds far worse.â
âSheâs weak to be moving.â The womanâs index finger tapped restlessly against the rockerâs arm, marking time on her objections.
âIâll take the small cart. She can lie flat. Weâll be there before the moon fully rises.â
âYouâll have to submerge the whole leg, the longer the better. And keep her warm.â
âI can do that.â
âIt may not help. You understand?â
Hale refused to speak to that thought. âIâm going to rig the cart and make a palette.â
Â
The night was clear and cold. Hale forced their passage along a path meant to be traveled on foot. The cart shuddered over rocks and squeaked as it squeezed between trees.
Polly never made a sound.
Her silence drove him faster. And gave him time to think. He relived each moment at her bedside a hundred times, inhaling icy air, exhaling heat.
What pleasure haunted her dreams? Was it a memory? A type of touch? Or was it some unspoken secret? Something sheâd hidden, the way
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