The Lightkeeper. Susan Wiggs
gunpowder.” She squinted through the smoke and wrinkled her nose, a perfect little nose sprinkled with freckles.
Jesse had no idea why he would make note of freckles. “You’re Irish,” he said stupidly, because it was the first thing that sprang to mind.
“And you’ve got some explaining to do.” She leaned sideways to look past him. “What the devil sort of gun is that?”
“It’s not a gun. It’s a camera.”
Her eyes widened. She pushed a hand through her tangled red hair. “A camera, is it?”
“Yes.”
The color leaped up in her cheeks again, making stark crimson spots on her pallor. “And what in the name of Peter and Paul are you doing shooting off a camera in here?”
Jesse’s already strained patience snapped. “Taking your picture, woman. What do you think?”
She made the sign of the cross and pressed back against the headboard, holding the covers to her chin. “Pervert!”
He gritted his teeth and clenched his fists at his sides to keep from doing something they’d both regret later. This was exactly why he lived here at the lighthouse, alone. He had no patience for other people, especially for mouthy Irishwomen who showed no gratitude for being rescued.
“Madam,” he said, “it occurs to me that your mishap has addled your brain. You’ve been unconscious. I thought it best to find your next of kin, so I took your picture. I had intended to circulate it to the newspaper and telegraph offices so your friends and family would learn of your survival.”
He strode to the door, the camera in one hand and tripod in the other. He paused and said, “I expect someone will be grateful that you’re alive.”
She moved quickly but clumsily, lurching from the bed. When Jesse saw her bare feet heading for the broken pieces of pottery, he had no choice. He dropped the tripod and scooped her up in his arms.
She gave a little squeak of surprise and paddled her feet in the air. “Don’t you do it, boyo.”
He glared at her. The top of her head was even with his chin. He could feel the heat emanating from her body. The sensation was so unfamiliar that he almost dropped her. Instead, he set her on the bed and stepped back quickly, as if he’d approached a hot stove.
“I beg your pardon?” he asked.
“Granted.” She gave a little bob of her head.
“I mean, I didn’t follow you, madam. Are you asking me not to leave the room?”
“Aye, that I am.”
“May I ask why?”
“Because I don’t want pictures of me put in any newspapers.”
Ah. So she was superstitious, then. Many immigrants brought their old-country beliefs with them; Palina and Magnus were proof of that. Quite a number thought it unlucky or even sacrilegious to produce graven images of themselves.
“Of course, now that you’re awake, there’s no need. You can simply tell me your name and destination. I’ll report that to—” he broke off, frowning down at her “Miss—er, Madam? Is there something wrong?”
She had begun to sway back and forth, her eyes glazing over. “I…feel strange all of a sudden. Higher than Gilderoy’s kite,” she said, her voice low and harsh. “Could you—that is, I need…”
Her words trailed off and she slumped to one side. Jesse dropped the camera, wincing as the lens cracked. Without breaking the flow of his movement, he dashed over to the bed, catching her by the shoulders and supporting her.
“Ma’am?” he asked. “Are you…all right?”
She made no response. She’d fallen unconscious again.
Jesse heaved a sigh of frustration. After settling her upon the pillows, he hesitated. Against his will, something inside him seemed to be bending toward her, reaching for her. He could not believe the impact of feeling her warm body curled against his, the tickle of her hair brushing his face and the scent of her, evocative and forbidden.
“Damn,” he swore between his teeth. She was everything he was trying to avoid.
As he tucked the quilts around the unconscious woman, his movements were slow, his hands gentle. He’d had no idea there was any tenderness left inside him.
The sooner he was rid of her, the better. He would send for Dr. MacEwan today to make certain this relapse wasn’t serious.
Amazingly, the one photographic plate he had taken remained intact. After developing the image, he would have a picture of the stranger. The amber tones would fail to capture the vivid richness of her red hair and her cream-and-roses coloring, not to mention the freckles, yet it would be a decent likeness.
Sleeping Beauty, he thought.
The hell with her superstitions. If she wouldn’t stay awake and tell him who she was, then he would publish her photograph and get the investigation started.
His boots crunched on earthenware shards from the shattered pitcher. In all the years Jesse had lived here, there had never been such a mess.
And she’d only been awake five minutes.
“Brass,” Palina said, hurling the word like an invective. “It is the bane of my existence.”
Jesse levered himself to the top of the ladder leading to the pinnacle of the lighthouse. In the lamp room, Palina and Magnus were well into the day’s chores. Palina was polishing the brass of the central compressor and cursing it, as usual.
“Why do they have to make everything out of brass, anyway?” she muttered, her wadded cloth making tight, neat circles in the fittings behind the reflector.
Magnus, who had his good arm deep inside the mouth of one of the eagle-headed water spouts under the eaves, winked at her. “So you can see your beautiful face in it everywhere you turn.”
“Humph,” Palina said, but the brass she was polishing reflected a blush and a smile. She worked a few moments longer, pausing to wave at Erik, who strode across the bluff toward the horse pasture.
Life at the lighthouse station suited Palina and Magnus perfectly, because they enjoyed each other’s company above all others. Erik fit easily into their world. They accepted their son’s affliction with a God-given, abiding patience Jesse would never understand. And the boy—seventeen last year—seemed happy enough.
“’Morning,” Jesse said to Palina and Magnus.
“’Morning, Jesse,” said Palina. “How is our little guest today, eh?”
Jesse picked up a can of oil and held it to the light, checking the purity. The lampwicks consumed nearly two hundred gallons a month, and each ounce had to be pure. “Now that,” he said, “depends.”
“Is she awake?”
“She woke up,” he said.
Both Magnus and Palina stopped what they were doing.
“And?” Magnus prompted.
“Well, she cursed at me and then she threw a pitcher at my head.”
Palina looked away quickly. “She must be confused, poor lamb.”
“The woman’s a menace.”
“Well, what did she tell you about herself?”
“Hardly a thing. She accused me of shooting at her when all I did was take her photograph to publish in the newspaper.”
“Ach, you frightened the little dear,” Palina said. “Here she is in a strange place, all alone, having lost God-knows-what in the way of family, and she wakes up to picture taking.”
“She