The Lightkeeper. Susan Wiggs
was like admitting one had no heart, no soul.
“Mary Dare.” He leaned forward in a sort of grudging bow. Interesting to note that he had a small, miserly store of manners. “Your real name?” he inquired.
Anger—and guilt—chased off her maudlin feelings. “And you are?” she asked defensively.
“Jesse Kane Morgan. Captain of the lighthouse station.”
“’Tis an honor to meet you, Captain. But I confess, you have the advantage of me. Where, can I ask you, is this ‘station’?”
“Cape Disappointment.”
“Sure and that’s a terrible name for such a lovely place,” she said.
“Blue-water men trying to get their ships over the bar don’t think it’s lovely. We’re at the mouth of the Columbia, in the Washington Territory.”
Washington Territory. Fancy that. She had traveled to a whole new region and hadn’t even known it until now.
“Were you on the Blind Chance?” he asked. “As near as I can figure, it’s the only ship lost in the area on Sunday.”
Sunday. It occurred to Mary that she didn’t even know what day it was. Nor did she know what manner of man he was, this cold stranger, or what the future held.
All the information coming at her began to swirl like a fever through her mind. Sunday…Washington Territory…the Blind Chance… And through it all, the lighthouse beacon had guided her. With a harsh little cry, she launched herself from the settle and landed on her knees before him, clutching his hands. Her pose was that of a supplicant before a savior. “Captain Morgan, I’ve forgotten my manners. You saved my life. Our lives. Mine and the baby’s. That is what I should be telling you. How can I ever thank you?”
He wrenched his hands away and stood. She heard an oath barely hidden in the harshness of his breathing.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I didn’t mean to startle you.”
“I don’t like being touched.” Each word sounded measured, as if doled out from a meager supply. He walked away from her.
“Sure and if that isn’t the saddest thing I ever heard.” She followed him to the large front window, where he stood looking out at the distant bluff, his back to her.
“Never mind that,” he said brusquely. “I need to know several things about you, Mrs. Dare.”
“The first thing you should know is that—” she took a deep breath “—it’s not Mrs. Dare.” There. She’d said it. All along, she’d planned to lie to him and pretend she’d been a married lady and then widowed. Yet out popped the truth.
He didn’t move, didn’t react. “Miss Dare, then, is it?”
“Mary. Just Mary.”
“Did you have friends or family on the Blind Chance?”
“No.” The corners of her mouth curved up in an ironic smile. “I didn’t even have a ticket.”
He turned then, eyeing her suspiciously. Lord, but he was fine to look at, and he had no notion at all of his appeal. In fact, he was put together and clothed like a man who didn’t care for his appearance in the least. He just was. She itched to comb his hair for him, to trim it.
“I figured you were a stowaway.”
The thought of the ordeal she had endured sapped her strength. Her bad shoulder began to throb, and she touched it gingerly.
“Dr. MacEwan thinks you’ve hurt your collarbone.”
“A doctor’s been to see me?”
“Yes. You don’t remember?”
“I’m…afraid not.” She tried to stifle a yawn, but wasn’t quick enough. The dizziness spun upward through her. She felt her eyes roll back, her eyelids flutter.
“You should lie down and rest,” he said.
She nodded. His voice had a different quality now. She still heard that undertone of impatience, but the edges sounded smoother, somehow. “Thank you. I think I will.” She reached for his hand, then stopped herself.
I don’t like being touched.
Aye, it was the saddest thing she’d heard.
“Thank you again, Captain Morgan.”
“Jesse.”
“What?”
“Call me Jesse.” He strode across the room toward the door. “Now, go and rest.”
It was all Jesse could do to keep from running when he left the house. And that, perhaps, was what he resented most about this whole impossible situation. That the presence of this strange woman, this Mary Dare—imagine, her bearing the name of a shipwreck—could drive him from his own house, from his refuge against the outside world.
He walked across the clearing, heading for the barn. Whistling sharply, three short blasts, he didn’t even look to see if D’Artagnan obeyed. The horse came when summoned. It was the first lesson Jesse had taught him.
Within minutes, he had saddled up and was headed along the sinuous path to the beach. The horse was always game for a run, and as soon as they reached the flat expanse of brown sand, Jesse gave the gelding his head.
For a while, he felt something akin to exhilaration. The wind streamed through his hair and caught at his shirt, plastering the fabric to his chest and causing the sleeves to billow around his shoulders. The horse’s hooves kicked up wet sand and saltwater. Man and horse were like the skimmer birds, buzzing along the surf, heading nowhere as fast as they could.
From the corner of his eye, Jesse could see Sand Island, then the vast blue nothingness beyond the giant estuary. This was his world, his life. It was where he belonged. Alone. Eternally. He needed to be rid of Mary Dare, and quickly.
Because, somehow, her presence reminded him that his world was unbearably vast and empty.
God. The sight of her in that dress had nearly sent him to his knees. The memory had cut into him like a dagger: as if it were only yesterday, he’d seen Emily twirling beneath the chandelier in the foyer of their Portland mansion, laughing as the skirt belled out across the parquet floor….
“I put it on just for you, Jesse. Just for you.”
“Oh, Em. I’d rather have you take it off for me.”
She giggled and blushed. “That, my love, will come. We have plenty of time for that later.”
Jesse dug in his heels and rode harder.
He brought the horse up short at the boathouse tucked into a protected cove at the foot of Scarborough Hill. The rickety structure housed a pilot boat. Now that tugboats were common, the boat wasn’t used much to guide big ships out to sea, but Jesse kept the craft in perfect condition, varnishing the wood and caulking the seams, keeping oil in the lamps and the sails in good repair.
It was a sickness with him, taking care of this boat. For after Emily’s accident, Jesse had never gone to sea again. He never would. He was too afraid.
Disgusted with himself, he headed back to the lighthouse station. What a majestic sight it was, the lime-washed tower standing proud on the overlook of the cliff. And yet how small it looked, dwarfed by the huge trees beyond and the waves curling over the black rocks almost to its base.
When he reached the top of the trail, he heard a musical “Halloo!”
He smacked D’Artagnan into a trot and went to greet his visitor.
Lifting her navy blue skirts high above practical brogans, Dr. Fiona MacEwan alit from her buggy. “Good day, Jesse. I stopped in to check on our patient.”
He dismounted and led his