Night Hawk's Bride. Jillian Hart
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Night Hawk stepped into the shadows and disappeared. Marie stared into the darkness, wishing, just wishing.
“Honestly, Marie,” Henry boomed loud enough for every last soldier in the nearby barracks to hear. “I expected you to remain home until I arrived.”
“Oh, Papa. I couldn’t wait forever in an empty house.”
“How am I to maintain discipline in my ranks when I cannot command my own daughter? This is no way to start out your tenure here.”
“My tenure?” She’d been a fool to think anything had changed between them. She’d traveled all the way from Ohio for this? “I’m not one of your privates ready to jump at your every command. I am a grown woman—”
“That is quite enough, girl.” Henry pushed open the door. “Come, before I lose my temper.”
Marie steeled her heart and headed into the night. A pleasant breeze caressed her face and tangled through her long wavy locks, scattering them every which way. She heard her father’s gait behind her, tapping brisk and even.
“Good thing you came across Night Hawk. I run a tight fort and I command good men, but that doesn’t mean you should wander the grounds without an escort. The stables aren’t a proper place for a young lady.”
“I can take care of myself. I’m not the girl you remember.”
“No, but you are my daughter, and if anything should happen to you, I could never stand it.” A touch of warmth softened his stern manner. “I want you safe, Marie. A gently raised young lady such as yourself is not used to the dangers of the frontier.”
“I’m not afraid—”
“You could have been trampled today,” Henry interrupted. “You would have been had it not been for Night Hawk. That’s twice I’m indebted to him now. Twice. Do not put yourself in danger a third time.”
Marie followed her father up the steps and onto the porch. Not knowing what to do, she leaned against the railing and gazed out on the night. Her father sat down in the shadows, and the wooden chair creaked. A match flared to life, a brief flame against the darkness. The first burst of smoke lifted on the wind.
From Ohio, with his letter in hand inviting her to join him, it had seemed like an opportunity to make things better. Was it even possible to change things between them?
He might be her father, but he was a colonel first. Always a colonel. Never a parent to remember birthdays and gifts. Never someone to turn to when the loneliness became too much to bear.
“Go on up to your room and get some sleep, Marie.” He sounded gruff, just short of harsh, but he sounded strangely affectionate, too.
“I’ll choose my own bedtime, thank you. The night is beautiful and there are so many things I want to say to you.”
“Not tonight, daughter.” Embers glowed at the tip of his cigar as he inhaled. “I’ve had a tough day.”
“I see.” So, he would dismiss her. His daughter. She pushed away from the porch.
“Mrs. Olstad will have breakfast on the table at six hundred sharp. I’ll see you then.”
“Yes, Papa. Good night.” She fled before he could answer, turning her back on the lonely night and the canyon of distance between them.
She hurried up the staircase and down the dark hallway, trying not to turn their first not-so-warm encounter into a disaster. He was tired. She was disappointed. Maybe tomorrow would be better.
Her room was dark, just as she had left it. The white curtains lashed at the open window as if beckoning her. It was still early and she wasn’t a bit tired, so she knelt on the soft cushions of the window seat and let the wind breeze across her face.
It was a night made for dreaming, with stars so bright and the wide horizon brimming with possibilities. A hawk’s cry snared her attention and she watched the noble hunter cut the sky with silent wings.
Marie breathed in the fresh air and listened to the call of a coyote. The swirling emotions inside her began to ease.
A movement in the shadows caught her eye—a broad-shouldered man, lithe and powerful. Night Hawk. Mounted, he rode tall and proud, his long brave’s hair dancing with the wind.
Her heart soared just like the hawk overhead. The strange floating, shivering sensation she’d experienced in his presence returned.
She’d never felt so alive and the feeling remained long after he’d ridden from her sight.
Night Hawk saw the young hawk circling overhead in an ever-widening spiral away from the fort. Other creatures filled the night sky—the hoot owls, the mosquito-eating bats and a mature male eagle hunting the fields for food for his young.
It was likely that only the young hawk had no mate to fly with and no young to hunt for. A solitary life was no comfort for a bird.
Or a man.
The wind gusted, stirring a woman’s scent clinging to his shirt where he and Marie Lafayette had briefly touched.
The colonel’s daughter.
A cold weight settled in his gut, and Night Hawk urged Shadow into an easy lope. Even to notice the smallest detail about the colonel’s daughter was trouble.
In truth, he hadn’t noticed her. He’d memorized her wavy, dark brown hair and how she smelled fresh as morning sun on a spring meadow. The oval cut of her face was soft and so beautiful it hurt to look at her.
You’ve been without a woman too long, he told himself. But even as he thought the words, they rang false. It wasn’t lust he felt. It was something greater, like the sky without horizon, like time without end.
Who did he think he was? Marie was too young, too pretty and too white. She was the colonel’s daughter. She was out of his reach like the stars above.
He halted his stallion in the shadow of his home where there were no windows lit and no woman waiting.
If loneliness battered him, he refused to feel it.
He dropped the pack he carried on the front steps and made a vow never to think about the colonel’s daughter again.
Chapter Three
“You’re late.”
Marie pulled out the wooden chair and eased onto the tapestried cushion. “I had trouble finding all my clothes. Only one of my trunks arrived.”
“Then I’ll have Sergeant James see to it.” Henry’s stern demeanor softened. “Did you sleep well?”
“I tried.” Marie couldn’t contain her excitement. “I’ve never heard so many strange sounds in one place. Coyotes howling, owls hooting and creatures moving in the forest outside the fort walls.”
“We’ll