she called after him.
He threw up a hand. He didnât look back.
Â
Jillian closed the door and leaned back against it. She was a little apprehensive, but after all, she had to marry somebody. She knew Theodore Graves better than she knew any other men. And, despite their quarreling, they got along fairly well.
The alternative was to let some corporation build a holiday resort here in Hollister, and it would be a disaster for local ranching. Resorts brought in all sorts of amusement, plus hotels and gas stations and businesses. It would be a boon for the economy, but Hollister would lose its rural, small-town appeal. It wasnât somethingJillian would enjoy and she was certain that other people would feel the same. She loved the forests with their tall lodgepole pines, and the shallow, diamond-bright trout streams where she loved to fish when she had free time. Occasionally Theodore would bring over his spinning reel and join her. Then theyâd work side by side, scaling and filleting fish and frying them, along with hush puppies, in a vat of hot oil. Her mouth watered, just thinking about it.
She wandered into the kitchen. Sheâd learned to cook from one of her uncleâs rare girlfriends. It had delighted her. She might be a tomboy, but she had a natural affinity for flour and she could make bread from scratch. It amazed her how few people could. The feel of the dough, soft and smooth, was a gift to her fingertips when she kneaded and punched and worked it. The smell of fresh bread in the kitchen was a delight for the senses. She always had fresh homemade butter to go on it, which she purchased from an elderly widow just down the road. Theodore loved fresh bread. She was making a batch for tonight, to go with the pound cake.
She pulled out her bin of flour and got down some yeast from the shelf. It took a long time to make bread from scratch, but it was worth it.
She hadnât changed into anything fancy, although she did have on a new pair of blue jeans and a pink checked shirt that buttoned up. She also tucked a pink ribbon into her long blond hair, which she tidied into a bun on top of her head. She wasnât elegant, or beautiful, but she could at least look like a girl when she tried.
And he noticed the minute he walked in the door. He cocked his head and stared down at her with amusement.
âYouâre a girl,â he said with mock surprise.
She glared up at him. âIâm a woman.â
He pursed his lips. âNot yet.â
She flushed. She tried for a comeback but she couldnât fumble one out of her flustered mind.
âSorry,â he said gently, and became serious when he noted her reaction to the teasing. âThat wasnât fair. Especially since you went to all the trouble to make me fresh rolls.â He lifted his head and sniffed appreciably.
âHow did you know that?â
He tapped his nose. âI have a superlative sense of smell. Did I ever tell you about the time I tracked a wanted murderer by the way he smelled?â he added. âHe was wearing some gosh-awful cheap cologne. I just followed the scent and walked up to him with my gun out. Heâd spent a whole day covering his trail and stumbling over rocks to throw me off the track. He was so shocked when I walked into his camp that he just gave up without a fight.â
âDid you tell him that his smell gave him away?â she asked, chuckling.
âNo. I didnât want him to mention it to anybody when he went to jail. No need to give criminals a heads-up about something like that.â
âNative Americans are great trackers,â she commented.
He glowered down at her. âAnybody can be a good tracker. It comes from training, not ancestry.â
âWell, arenât you touchy,â she exclaimed.
He averted his eyes. He shrugged. âBanes has been at it again.â
âYou should assign him to school crossings. He hates that,â she