with words and touches.
âLola swears this smelly salve keeps infection out of wounds better than soap,â she murmured. âI donât know what my uncle would say, but it certainly worked on Ute and you and the rest of the wild creatures.â
She set down the jar of salve. It thumped gently onto the floor near her patientâs shoulder.
The mixed scents of juniper, sage, and other herbs Case couldnât identify flowed over him each time he breathed in. He preferred the sunshine and rose-petal smell of Sarahâs skin, but he lacked the energy to tell her.
âThatâs it,â she encouraged. âJust keep sleeping. Iâll have a clean bandage back on in two shakes of a lambâs tail.â
The sensation of her hands on his skin was familiar to him by now, as was the faint brushing of her breasts against him while she wrapped the bandage all the way around his thigh.
His bodyâs reaction was familiar, too.
He didnât bother trying to fight the arousal that came whether he willed it or not. He simply hoped the loincloth covered him.
âNow weâll just stretch out this leg,â she murmured. âIt shouldnât hurt for but a moment.â
Her hands slid under the knee and heel of his wounded leg. Gently she guided his leg into a more natural position.
âItâs a good thing I only have to move part of you at a time,â she said softly. âYouâre big even lying down.â
Her hand smoothed gently down his uninjured leg, enjoying the warmth and resilience of his flesh.
âSuch strength,â she said. âIt must be wonderful to be that strong.â
Case didnât speak for the simple reason that he didnât want the soft petting to stop. He hadnât experienced anything as sweet in too many years to count.
âYouâre dusty, too,â she added with a soft laugh. âHow do people raise a family on a dirt floor and keep the little ones clean?â
While she spoke, her hand repeated its calming sweep down his leg.
He knew the motion was meant to be soothing. He had watched her pet and murmur over her wounded hawk in just the same slow, gentle way, easing the birdâs restlessness when she put medicine on its wound.
âI wish Conner and Ute could take a week to go to the mountains and saw some planks for the floor,â she murmured. âBut that isnât likely. So much work, so little timeâ¦â
She picked up the jar of slave, covered Case with a flannel sheet, and moved away from his side.
He gave a silent sigh that was part disappointment and part relief. Being petted like that was both arousing and oddly poignant.
She would be a good mother , he thought. But first sheâllhave to find a man young or brave or stupid enough to ask God for children he canât protect .
Case wasnât that young anymore. He hadnât been since he came home from the war and found the bloody remains of his brotherâs family.
Five Culpeppers left , he told himself. Then it will be over .
He didnât linger over what had been done or what remained to be done. No man enjoyed digging out a privy, but no man worth his salt ignored the duty when he drew the short straw.
The Culpeppers had to be stopped.
Case had drawn the short straw.
A slight rush of air and the faint scent of roses told him that Sarah had returned.
âI hope this doesnât wake you,â she murmured. âJust a warm wet rag and some soap. Nothing to worry a strong man like you.â
Slim fingers combed through his hair, moving it back from his forehead. He enjoyed the caresses in a suspended kind of way, like a fever dream.
Rose-scented and soapy, the rag moved over his face. It reminded him of a big, warm, slightly rough tongue.
âIâll wash your hair tomorrow, when youâre less tired,â she crooned. âI could tell from the feel of it the first time I touched your hair that youâre used
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