Something cold struck her cheek as she tried not to seeâand yet could not help drawing up the imageâof how he would look seasoned by experience and a rugged, active life.
âItâs snowing yet again.â Henriettaâs voice carved into Noelleâs thoughts. âWhen will winter end? I shall never become accustomed to these Montana storms.â
âYes, sadly we are all likely to be snowed over until Armageddon if this continues.â Noelle knew that dire prediction would make her aunt happy, who huffed decidedly, pleased to have such problems to discuss.
Determined to leave Thad McKaslin out of her thoughts, Noelle set her chin and swiped at the cold wetness on her cheekâtears, and not snow after all. âThen your letter shall never reach the territorial governor.â
âExactly my brand of luck. Listen to that! That contraption! How blessed we are to have a sensible mare who will not bolt at the clamor and dank coal smoke.â
Only then did Noelle hear the clatter of the incoming train and smell its choking coal smoke. She did not notice much else, not the harmony of the traffic noise or the melody of the townâs people going about their busy ways.
Her heart was too heavy to hear any music. Snow began falling in earnest with sharp, needlelike hits that had no rhythm or song as they fell, driven on a bleak wind.
Chapter Five
A s Thad circled a dappled gray mare at the saleâheâd let Robert Worthington talk him into giving his opinion on a few animals he was consideringânot even the steadily falling snow could clean away the grit of emotion that clung to him.
This wasnât how heâd reckoned things would be. Seeing Noelle again was going to happenâhe knew that when heâd made the decision to come back to Angel Falls. But he figured sheâd be a wife and a mother, busy with the fanciful tasks that kept privileged women occupied, like book clubs and church fund-raisers and whatnot. What he didnât figure on was having to realize how complete her fatherâs plan had been. Mr. Kramer, rest his soul, must have known that Noelle would never understand or forgive, even with her generous heart. Heâd hurt her then, and he was hurting her now. He hated it. He wishedâwell, he didnât know what he wanted, but he would do anything, or be anything, to keep her from hurting.
Impossible, he realized. His nearness made her sad. It was as plain as day.
âMcKaslin, whatâs your opinion?â
âWh-what?â He blinked, realizing he must have been staring at the horseâs withers for a rather long time. The sights and sounds of the busy horse sale chased away most of his trail of thoughts, but not all of them.
âSheâs too old but, McKaslin, you seem to like her better than the gelding.â
Thad knocked back his hat and the snow accumulating on the brim slid off, giving him time to think of the best way to answer. âYouâd do well to go with an older horse. This mare is a little long in the tooth, but sheâs steady and gentle.â
âI suppose I like the brash younger ones. More of a challenge.â
Yep, Worthington had even less horse sense than heâd figured on. âWell, sir, you might not want to gamble your womenfolkâs well-being like that. This old mare has a lot of good years in her, sheâll be suited to pulling a light sleigh or buggy. Besides, look at the kindness youâd be doing. If no one buys her, she might be sent to the stockyards. That is one sad end for a nice horse.â
Robert gulped at that. âI hadnât considered that before. Iâm glad I asked your opinion. You have sound reasoning and a lot of knowledge. You know Iâm looking to hire a good horseman to teach me what I havenât learned in books. If itâs stable work you mind, Iâll find someone to muck out the stallsââ
âYouâve got that wrong, Mr.