“Oh, there wasn’t any danger. I mean, very little. Haven’t you ever climbed these trees? They’re the perfect climbing trees. The”—she let out a little hiccup—“branches are so huge and strong and wide. You could sleep on one.”
“You’re drunk, Kira. If you had tried to sleep on a tree branch, I’d be scraping you off the ground tomorrow.”
She laughed as if that was funny. “Seriously, though, surely you’ve climbed one of these trees?”
“No.”
“No?” she whispered. “Why?” She looked at me so seriously, her expression as confounded as if I’d just admitted I’d never tried breathing air before.
Without answering, I turned to Virgil who was shifting back and forth on his feet. “You should go on back to your bunk, Virgil.”
“Yes, sir,” he muttered. He turned to Kira, his face lighting up as if she were the sun and he had just been looking into the darkness—me being the darkness in this particular circumstance. He gave her the most openly enamored smile I’d ever seen on a grown man and said shyly, “Good night, Miss Kira.”
Kira shot him a grin and I startled slightly. There it was. That dimple I’d seen in the online photograph. Virgil got the dimple. I’d never gotten the dimple—not even once. And I probably never would, especially after tonight.
“Mrs. Kira,” she corrected, winking.
Virgil gave me a look that I swore was suspicious even though I was the one who’d given him a damn job, and then nodded at Kira, smiling again as he turned and walked away. I faced the little witch. We stared at each other for a few moments. “My father never would have allowed it,” I said. “Climbing trees.”
She furrowed her brow as if trying to remember what we’d been talking about. Her eyes met mine, and although she was clearly inebriated, her expression gentled. “My father didn’t allow it either.”
“I take it you didn’t listen?” I raised a brow.
She laughed softly and shook her head, looking suddenly sad in a way that made me want to reach out to her. But then she smiled and raised her gaze to the tree above. “I’ve never been very good at obedience. Or meekness. Or curbing my sharp tongue for that matter. I’d make a terrible wife.” She swayed again very slightly and took a step toward me on a small laugh.
I couldn’t help smiling back at her joke as I caught her by her upper arms.
Something suddenly seemed to occur to her. “Speaking of my father, I told you to be discreet about your personal life. Discreet.” She dragged out the word, leaning toward me. “It’s very important.”
I cleared my throat. “I thought you said you weren’t overly worried about your father.”
Her shoulders dropped. “I’m always worried about my father,” she whispered, looking somewhere off in the distance. Her eyes focused on me again and she stood up straighter. “I just don’t want to invite trouble.”
“Noted” was all I gave her as she swayed again. “Okay, little witch, let’s get you back to your cottage in the woods.” I almost offered one of the guest rooms in the house again, but she had turned me down before, and frankly, I thought it better that there was distance between us—for a whole slew of reasons I didn’t much want to contemplate any more than I already had.
When we made it to the door of her cottage, she turned to me, her eyes bleary, her cheeks flushed. She tilted her head, and as the leaves of the trees overhead blew in the wind, a shaft of moonbeam hit her face, lighting it just enough that her green eyes shone like emeralds. Her hair, perhaps put up in a twist earlier tonight, had slipped almost completely loose and as usual, silky tendrils framed her face. Her lips curved up just the slightest bit, and I felt momentarily stunned silent. Had I thought this girl was merely pretty? I was the stupidest man alive.
A blind fool.
A complete moron.
She was beautiful.
Irrationally, I felt duped, as if the little witch had put some kind of spell on me. Maybe it wasn’t so irrational—she probably had.
I turned on my heel. “Good night,” I called over my shoulder, not even bothering to wait until she’d slipped through the door of her cottage. I went back to my house and took a very cold shower.
* * *
I avoided Kira for the next couple days. I was busy, but more than that, she unsettled me, and I didn’t need the distraction. The only female companionship I had the time or desire for right now was very temporary and, admittedly, very shallow. Getting involved with my wife would be a bad idea on almost every level.
The only contact we’d had was her text advising me she’d requested a certified copy of our marriage license, but that it would be several weeks before it would be processed and posted. More waiting—but we were one step closer. A couple weeks and we’d have the check we both desperately needed. The end.
I had no idea what she was doing, nor did I much care. Or at least that’s what I kept telling myself. In any case, she seemed to be happy enough to avoid me as well. She didn’t show up at any of the normal mealtimes, and I refused to ask Charlotte whether she ate at the vineyard or not. Although I did catch sight of her scampering around here and there, and I thought she might have brought the men I worked with lunch a couple times. I always ate up at the house, so I couldn’t be sure, and I didn’t ask them.
A week after we’d gotten married, I was walking back down the hill to the vineyards where José, Virgil, and the two new part-time guys I’d hired the day before were working, when I stopped short, squinting my eyes to make sure I was really seeing what I thought I was seeing. Kira was standing on one leg, her other stretched out behind her on the back of one of the tractors as it moved around the perimeter of the grapevines. She had a long ribbon of some sort in one hand and was waving it through the air. As I watched, she changed legs, bringing her arms out in front of her in some sort of pose. The men cheered and clapped, holding up their fingers as if scoring her for her performance. She turned toward them, the tractor still moving, José at the wheel, and did a deep curtsy, her long, loose hair falling forward, and then stood and spun around, bringing her leg up again in a ballerina-type pose. My heart leapt with panic and my breath stuttered at the dangerous stunt, which got my legs moving again. I half walked–half jogged toward her. When I was close, José looked to where I was, the smile on his face disappearing as he slowed the tractor, finally stopping completely. Immobile, I glared at them, at a complete loss for words. Finally, I managed to grit out, “What in the hell are you doing?”
José scratched his neck and wisely looked away, while Kira stood straighter, staring down at me defiantly. “I brought lunch down,” she said, gesturing to the In-N-Out Burger wrappers strewn on a blanket at the base of a tree to the right of the tractor’s path. “I was simply showing them the routine I planned to use to join the circus. I was going to be the girl who dances on the back of an elephant. I perfected it years ago while my best friend, Kimberly, drove my father’s golf cart. We all got talking about childhood dreams and…” She trailed off, smiling around at the men.