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Abra walked among the rows of wheat, her
fingers splayed to feel the soft kiss of each bulging seedhead. The sun hung
at the center of the sky, its glorious rays warming her pale skin. She wore
a tank top and a long, green cotton skirt with beads sewn into the seams.
Her mother had given her the skirt years ago, and she still loved it.
Sandaled feet made small sounds against the earth she crossed. Far in the
distance, her parents’ house stood on a flowing hill dotted with pecan
trees. This is my heaven, she thought. My parents left me this
paradise. What a great place to hide from the world.
She crossed the wheat and strode along
the green meadow that separated her from the porch. For days she’d read book
after book in her newly made study, pored over her father’s collection of
tomes and news magazines until she couldn’t take any more. When she reached
the steps to the wooden porch, she realized that the stain was wearing thin
on the planks. “Maybe I’ll start on that tomorrow.” Abra climbed the five
steps, her fingers skimming the banister as she hurried to the screen door.
She felt the strangest sensation that someone was watching her. At once, the
midday heat felt too stifling. Her skirt clung to her legs, and beads of
sweat broke out across her brow. She felt weary, as if she’d worked for a
whole day when here it was just noon.
Being alone never bothered her before
now. She shook her head, trying to ward off the unnatural feeling. Sweeping
a hand through her loose hair, she flinched when a gust of hot air blasted
her face and body, sending the blonde tendrils flying across her field of
vision. She turned to look into the wind and saw a lone figure walking
beside the road. He crested the hill, his gait a gentle lope, the shape of
him not clear through the waves of heat in the air. She squinted, staring as
he ambled along. A quell rose in her chest. Is he going to stop here?
She backed to the wicker chair her mom
favored when she was alive, and sank into the cornflower blue cushion.
Picking at the corner of it, she waited. His voice carried on the ill-wind,
a basso that thrummed out a lulling, manly tune. He crossed the ditch that
separated the road from the fence, and ran his hand along the barbed wire,
lifting his fingers every time a metal thorn might prick his skin.
Abra thought she ought to ease back,
maybe even close her eyes against his approach. He’ll pass by. No one
stops here. No one has any reason to. There’s nothing to see or find in this
empty old house except. . .me. The thought startled her. Did she want to
be found by him?
He moved like a panther, a shadowy man
with tanned skin and jet black hair that fell in straight locks around his
face. The wind tousled it, and Abra decided that the wind did so at just the
right time. He wore a white t-shirt, simple and clean. His blue jeans looked
a little worn in the knees and beige leather hiking boots made a deep
crunching sound in the dry November grass.
At the gate by the drive, he stopped.
The stranger held one hand to his forehead, his gaze searching even from
such a distance for. . .Me, Abra thought.
He waved in a casual manner, as if he
knew her, and strode past the slight opening in the gate. |