Chapter 18
CHAPTER 18
Tommy
T he sun hung high in the sky and I couldn’t stop looking upward at it.
I’d gotten so used to the normality of gray skies that when the sun did break through at times, it was hypnotizing.
“It’s grand, isn’t it?” Fiona said as she adjusted the bridle on her mare.
“Not as pretty as you,” I proclaimed, swinging into the saddle and settling atop a sturdy gray gelding named Murphy.
He was a far cry from the energetic thoroughbreds we worked with at the training center—solid, patient, with a thick mane and the kind of calm disposition that made him a pleasure to ride.
Glenhaven had a handful of retired horses that were mellow enough in their old age to take easygoing rides through fields and on trails.
Fiona blushed and I loved that I could make this beautiful, confident woman redden in the cheeks.
I waited as she made a final adjustment to the stirrups.
“You sure you don’t need help, darlin’?” I teased, watching as she climbed on a mounting block and swung her leg over the horse’s back with practiced ease.
She shot me a look, green eyes glinting.
“I’ve been ridin’ my whole life, Tommy Blackburn. I think I’ll manage.”
I grinned as she nudged her horse forward and we were silent as we rode single file along a worn dirt trail leading away from Glenhaven.
She had packed a lunch and it was currently strapped to the side of her saddle in a burlap sack.
Wildflowers were starting to bloom and the sun was warm upon our faces.
The trees lining the path swayed gently in the summer breeze, their branches casting dappled shadows across the ground.
I had to chuckle thinking of our own saddlebred horses back in Kentucky.
They tended to be a little high-strung and sometimes spooked easy.
Dappled light on the ground could cause a horse to jump sideways in fright, but I always thought that’s what made riding them so interesting.
Birds trilled from the hedgerows, and in the distance, the faint rush of water caught my attention.
Fiona sat in the saddle like she was born to it, moving in rhythm with her horse’s easy stride, her body relaxed and at home in the moment.
I still wasn’t used to the sight of her like this—free, happy, her hair loose and wild, the sun catching strands of red and turning them to fire, and I wondered how I fell so hard, so fast.
I could’ve watched her like that for hours—completely at ease, lost in the peace of the ride—but then she turned, shooting me a grin over her shoulder.
“There,” she said, nodding toward a break in the trees with a meadow that dipped in the distance.
“Ye hear that?”
I did.
The sound of water tumbling over rocks was unmistakably louder.
A soft, gurgling melody that blended with the rustle of leaves in the breeze.
“Fancy a race?” she asked with a gleam in her eye.
I looked down at old Murphy and didn’t know if he had it in him, but I wasn’t about to pass up this opportunity for Fiona to run and for me to pursue her.
“You’re on,” I said, but the words were barely out before she kicked her horse’s flanks and took off like a shot.
I urged Murphy to do the same, but Fiona must have known the old boy had nothing in him.
As Fiona pulled away, my steed kept at a gentle canter as we followed her to the edge of a stream cutting through a meadow of wildflowers and low stone walls that were broken and crumbling in various spots.
The water wasn’t deep—just a shallow, winding ribbon of silver weaving through the landscape—but it was clear, the bottom lined with smooth stones, some catching the light like bits of glass.
The sun had miraculously stayed out the entire time and there wasn’t a gray cloud to be found.
It’s like the day had been planned to perfection, only for us.
Fiona dismounted near the bank in one graceful movement before looping her reins loosely over a low-hanging branch.
I followed, swinging down from the saddle and giving my horse a firm pat on the neck before leading him a few steps forward, letting him nose at the grass near the edge of the stream.
“Didn’t expect this,” I admitted, scanning the area.
The way the water moved with shimmering ripples made the whole place feel untouched—like something out of a dream.
“This is something else.”
Fiona smiled as she untied the burlap from her saddle.
“Best spot in all of Glenhaven.”
I walked up beside her, watching the way the sunlight made her hair look damn near copper.
She was right.
This place was beautiful.
But nothing held a candle to her.
“Tie Murph up and let’s eat,” she said as she worked at a thick plaid blanket tied to the other side of her saddle.
I did as requested and helped her spread everything out.
We sat side by side and ate corned beef sandwiches on thick rye bread and she told me stories of growing up at Glenhaven, particularly focusing on her bond with Siobhan since they were so close in age.
After, we stretched our legs out, shoulders barely touching, and Fiona tilted her head back as she inhaled the fresh air.
“God, I love this,” she murmured.
“The open land, the smell of summer. I feel like I can breathe out here.”
“I know what you mean,” I replied, glancing over at her.
Yet I wasn’t feeling her level of peace right now.
Staring at her made it hard to breathe.
Twisting her neck, she looked over at me and as her eyes caught the rays of the sun and glimmered like green gemstones, I saw the mischief within.
“Siobhan was waitin’ for me when I got home last night. She’d snuck into my room and was lyin’ in my bed like she used to when we were little.”
“She figured out where you’d been?”
“Oh aye,” Fiona said, grabbing a long blade of grass and twirling it around her finger.
“I barely got in the door before she started asking questions. And when I told her—not details, mind ye—she got all giddy like we were talkin’ about some grand fairy tale.”
I couldn’t help but chuckle, envisioning her sister lying in wait.
“She thinks it’s all so romantic,” Fiona mused, tucking her knees to her chest.
“Me sneakin’ out, ye sweepin’ me off my feet… She said I’m actin’ like a heroine in a love story.”
I looked at her, my grin fading into something softer.
“And are you?”
She held my gaze for a beat, then exhaled.
“I think so. But I’m not sure. I’ve never felt like this before.”
That was about the most mature thing any young woman in her position could say and I realized that Fiona wasn’t making impulsive decisions about her life.
I reached over, to touch a strand of her hair.
“That makes two of us.”
She leaned into my touch for a second before shifting to admire the water.
“At breakfast this morning, Da didn’t say a word about Brian. He was in a rush, barely glanced at me before leavin’. I think he assumes everything’s as he planned.”
I sighed, taking her hand in mine.
“He’s gonna find out, Fi. Sooner or later.”
She nodded.
“I know. I just don’t know what I’ll do when he does.”
I hated the uncertainty in her voice, the way she still held that thread of fear.
“We’ll handle it,” I promised.
“Together.”
A small smile tugged at her lips.
“Aye. No goin’ backward.”
We fell into easy conversation after that, eating apples from her bag as we watched the stream ripple and bugs skim across the surface.
At some point, I stretched out on my back, hands tucked behind my head, staring up at the clouds.
Fiona lay beside me, propped on her elbow, eyes twinkling.
“So,” she said, her smile soft and I got distracted by that mouth.
“Teach me somethin’ ye’d say in Kentucky.”
I raised an eyebrow.
“Like what?”
She shrugged.
“A phrase. Somethin’ ye’d say back home particular to yer culture.”
I smirked, thinking for a second before saying, “Well, in summer you’ll hear my mom complain it’s hotter than a goat in a pepper patch.”
Fiona giggled.
“A goat in a pepper patch? What does that even mean?”
God, I loved the sound of her laugh.
Light and carefree, with just enough husky warmth to make my pulse skip.
“No clue, but goats will eat anything, including hot peppers if they find their way into a patch. I suppose they’d be on fire after an all-out pepper buffet.”
Fiona laughed until she was in tears.
“What’s another one?”
I thought about my parents, my friends, my community.
As much as I loved this beautiful green country and the gorgeous Irish lass within it, I loved Kentucky to the depths of my soul.
“People will often say ‘If the creek don’t rise.’ It means, ‘I’ll do it, so long as nothin’ unexpected gets in the way.’ Back home we’ve got creeks that can flood real fast after a heavy rain. If that happens, roads get washed out, and you’re not going anywhere until the water goes down. So when someone says, ‘I’ll see you tomorrow, if the creek don’t rise,’ they mean, ‘I’ll be there—unless somethin’ outside my control messes it up.’”
Fiona tilted her head, considering it.
“So basically, it’s just a fancy way of sayin’ ‘If all goes well’?”
Grinning, I deepened my drawl in an exaggerated way.
“Out where I’m from, that’d be said clear as a bell down in the holler.”
Her forehead crinkles in confusion.
“Holler?” Fiona tilted her head.
“You mean shout?”
I laughed with gusto.
“It’s like you and I speak a different language,” I teased.
“Nah, not that kind. A holler’s a little valley where folks live—kind of like a glen.”
“What’s another?” she asked, flopping onto her back beside me.
There were so many but I wanted to hear that laugh again.
“If someone’s acting lazy, we say they’re ‘happier than a hog in slop.’”
That did the trick.
She laughed fully, shaking her head.
“That’s disgusting.”
I chuckled, rolling onto my side to face her.
“Come on, say it.”
She wrinkled her nose but humored me and even mimicked my drawl.
“I’m happier than a hog in slop right now.”
I laughed.
“Perfect. Now say, ‘I reckon.’”
“I reckon,” she repeated, with a fairly realistic Kentucky drawl.
“Now say, ‘I reckon Tommy Blackburn is the most handsome fella I ever did see.’”
She snorted, shoving my shoulder.
“I am not sayin’ that.”
I laughed, catching her hand before she could pull it away.
Our eyes met, and just like that, the playful moment turned into something else entirely.
My fingers curled around hers, my thumb brushing against the inside of her wrist.
“I reckon,” she murmured, her voice suddenly quieter, “that yer somethin’ special, Tommy.”
My throat went dry.
“That so?”
“Aye.”
The breeze stirred between us, lifting strands of her hair, making the moment feel like something stolen from time.
I lifted her hand to my lips, pressing a slow kiss to her knuckles.
“You’re beyond special, Fi.”
I wanted to say more—wanted to tell her I couldn’t imagine walking away from this, that I didn’t want whatever this was to end when summer did.
But I didn’t.
Not yet.
Instead, I pulled her closer, pressing a kiss to her forehead, lingering there for a moment before whispering, “We should probably head back before Rory starts wondering where you are.”
While he was more than happy to give me a bit of an extended lunch to go on a ride with Fiona, I have a bunch of work waiting for me at the training center.
She sighed, nodding reluctantly.
“Aye. Don’t want them thinking we’re happier than hogs in slop.”
I laughed, swatting her playfully as I stood and offered her a hand.
“C’mon, smart mouth.”
We packed up, mounted our horses, and started back toward Glenhaven.