Reno slid off Darlin’ in a rush. He stood close enough to Eve that she felt the heat of his chest against her leg as clearly as she had felt the heat of his thighs against her own. She had felt something else as well, but doubted her own senses. Surely a man couldn’t become aroused so quickly.
A glance told Eve she had indeed been correct. Once, Reno’s bold arousal would have embarrassed or unnerved her. Now it simply made heat splinter delicately through her. She remembered what it had felt like to give herself to Reno’s heat and strength and heady sensuality.
«Sugar girl, you do tempt a man,» he said in a deep voice.
«I do?»
«You sure do.»
«I’m just sitting here,» she pointed out.
«And looking at me like you’re wondering how I’d taste with butter and maple syrup,» Reno drawled.
Eve flushed, but couldn’t help laughing. She was still laughing when Reno pulled her out of the saddle and gave her a kiss that made her dizzy.
«I like having you look at me that way,» Reno said against her mouth. «I like it too damn much.»
He carried Eve the few steps to her horse.
«Mount up, gata. I’m going to have hell riding as it is.»
As Reno spoke, he lifted Eve into the saddle. Then he let go of her and turned away quickly, heading for his own horse once more.
«I didn’t mean to tease,» she said.
A curt nod as Reno mounted was his only answer.
«Couldn’t we…» Eve’s voice faded, then strengthened along with the color in her cheeks. «You’re hurting and I’m all right and there’s no reason we can’t…is there?»
Reno reined Darlin’ over to Eve and looked at her for the space of several heartbeats.
«There’s a reason we can’t,» he said.
The calm of Reno’s voice was belied by his smoldering green glance.
«Slater?» guessed Eve unhappily.
Reno shook his head. «I figure it will be at least two days before Crooked Bear cuts our sign again. The shaman figured it about the same, and he knows the land better than the Spaniards and Cal’s daddy combined.»
«Then why can’t we…?»
Despite the hunger knotting his guts, Reno smiled at the bright red on Eve’s cheeks.
«Because, sugar girl, the next time I get my hands on you, I’m not going to let go until neither one of us has enough strength left to lick our lips.»
EVE sat with her chin on her knees and her arms around her legs. A few feet beyond her boots, the land sheered away.
At the moment, Reno was exploring the head of the ravine that the shaman had told them would take them across a fringe of the stone canyon and then join with one of the old Spanish trails. If the trail was clear enough, they would ride by the ghostly light of the moon. If not, they would make a dry camp here, at the edge of the plateau.
Off to the west, the sun hovered a few degrees above the horizon. Below and in the distance, long, dense shadows flowed out from countless stone formations. Like the sun, the shadows moved, changing everything they touched, making and remaking the landscape in a slow-motion kaleidoscope of shifting colors and breathtaking vistas.
When footsteps approached, Eve didn’t have to turn around to know that it was Reno rather than some stranger walking up behind her. The unique rhythms of Reno’s steps had become a part of her, as had the sweet memories of a hidden pool and water braiding down cliffs of solid stone.
«Penny for your thoughts,» he said.
Smiling, Eve looked back out over the slow transformations of stone and shadow and sunset.
«I keep wondering,» she said, «how the maze got here and why it’s so different from everything I’ve ever seen.»
«I felt the same way the first time I saw it. I came across a government paleontologist about eight years ago, and he —»
«What’s that?» Eve interrupted.
«A paleontologist?»
She nodded.
«It’s a four-dollar word for a man who hunts bones so old, they’ve turned to stone.»
Eve made a sound of disbelief. «A stone bone?»
«It’s called a fossil.»
«Where do the bones come from?»
«Animals that lived a long, long, long time ago.»
A vague memory came to Eve, left over from a time when she had attended the orphanage school.
«Like the ‘terrible lizards’?» she asked.
Reno looked surprised. «Yes.»
Eve put her chin back on her knees.
«I thought the older kids were teasing me, but one of them showed me a photograph in a book,» she said dreamily. «It was a skeleton of a lizard standing on its hind legs. It was taller than a church steeple. I wanted to read the book, but somebody stole it before I could.»
«I’ve got the same book back at Willy and Cal’s ranch,» Reno said, «along with about fifty others.»
«Do any of them tell you how that happened?» Eve asked, gesturing toward the stone maze far below.
«Ever see a river undercut its bank until the bank topples, making a new shape to the river?»
«Sure. Floods do it even faster.»
«Think how it would look if the river cut through stone rather than dirt, and every tributary creek and stream cut through stone, and stone banks slowly were worn away, widening all the ravines more and more. …»
«Is that what happened here?»
Reno nodded.
«It must have taken a long time,» Eve said.
«Longer than anyone but God can imagine,» he said simply.
Into the silence came the slow exhalation of a wind that had touched nothing but time, distance, and stone.
«Somewhere out there lie the bones of animals so strange, they can scarcely be believed,» Reno said. «Out there are sand dunes turned to rock, and with them the tracks of animals that died a thousand thousand years before anything like man ever lived.»
«Eden,» Eve whispered. «Or Hades.»
«What?»
«I can’t decide if this is a demanding kind of paradise or a seductive kind of hell,» she said.
Reno smiled strangely. «Let me know when you decide. I’ve often wrestled with that question myself.»
In silence they watched patterns of light and darkness shift and re-form until the distant mesas looked like stone ships anchored in a shadow sea.
«It’s so unbelievable. …» Eve’s voice faded into silence.
«It’s no stranger than men building a boat that carries four people and goesunderwater.»
Eve gave Reno a startled look, but before she could say anything, he was talking again.
«It’s no stranger than the New Madrid earthquake that changed the course of the Mississippi,» he said. «It’s no stranger than Mount Tambora blowing its top and bringing the Year Without a Summer to Britain.»
«What?» she asked.
«It’s true. Byron even wrote a poem about it,» Reno said.
«Good Lord. If one little volcano was worth a poem, what would he have written about this?» she demanded, gesturing to the view in front of her.
Reno smiled wryly. «I don’t know, but I would have enjoyed reading it.»
The smile faded from Reno’s face as he said, «The world is all of a piece, all connected. It’s big, but it’s still only one place. Someday Rafe will figure it out and stop roaming.»
«And until then?»
«Rafe will be like the wind, alive only when he’s moving.»
«What about you?» Eve asked softly.
«I’ll be what I’ve always been, a man who puts his faith in the only thing that’s as valuable as it is incorruptible…tears of the sun god, the transcendent brought down to earth, the one thing that a man can count on in life. Gold.»
There was a long silence while Eve looked out on the land with eyes that would rather have cried. She should have expected Reno to say nothing else, but the depth of her pain told her that she had.
She had been seduced by passion and love. The passion had been returned to her redoubled.
The love had not.
Becoming Reno’s woman had changed the world for Eve. But not for him. He still had only one Golden Rule:
You can’t count on women, but you can count on gold.
Reno stood and held out his hand to Eve. He pulled her to her feet with an ease that made her wonder if he ever grew tired, ever felt he couldn’t take one more step, ever knew hunger or cold or sleeplessness.
«Time to go, sugar girl.»
«We’re not camping here?»
«No. The shaman was right about the trail. It’s so easy, we can do it by moonlight.»
As Reno walked back to the horses, Eve looked out over the beautiful, enigmatic maze once more.
«Ships of stone,» she whispered. «Why can’t Reno see you?»
17
Even after the moon set, the stars burned in such radiant profusion that ghostly shadows formed. Though as sheer as a veil, the shadows were nonetheless real.
Unhappily Eve concluded that, no matter how vague, starlight wasn’t exempt from Reno’s list of impossible demands.
A stone ship, a dry rain, and a light that casts no shadow.
She might have found an armada of stone ships, but the dry rain was as unattainable as ever. The shadowless light was also beyond her reach.
One of the hobbled horses snorted, disturbing Eve’s gloomy thoughts. She turned in her bedroll, blaming her sleeplessness on the hard ground rather than on her depressing reflections.
But the ground wasn’t any harder than it had ever been. Turning over didn’t make her more comfortable. It simply gave her a better view over the ashes of the campfire.
Reno’s powerful, broad-shouldered silhouette was looming unmistakably against the stars. His bare chest and feet were a lighter shade of darkness. Obviously he was ready for bed but not ready for sleep.
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