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Authors: Pamela Morsi

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Spring in full bloom all around them and the sweet smell of honeysuckle wafting- through the air, the attractive young couple sat together on a whitewashed bench beneath the enveloping shade of a giant silverieaf maple.

"Can I get you some more lemonade?" Sophrona asked him.

The Tewksburys' parsonage was a mere stone's throw from where they sat, but it was the closest thing to privacy Cleav had been able to manage.

Glancing into his empty glass, Cleav thought Miss Sophrona's recipe for lemonade relied a good deal too heavily on sugar.

"No, thank you," he answered politely. "It's wonderful but I believe I've had enough."

Miss Sophrona was gowned in somber blue, which may have reflected her mood. It had been over a week since the fiasco of the taffy pull, and Cleav was just beginning to work himself back into Miss Sophrona's good graces. There had been no open discussion of the troubles between them. And that was fine with Cleav. He had no idea how to explain, and he was hoping that he wouldn't be expected to do so.

At least today the dangerous Miss Crabb was nowhere in sight. He wished she'd made herself equally as scarce on the previous Saturday.

After his hasty retreat from the clover-covered hillside with Esme, Cleav had arrived at the parsonage an hour late. He was not surprised to find the house deserted. Sophrona had waited as long as she could and finally gone on with her parents. Cleav had followed miserably and alone.

It might have worked out. Sophrona was so honest herself, the potential for deceit in others rarely entered her mind.

When Cleav arrived at the party, he found her gaily immersing herself in the infectious laughter that was inevitable when a dozen pairs of buttered hands are passing and pulling at a glob of hot candy.

"I'm so sorry I'm late," he apologized immediately.

Sophrona's smile was open and forgiving. "I know. I told Daddy that it must have been your mother's ill health that detained you."

Cleav did attempt not to lie deliberately. "Mother is feeling better this evening," he told her. "And, of course, she sends her love."

Scooting over, Sophrona made a place for him beside her on the bench. Within minutes Cleav's hands were washed and buttered, and he, too, was laughing and joking as the sticky sweet came his way.

As the young people worked the taffy, children ran around trying to steal a sweet bite, even though it was still hot enough to burn their mouths. The older folks stood watching and talking, some remembering the days of their own youthful exuberance, others gossiping about the current crop of courting couples. Armon Hightower and the Crabb twins came in for more of their share of the speculation. Hightower had arrived with one twin on his arm but was now sitting between both of them, apparently quite content with this double dose of feminine attention.

Yo Crabb played a lively tune that caused more than one foot to tap with an unspoken wish that dancing was not one of Reverend Tewksbury's most oft-preached-upon sins.

It was just bad luck, Cleav decided later, that the lull in the music coincided with the late, unexpected arrival of Esme Crabb. It was not so much that Esme rarely showed up for social occasions, since up to now she'd shown a patent disinterest in gentlemen callers. The problem was her altered appearance captured every eye in the place.

Armon Hightower blurted out what everyone else was thinking. "Don't you look pretty as spring!"

The made-over dress was attractive, and Esme's long ringlets were now tossed casually by her run through the meadow. She glowed with pretty disarray in the light of the Chinese lanterns. But what set off the young woman's beauty most effectively was the wild garland of clover and phlox that was draped around her.

"Oh, doesn't she look lovely?" Sophrona asked Cleav in a delighted whisper. "And in my old dress, too. I'm so pleased."

Cleav found himself unable to reply. She was pretty, but he was determined to keep his eyes on Sophrona Tewksbury.
She
was the woman in whom he was interested.

The music started up again, and a place was made for Esme in the circle. More than one of the young swains gave Esme a long, thoughtful look.

"That's a pretty wildflower chain," Elmer Crossbridge, a blond and buck-toothed young fanner, observed, giving himself an excuse to scrutinize Esme's bosom. "Must have taken you a goodly amount of time to make it." Esme glanced proudly down at the artistic creation. She thought it was pretty, too. The prettiest thing she had ever seen. And the prettiest part of it was the wild phlox that was woven in.

"Cleavis helped me," she blurted out with pleasure.

"Cleavis?" Crossbridge raised a speculative eyebrow at the unwarranted familiarity.

"Mr. Rhy, that is," Esme hastily corrected, her face flaming at her indiscreet blunder. But the damage was already done.

Cleav's face was as white as Esme's was red, and Sophrona was staring at him as if she'd never seen him before.

Now, after a week of trying to explain away the incident to Sophrona's father, Cleav found himself at last welcome in her presence.

"So what is your opinion, Mr. Rhy?" Sophrona was asking. "Do you think that the serpent in the garden walked on legs, or was he just the kind of snake we see today?"

Cleav hated thorny, Biblical catechism. Miss Sophrona, however, seemed to thrive on such. So he forced his brain to participate. "Well, the Bible does state that he was condemned to slither across the ground. That infers that it was not the serpent's original state," he said.

"Then you think the serpent in the garden was just another type of lizard?" she asked.

Cleav hesitated, bating to be pinned down.

"No," he hedged. "The serpent didn't
have
to be a lizard. It could have been any kind of creature prior to being used by the devil."

"What an interesting idea!" Sophrona exclaimed. As she postulated on the possibilities, Cleav's attention wandered.

Not five feet away from them an incongruous sight captured Cleav's attention. At the foot of the maple tree, propped neatly against the rough, dark bark, was a pair of very worn men's work shoes. Peeking out the tops were some nearly threadbare black wool stockings.

His first thought was how strange it was to find such an item in the Tewksburys' very neatly kept yard. Then he was struck by how oddly familiar the shoes and stockings happened to be. With a sinking feeling of dread, Cteav slowly, casually, without drawing attention to himself, leaned backward and allowed his gaze to drift upward.

Dangling from a sturdy limb almost directly above them was a pair of long, shapely, bare legs that Cleav definitely should not have recognized as easily as he did.

"I suppose it would have to be some animal that no longer exists," Sophrona was saying. "Do you think it would have been in the reptile family?" she asked.

Cleav jerked his eyes and his thoughts back to the woman at his side. Struggling for an answer to her question, all he could think about was how shocked she would be to know Esme Crabb was spying on them. How could he explain it? And God only knew what Esme herself might say. The woman had about as much tact and social sense as one of his fishes.

"Miss Sophrona," he blurted out finally. "I believe I will have another glass of your lemonade."

Since he'd interrupted her musings, Sophrona cocked her head quizzically at him but recovered quickly and reached for the glass he offered.

" 'If he thirst, give him drink,''' she quoted with a cheery giggle as she rose to get Cleav another glass of refreshment.

Watching her retreat, Cleav never allowed his eyes to stray to the intruder in the tree above him. In his mind, however, the slim bare calves and ankles waved before him like a red cape before a bull.

Only when he saw Sophrona step into the house and close the door behind her did he look up into the tree.

"What do you think you're doing?"

Esme looked down through her leafy camouflage to the stormy visage of the man seated below her.

"Just enjoying the beautiful day," she answered innocently.

In truth, Esme was almost as horrified as Cleav about her present location. She'd watched Cleav hurrying to call on Miss Sophrona, and she just had to follow.

She'd just wanted to observe them, she'd assured herself. Or rather to observe
him
. The taffy pull had been a definite setback, and Esme knew she needed to regroup. Esme wanted to see this side of his nature, Cleavis the suitor. She wanted to watch and learn and imagine what it was going to be like
when
he finally came calling on her. She couldn't bear to think the word was really
if
. And she wanted to see if he was as hesitant in kissing Sophrona as he was in kissing her.

Seeing the maple tree a goodly distance from the house but within hearing of the porch, she'd scrambled. She assumed the couple would pass their afternoon on the Tewksburys' slatted swing. Esme was more than a little chagrined to find them taking their ease directly below her spying perch.

There was no humor in Cleav's grin. "You just happened to be enjoying it while hidden in a tree in Miss Sophrona's yard?"

His question didn't require an answer, but Esme gave a halfhearted one anyway. "I'm not
hidden
," she insisted with only a slight blush at the fib. "Anyone who looks up in this tree could see me."

Cleav nodded in apparent agreement. "Except that no one with any sense in the world would think to look for young women peeping from trees."

"You did!" she shot back.

"It's because I've come to know you." His explanation was terse, and his eyebrow was raised in disdain.

Esme felt the roses building in her cheeks but could think of no snappy comeback.

"Actually," Cleav continued, "it was your shoes that gave you away." He made a gesture toward her discarded footwear. "Aren't you aware that young women of your age do not go around bare-legged?''

His heated disapproval was clearly based on the distraction the sight of those legs was causing him. As Esme realized this, her embarrassment began to fade and a sly smile came to her lips.

"You can't climb a tree in shoes and stockings," she answered him reasonably. "When a woman's got a choice of modesty or breaking her neck," she told him, shifting casually on the thick tree limb, "then it's bare-legged every time!"

Cleav opened his mouth for a scathing reply, but forgot what he was going to say. Esme threw her right leg over the limb, straddling the thick brown tree branch. Her skirts bunched around her, giving an ample display of her bare legs and a tantalizing glimpse of the edge of the leg of her cotton drawers.

As Cleav's mouth hung open in shock, Esme tested the strength of her new power, casually bending forward and arching her back in what she hoped was a seductive pose.

To Cleav, it looked as if she were trying to wiggle herself closer to the hard, thick wood that she cushioned so intimately between her thighs. He swallowed the lump that formed in his throat.

"I'm not really spying," Esme said. "I'm just interested in how a gentleman courts a lady."

With deliberate casualness Cleav crossed one leg over his knee.

"Well, now that you've found out what you wanted to know," he told her, "why don't you get down from that tree and get out of here before Miss Sophrona gets back."

Esme disliked his terse order. She disliked his eagerness to be alone with Sophrona even more.

Her smile was a tease. "Leave so soon?" she asked with

mock astonishment. "Before anything has even happened? Now, that would be foolish."

"Nothing is going to happen," Cleav answered, his words cold and precise.

"Nothing?" Esme sighed loudly in disappointment. "If that's all that gentlemen do, save to graces, I can't imagine why any man would want to be one!"

"What do you mean?"

"I mean the boys on the mountain, the ones that court the twins, are always sparking and trying to steal a kiss."

She leaned forward, lying on her stomach upon the thick, burly limb. She raised her legs to drape leisurely along the rough brown bark.

"It looks to me that gentlemen don't have near so much fun."

Bending her knee saucily, she waved one long bare foot in the air. Her wide-eyed grin was downright impertinent.

"Instead of sparking, you're Bible-talking. Do you truly care about what kind of critter was in the Garden of Eden?''

As Cleav gazed up at the long-limbed beauty in the tree, there was no doubt in his mind what kind of animal the devil would have used to tempt
him
.

"Relevant theological discussion broadens the intellect and lightens the soul," he replied arrogantly.

Esme giggled, but her voice was smooth as honey. "There you go, talking prissy again."

"I do not talk prissy!" He raised his voice in anger before glancing guiltily toward the house. "I do not talk prissy," he repeated quietly.

"I'm not complaining," Esme assured him. "I told you that I like that prissy talk."

Cleav sighed loudly with exasperation. "Oh, well, thank you very much."

Esme ignored his sarcasm.

"I suspect Miss Sophrona does, too," she added, casually surveying her fingernails. "Or she'd sure lose patience with all that talking and no kissing at all."

"What!" Cleav nearly choked.

"I said—"

"I heard what you said!" Cleav gave a hasty glance toward the house. "Miss Sophrona is a very proper young lady. A lady who can appreciate a gentleman's favor and regard."

Esme was skeptical. "I'm betting she'd consider it a favor if you'd give a bit of kissing and sparking more regard."

Her criticism of his wooing abilities stung. "Our courtship is no concern of yours."

"Of course not. I'm just trying to give you some advice."

"I do not
need
any advice."

"Well, you need something. The two of you are like to bore each other to death."

"Miss Sophrona and I are eminently suitable," he stated flatly.

Esme was not sure what he meant by that. "Suitable" was wearing a black dress to a funeral. She'd never heard the word used concerning sparking or marrying. Was courting really so different for ladies and gentlemen?

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