Authors: Susan Krinard
Ulysses moved to Morgan's side. "I hope that Caitlin does not suffer a grave
disappointment," he said softly. "It is much worse than Harry admits.”
"I know.”
"You are remaining with us?”
"I will stay. I have no choice, do I?”
"I sometimes wonder," Ulysses said, "if Caitlin is not right, and there is a reason for such
events—one beyond our understanding.”
"Then whoever makes such reasons has no love for me—or you.”
" 'The heart has its reasons which reason knows not of.'“
"You are a fraud, Professor," Morgan said. "You still listen to your heart.”
"And you do not?”
Morgan turned on his heel and walked away.
The fire had drawn Niall, though he might have missed it had he not left his hotel for a
late-night stroll. Colorado Springs was not so great a town to ignore a good-sized
conflagration, especially when it was burning up a visiting circus.
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So Niall followed the crowds to the outskirts of town, where most of the blaze had
already been extinguished. He had not seen the circus perform, preoccupied as he had
been with the business he had recently completed in New Mexico, but he recognized
disaster when he saw it. He watched with detached curiosity as the circus people ran to
and fro, gesticulating and crying out as some new loss was discovered.
He could almost pity them. His father had suffered such setbacks in his early years of
business in Denver, but he had persevered and overcome them. He had been daring
and ruthless as well as shrewd, as one had to be in these times. Niall had carried on in
his footsteps. The Munroe fortune had doubled in the seven years since Niall had taken
control.
But he had started with an advantage. These people, vagrants and mountebanks, lived
on the edge of ruin. He doubted any of them would accept a decent, steady job in place
of the life they lived.
Once he had considered the wandering life himself. Once he'd had no thought of the
future beyond the next five minutes. Athena had paid for his folly. Now he spent every
day trying to make it right. And failing.
He pushed his hands into the pockets of his greatcoat and remembered his last
conversation with Athena. "Where did you get your hard heart, Niall?”
She simply could not understand. How could she, sheltered as she was? And he
intended to keep her that way. She had no conception of the dangers of the world, the
cruelties it held for a young woman foolish enough to believe she could change it.
Niall sighed and looked at the stars, visible now that the smoke had begun to clear.
When was the last time he had glanced up to notice the constellations, or walked for the
sake of walking? He took for granted what Athena was unable to do, because of him.
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Well, now he had an opportunity to prove Athena wrong about the nature of his heart, if
he chose to take it.
He dropped his gaze and followed a lone figure as it crossed the lot with a purposeful
stride. One of the performers. A woman—by no means curvaceous, almost childlike—
but graceful nonetheless. In fact, the way she moved was arresting, and he found
himself staring after her when she disappeared into one of the undamaged tents.
It wasn't until he was almost there that he realized he had been walking toward that very
tent. He stopped, considering retreat. This was not his world, or his business.
But his sudden impulse to help demanded that he find someone to accept his
generosity. He pulled his wallet from his pocket and examined the contents. A hundred
dollars would be more than adequate.
A head poked through the tent flap. It was crowned by an untidy cap of curly red hair,
and the face beneath was attached to the young woman he had followed.
She stared at him, nonplussed. He tipped his hat.
"Forgive me," he said, "but have I the pleasure of addressing one of the performers of
this establishment?”
The girl burst into laughter. "You talk like Ulysses. Who are you?”
It was his turn to be taken aback. That she could laugh at such a time amazed him, but
her bluntness was astounding.
"I beg your pardon," he said. "My name is Niall Munroe. I could not help but notice the
damage you have suffered as the result of the fire—”
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"Did you?" She stepped fully from the tent, and he got his first good look at her. His
initial impression had been correct: she was slight, boyishly slim in an oversized coat,
and elfin in size and bearing, but her eyes were bright and her smile dazzling. "And why
should you care, Niall Munroe?”
Indeed. He thought once more of walking away, but her eyes held him rooted to the
spot. "I had thought to offer my assistance," he said stiffly, "but if you have no use for it,
Miss—”
"Hughes. Caitlin Hughes. And I still wonder why a towny should care what happens to
people like us.”
Towny. She spoke the word like an epithet. He drew himself up to his considerably
greater height. "In Denver, it is customary for the fortunate to assist those who are less
so. When I noted the degree of your misfortune, I hardly thought that you would be likely
to reject any offer of help.”
"Oh." She widened her eyes. "I understand. You are a very rich man from the big city,
and you wish to give us charity.”
He slammed his hat back on his head. "I see I have offended you, so I will be on my
way—”
"No. Wait." She bit her full lower lip and sighed. "I'm—we are not very used to townies
offering help. Most of the time, they—" She broke off. "You'll have to speak to Harry.”
"Harry?”
"He is the manager and owner. I'm sure he'd be very happy to see you, Mr. Munroe.”
He had the absurd desire to ask her to call him Niall. "I would be obliged, Miss Hughes.”
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She flushed, raising freckles on her pale skin. He wondered again how he could
possibly find such a ragamuffin attractive.
Caitlin looked up the long, slim length of the gentleman and cursed herself for an idiot.
She knew as well as anyone that the troupe was in dire straits, even if she pretended
otherwise for Harry's sake. If some towny wanted to offer help, who was she to say no?
Even if all of the alarm bells in her head were going off at once.
Yet, she had to admit, this fellow was no ordinary towny. He was dressed like someone
with a great deal of money. He carried himself like a prince. He was handsome, in a
cold sort of way. And he looked at her with a strange intensity she couldn't ignore.
Morgan had that intensity. But when he looked at her, she saw only a friend. She felt no
prickling in her belly, nor heat in her cheeks.
"I'll tell him that you have come," she said, retreating quickly into the tent.
"Back so soon?" Harry said, looking up from the chaos of ledgers and papers he had
salvaged from the office wagon. His face was drawn and haggard. "What is it, Firefly?”
"There is a man outside—a towny—who
well, as peculiar as it seems, he wishes to
help us.”
"Indeed?" Harry pursued his lips. "That is peculiar. Well, send him in, by all means!”
Caitlin nodded and went outside to Niall Munroe. He was fidgeting, something she
hadn't expected to see in such a dignified gentleman. It made him seem more human,
somehow.
"Harry—Mr. French—will see you now," she said.
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"Thank you." He nodded and stepped into the tent.
Caitlin waited outside, pacing back and forth. The scent of burnt canvas and wood was
choking, but the tingling in her nerves only heightened her hope. Could Niall Munroe's
appearance be yet another miracle? Several months ago, she'd been certain that
Morgan had been meant to come when he did. Now her intuition was telling her the
same thing of the gentleman stranger.
Your intuition, or something much more physical?
She shook her head in self-disgust, but waited out the long hour while Munroe
consulted with Harry. Munroe emerged at last, settled his hat on his head, and buttoned
his coat against the night's chill. He did not seem surprised to find her still there.
"Good-night, Miss Hughes," he said. "We shall meet again.”
She flushed at his bow and looked elsewhere until he was some distance across the lot
and headed toward town. Harry appeared a moment later.
"You will not believe this, my dear, but we are saved yet again!”
"Saved?" she murmured.
"That gentleman, Mr. Munroe, has offered us an engagement in Denver, a private
performance for his family's orphanage. The Munroes are very important people in
Colorado—I have heard of them myself. They are extremely wealthy and influential. Mr.
Munroe's sister is quite a central figure in Denver society and does much good work. He
wishes to contribute to her charities in a most novel way. He has agreed to replace our
tents, provide us with a lot on land he owns, and pay us very well indeed. So well, in
fact, that it will more than make up for this night's losses.”
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"So much?" Caitlin could no longer see Munroe's form, yet she continued to search
against all reason. "It is so late in the season—”
"One last performance, and then we may have enough to winter over as we had
planned. How can we turn down such an opportunity?”
We can't. Of course we can't. Yet Caitlin felt a wild see-sawing of dread and
anticipation, as if she were attempting a new and very dangerous stunt.
"When are we to leave?" she asked.
"As soon as we can be ready. I shall call the troupers together at dawn and share the
good news." He clasped his hands. "Ah, it has turned out to be a much better night than
events would suggest! Who knows where such patronage might lead?”
Indeed. Harry always found the good in everything, but she felt the same sense of
anticipation.
Of one thing she was certain. Their lives were about to change—hers, Morgan's,
everyone's. She couldn't begin to guess where those changes were leading, but Fate
had intervened with a vengeance.
After tonight, nothing would be the same again.
The tall, familiar figure strode up the drive, and Athena rolled away from the parlor
windows to face the door. Niall had come home.
He had been gone a very long four months. Strange that in spite of their last argument,
she had missed him terribly. Not even the constant social and philanthropic
commitments had been completely successful in easing her loneliness.
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When did it begin? she asked herself, listening for the door and Brinkley's greeting.
When did I become
dissatisfied?
She could not pinpoint the precise day or date, but the feeling of emptiness had been
growing, and it troubled her. She had spent wasted hours looking out the window at her
friends and neighbors walking and riding in the crisp autumn air, and remembering what
it had been like to kick at piles of leaves and dash across the park on a high-spirited
horse.
But her friends and fellow Society members had been as attentive as always in their
visits, just as generous in their contributions. The orphans and poor folk still responded
to her visits with solemn gratitude. There was no good reason for her disaffection.
Surely it was the change of seasons that made her feel so restless. Now that Niall was
back, those troublesome emotions would dissipate. His opposition to much of her work
might even fire a renewed determination. Yes, that was what she needed—fresh
inspiration, something to fight for.
The front door opened. Brinkley's voice welcomed his employer home, and Niall's
footsteps echoed in the vestibule.
Athena sat up straight and had her best smile ready for him when he walked into the
parlor. She held out her hands.
"Niall, welcome home! It is so wonderful to have you back.”
He bent to take her hands and kissed them. "Athena. You are looking well—and lovely,
as ever.”
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Athena searched his face. He, too, was looking well; his ordinarily sober gray eyes were
almost sparkling, as if with some hidden mischief. They reminded her of the old days,
when Niall had been
when it had been so much easier for him to laugh. So much
easier for both of them.
"Sit down, and tell me all about your business," she said, signaling for the parlormaid to