Ever one to take advantage of a theme offered up helpfully
by the season, (for Valentine’s Day is just around the corner, in case the
copious amounts of heart-and-pink-filled shop fronts have managed to somehow slip
your notice), and so I offer here my own little romantic frippery for the
occasion.
“God’s blood!” She yelped in pain. A further series of
imaginative curses, which probably shouldn’t have sounded quite so well
practiced, followed her outburst. With eyes firmly shut she willed the
throbbing pain in her leg to disperse and then nearly shrieked in alarm when an
unknown voice asked,
“Are you all right?”
“Do I look all right?” She snapped back bad-temperedly, her
embarrassment at being discovered igniting immediately into annoyance. From her
splayed position across the frozen ground she glared up into a pair of amused
green eyes.
Or at least she thought they were green. Even with her eyes
now open she was unable to fully be sure. They would definitely be amused though
if the rich baritone of his voice was any indication. She had gotten quite good
in recent years at reading people’s tone. Her eyesight had deteriorated since
childhood, and unless she was right on top of something or someone they were
now a simply a blur of colour and movement. Explanation enough perhaps for why
she was at this moment sprawled inelegantly across the ice-covered ground.
Drat. She should have realised the previous day’s rain would
have turned to ice after the freezing fog had rolled off the mountains. And
double drat for she realised that she would probably need to ask this man for
help. Yet she held her tongue stubbornly refusing to do so.
“Could I be of any assistance?” He asked as if noticing her
inner conflict. He sounded undoubtedly sincere, but still she shook her head
defiantly, her voice as wintry as the weather.
“I am quite capable thank you.” It was her mantra she
supposed. The words she used to motivate herself when in difficulty. She didn’t
want and certainly didn’t ask for pity or assistance from anybody.
Once he had gone she could crawl or stumble or do whatever
her bruised body would allow, but she didn’t need an audience for that. So it
was with some disbelief that she realised that he had sat down beside her on
the freezing ground. Turning her head to him she frowned, hoping that he’d understand
and leave her to nurse her wounded leg and pride in peace. Instead he simply
smiled and said nonchalantly,
“I hope you don’t mind. The view is excellent from down here.”
Gritting her teeth she tried not to show how much this man irritated her. Her
fingers and toes were beginning to tingle from their contact with the cold
earth and she felt her muscles stiffening in weary protest. Shuffling a bit she
tried to covertly put some weight on her leg, grimacing to herself as pain
blazed a trail up the limb. She needed to get up and in order to do that she was
going to need his help. Curses. Wrestling with her pride and the pain she
eventually ground out,
“I can get up but I’m going to need something to lean on. Perhaps
if you could kindly shift that rock a little closer it might help.” She felt
him stand up and then the next thing she knew he was putting his arms around
her body and lifting her. She opened her mouth to object but he simply
chuckled and said,
“This is much easier for the both of us. I couldn’t move
that rock and you couldn’t get up. So let’s not argue about it.” She stiffened
in his arms,
“I am quite capable -”
“- So you said before.” He cut in to her heated protest with
quiet firmness. “But you’ve hurt your leg, and I don’t think you understand how
serious it is.” Alarm sparked within her and she tried to look down at her
legs, but she couldn’t see past the muddle of her woollen gown. It hurt like
the devil but she couldn’t tell and certainly couldn’t see from this angle how
badly injured she was.
Realisation sparked that this man must be a stranger to her,
someone who didn’t know of her affliction, for he had not said that she
couldn’t see how serious it was. He had thought her simply stubborn and stupid,
not stubborn and practically blind. A tiny flicker of remorse made her chew at
her bottom lip. She could be rude and abrasive when she thought people were
coddling her for the sake of her condition. He had after all only been trying
to help. She softened slightly allowing herself to relax in the comfort of his
arms.
She decided against making an explanation that would excuse
her lack of awareness. She wished to preserve for as long as possible this
semblance of normality. To be treated as others would be was rare indeed and
she savoured it. Just as she was also savouring the secure feeling of his arms
around her. He made light work of their journey, though she was certainly no
waif, and he walked with a calm surety, his thick boots providing a stable
purchase for them both on the slippery surface.
“Thank you.” She murmured
apologetically. He glanced down at her and as he did so the features of his
face finally became defined. Christ’s wounds he most definitely had green eyes. If she
were a poet she would write songs about those eyes. She blinked suddenly
feeling reticent under his gentle appraisal. She saw now the signs of that
amusement writ upon his face, but she also saw masked concern. Concern for her?
She waited for the familiar flutter of irritation but alongside it she felt a
flutter of something entirely different. Embarrassment and annoyance combined
to flush sudden heat across her cheeks under his steady gaze.
These images were borrowed from the incredibly pretty and inspiration-full
crafting blog Mollie Makes.