them during her brief stroll around the stables and corral. One was a mare about to foal, the other a full stallion, both with sleek chestnut coats and exquisite conformation. Sheâd wanted to ask Winthrop about them over scrambled eggs and steak that morning, but heâd been unapproachable. Frozen over, in fact, and she knew why without even being told. He didnât want her too close, so he was freezing her out.
Sheâd finished her two hours in the study, taking dictation from Gerald, and now cozy and warm in tailored gray slacks and a white pullover sweater, she was lazing around the corral looking for the horses. The stallion was there, but she didnât see the mare anywhere.
A noise from inside the big barn caught her attention. She couldnât see inside, but it sounded like a horseâs whinny of pain. It was followed by a particularly virulent curse from a voice she recognized immediately.
She darted into the dim warmth of the big barn, down the neat corridor between the stalls that was covered with pine shavings.
âWinthrop?â she called quickly.
âIn here.â
She followed his voice to the end stall. The mare was down on her side, making snuffling sounds, and Winthrop was bending over her, his sleeves rolled up, bareheaded, scowling.
âSomethingâs wrong,â she said, glancing at him.
âBrilliant observation,â he muttered, probing at the mareâs distended belly with tender, sure hands. âThis is her first foal and itâs a breech, damn the luck! Go get Johnny Blake and tell him I said to come here, I canât do this alone. Heâll beââ
âThe mare will be dead by the time I find him,â she said matter-of-factly. She eased into the stall, ignoring Winthrop as she gently approached the mare, talking softly to her with every step. While Winthrop watched, scowling, she slid down to her knees beside the beautiful, intelligent creature, watching the silky brown eyes all the while. She sat down then, reaching out to stroke the mare. And slowly, she eased under the proud head and slowly coaxed it onto her knees. She drew her fingers gently over the velvety muzzle, talking softly to the mare, gentling her.
âSheâll let you help her now,â she told Winthrop softly, never taking her eyes from the mareâs.
âYes,â he said, watching her curiously for a few seconds before he bent to his task. âI believe she might. Youâll ruin that fancy sweater,â he murmured as he went to work.
âBetter it than lose the foal,â she said, and smiled at the mare, talking gently to her all along, smoothing the long mane, cuddling the shuddering head, as Winthrop slowly worked to help the colt in its dark cradle. She knew instinctively that the mare would realize that she was trying to help, and not hurt her.
Minutes later, guided by patient, expert lean hands, hind fetlocks appeared suddenly, followed rapidly by the rest of the newborn animal. Winthrop laughed softly, triumphantly, as the tiny new life slid into the hay and he cleared its nostrils.
âA colt,â he announced.
Nicole smiled at him over the mare, amazed to find genuine warmth in his dark eyes. âAnd a very healthy one, too,â she agreed. Her eyes searched his softly, and then she felt herself beginning to tremble at the intensity of his level gaze. She drew her gaze away and stroked the mare again before she got slowly to her feet so that the new mother could lick her colt and nuzzle it.
âA thoroughbred, isnât he?â she replied absently, her eyes on the slick colt being lovingly washed by his mother. âThe stallion has a superior conformation. So does the mare. He might be a champion.â
âThe stallion is by Calhammond, out of Dame Savoy,â he said, frowning as he moved away to wash his hands and arms in a bucket of water with a bar of soap, drying them on a towel that hung over it. âHow
Justine Dare Justine Davis