His lips curved as he brushed them over her hair. "Neither do I."
"So we'll make a pact. Whatever happens, neither of us will make the other feel stupid."
"I can agree to that." He lifted her chin for another kiss. "Why don't I walk home with you?"
"All right."
She couldn't help it. She felt stupid and sentimental walking hand in hand with him through the woods, aware of every beam of sunlight, every scent, every sound. She would have sworn that she could hear the leaves growing overhead and the wildflowers struggling toward the sun.
Love, she mused, honed the senses.
"I have to pick up Bryan in a little while." She glanced over. "I can call Cassie and rearrange things."
He knew what she was offering, and could feel the blood humming under his skin. When he brought their joined hands to his lips, he saw the flash of surprised pleasure in her eyes. Not yet, he told himself. Not quite yet.
"We'll both pick him up. What do you say to an early movie, and pizza after?"
She couldn't look at him now, not the way her throat was aching. She knew what he was offering. "I'd say great," she managed. "Thanks."
"Jared's cool." Bryan bounced into the top bunk of his bed, his mind full of scenes from the action flick, his belly stuffed with pepperoni pizza. "I mean, man, he knows everything about baseball, and stuff about the farm and the battlefield. He's even smarter than Connor."
"You're no slouch, Ace." She tousled his hair.
"Jared says everybody's got a special talent."
Interested, Savannah leaned on the edge of the bed so that her face was level with her son's. "He did?"
"Yeah, when we went to get popcorn. He said how everybody's got something inside than makes them different. He knows on account of he has three brothers and they're a lot alike, but they're different, too. He said I'm a natural."
She grinned. "A natural what?"
"Mom." Rolling his eyes, Bryan sat up in bed. "At baseball. And you know what else he said?"
"No. What else did he say?"
"He said how even if I decided not to be a major-leaguer I could use the stuff I know in other things. Of course, I'm going to be a major-leaguer, but maybe I'd be like a lawyer, too."
"A lawyer?" She felt a little flutter of panic. Her son was falling in love as quickly as she was.
"Yeah, 'cause you get to go to court and argue with people and put criminals in jail. But you have to go to school forever, I mean until you're old. Jared went to college and to law school and everything."
"So can you, if that's what you want."
"Well, I'm going to think about it."
He flopped back down, curled into his pillow in a way that comforted her as much as him. It was the gesture of a child. He was still her little boy.
"Night."
"Good night, Bry." She pressed her lips to his temple and lingered over it a moment or two longer than usual. Long enough to make him squirm sleepily.
She rose, turned off his light, then closed his door, because he liked his privacy.
Her son the lawyer, she thought, and rubbed her hands over her face. With a mother who'd never finished high school.
Then, as the panic gave way to a warm glow of pride for what her son might one day achieve, she smiled.
She walked quietly to her own room and moved to the window to look out at the woods. Through them, she could see the lights of the MacKade farm. And there, she thought, was the man she'd fallen in love with.