Seated on a patched old quilt amid the spectators, watching the men’s baseball game enter its eighth inning, Olivia felt nearly toasted through. The sun beat down on her head. The spectators packed close together, increasing the ambient temperature. The fabric of her springtime coat seemed to have doubled in thickness since she’d first put it on that morning.
She’d never had a more daft idea than wearing it. Or, rather, wearing the ensemble she’d dressed in beneath it. But since Olivia didn’t want anyone to know what she’d foolishly outfitted herself in that morning—in a fit of optimism, no doubt—she huddled in her coat, holding a small homemade pennant.
As handcrafted as it was, her miniature pennant added a certain jollity to the proceedings. Emblazoned with the symbol of Griffin’s adopted team and joined with everyone else’s similar pennants and banners, it demonstrated a certain sense of sportsmanship and town loyalty that she was proud of. Later, she’d switch pennants and cheer on her own female team. But now, while the men played, Olivia was strictly a spectator.
Not that she’d be much more than that later, she thought wryly, remembering Griffin’s urgings that she play in today’s game. Like every other baseball game, Olivia had planned to spend this one as an onlooker. As much as she yearned to play, she couldn’t risk unleashing her own vigor and competitiveness.
Women were only allowed to compete for the title of Best Jam in the county fair or Most Finely Stitched in displays of fancy needlework. To compete in other arenas only suggested an unfeminine thirst for accomplishment...not that that particular truism had ever stopped Grace Murphy from achieving amazing feats, Olivia mused as she spied the suffragist standing to the side, all while being married to her saloonkeeper husband.
Watching alertly as Grace gave Jack Murphy a distinctly robust cheer, Olivia couldn’t help being intrigued. Her husband seemed to love everything about her. Even as Sheriff Caffey issued Grace a chastising look—bringing his helper, Deputy Winston, in on his very public censure—Jack Murphy only smiled. It was clear that he respected Grace because she was herself. No matter what anyone else thought of her antics.
“The players are quite virile, aren’t they?” someone asked, breaking into Olivia’s thoughts. “Especially my Mr. Davis.”
At that, Olivia returned her attention to her own group of friends, situated on her worn quilt. Adeline Wilson sat prettily beside Olivia. She was the one who’d just spoken, and she looked as beautiful as she always did, especially while mooning over her longtime beau, Clayton Davis. The lumber-mill sawyer stepped up to bat. He aimed a lovelorn look at Adeline.
She returned it unabashedly. “Hit a home run, Clay!”
She watched raptly as he did so. She clapped for him.
“Well done!” Olivia clapped, too. “My, he’s very good!”
“Yes.” Still watching her sweetheart run toward second base, Adeline nodded. “I only wish Clayton was half as good at tendering a marriage proposal as he is at clobbering a ball with a bat.” She slanted Olivia a bemused look. “I don’t know what his holdup is, but I’m running out of patience, to be sure.”
“He must have a very good reason for waiting,” Olivia assured her. Privately, she considered Adeline to be the most attractive woman in town—far more beautiful than Olivia herself. She couldn’t fathom what would prevent any reasonable man from proposing to her. “You’ll just have to be patient, I guess.”
“I guess,” Adeline grumbled good-naturedly. “For now...”
From beside Adeline, their mutual friend Violet Benson only gave a silent nod. While the game continued, so did their conversation. It hardly seemed fair, they agreed, that the men were allowed to play first, when the women were also keen. But that had been the compromise Grace had finagled with the league.
The menfolk simply weren’t willing to allow anything more. As it was, most of the spectators drifted away after the men’s game was finished. At the moment, though, the crowd was large.
It was a little too large for Olivia’s liking—for the ill-advised plan she’d initiated for herself this morning. Facing a field full of almost everyone she knew, from her father to the Pioneer Press’s editor, Thomas Walsh, was unnerving at best.
To her left sat Mr. Walsh’s sister, the famous cookery book author, Daisy Walsh, who was visiting Morrow Creek for a spell and had decided to accompany little Élodie Cooper—daughter of the livery stable owner, widowed Owen Cooper—to the game. Both ladies, larger and smaller, applauded their menfolk. Near them, Miss Mellie Reardon appeared to root for the town’s newspaper editor with a special enthusiasm. As a part-time typesetter at the press office, she had reason to be enthusiastic, but it seemed to Olivia that there was more than genial interest in Mellie’s cheering. Watching her, Olivia couldn’t help hoping she snared Mr. Walsh for her own, as she clearly wished to do.
“Ooh!” Violet elbowed Olivia in the ribs. “Here’s your Mr. Turner, coming up to bat.” She watched avidly as Griffin approached the plate. “He’s playing with such heart, isn’t he?”
At Violet’s sincere remark, Olivia smiled. “That’s a diplomatic way of describing it.” She couldn’t tear away her gaze from Griffin’s masculine form, displayed to advantage by his athletic stance and slightly too form-fitting clothing. He’d borrowed those togs, but Olivia couldn’t complain about the result. “I can promise you, Mr. Turner does everything in that fashion—as though he intends to win big or go down swinging.”
“I admire that about him.” Violet put her chin in her hand, gazing at Griffin as though she admired more than his determined attitude. She sighed. “He was very nice to me, you know.”
Ah. With relief, Olivia remembered Griffin’s gracious encounter with Violet on the day of the handicrafts show. Likely, that was all she meant. “Yes. He is quite nice.”
He’s especially nice when he’s kissing me, she couldn’t help thinking...and daydreamed through his first turn at bat.
Reassembling her attention, Olivia tried harder for Griffin’s next attempt. So far today, he’d missed more balls than he’d hit, but that hadn’t unsettled him in the least.
“He’s quite...unusual looking, isn’t he?” ventured Daisy Walsh as she handed a rag doll to little Élodie. “His nose—”
“Is perfectly fine for his face,” Violet stated bluntly.
“A big nose indicates big...appetites,” Adeline added, leaning forward with a saucy eyebrow waggle. “It’s manly.”
Shocked by her brazenness, Olivia could only gawk as the other women in her group chimed in. One declared Griffin to be rugged. Another proclaimed him impressive. A third merely fanned herself with a bit of newsprint, watching Griffin bat.
Through it all, Daisy Walsh sat plainly mystified. She exchanged baffled glances with Élodie. They both shrugged.
“I guess you have to be a local to understand,” Daisy said.
“Or a grown-up,” Élodie added wisely. “Like my papa.”
As Daisy’s cheeks colored in response to that remark, Olivia frowned at all of them—except ten-year-old Élodie, of course. She couldn’t help feeling that Griffin was her man to appreciate. Hers alone. Protectively, she watched him bat again.
He swung hard. He missed mightily. His ensemble of admirers gave a collective “aww” of commiseration. Irked, Olivia frowned.
“Smash it, Griffin!” she yelled through cupped hands, having had enough of poise. “You can do it! Hurray, Griffin!”
A wave of incredulity swept through the crowd, strong enough to make Olivia’s cheeks heat. But she just...didn’t care.
Importantly, Griffin did care. He’d heard her. He winked at her, and then he pulled down his hat and prepared a sockdolager.
Olivia held her breath. Griffin wound up. He swung.
This time, his bat connected with the ball. In fact, it connected hard enough to splinter the bat in pieces—but not before the baseball soared into the sky toward left field.
Griffin stared. Then he ran.
Olivia leaped ecstatically to her feet.
Barely aware of her own actions, she jumped up and down, watching Griffin make a triumphant run around the bases. He was full of power and might, grinning like a conqueror, running hard. His black hat flew off. It wheeled away in the breeze.
Still Griffin kept running. With his face wholly revealed, he powered his way past third base. He was heading home.
“Go! Go! Go!” Olivia shrieked, waving her arms. “Go!”
When he cleared home base, Olivia thought she might swoon from excitement. Clapping madly, she hurtled herself toward the improvised wooden bench where the baseball players sat.
She was in Griffin’s arms an instant later. Laughing with delight, she hugged him. “You did it! You were magnificent.”
Still hatless, with his dark, unruly hair half-undone from its leather tie and his skin glistening with sweat, Griffin gave an offhanded shrug. “That’ll show those glasshouse boys for not letting me onto their damn team.” Full of pride, he cupped her face in his big, dirt-smudged hands. He grinned. “You did root for me. I heard you all the way on the field.”
“Half the town heard me,” Olivia joked, still struck by the fact that the reason Griffin hadn’t ever played baseball wasn’t—as she’d assumed—because he hadn’t wanted to join in. It was because he wasn’t allowed to join in. Her heart went out to him.
“Ahem.” Nearby, one of the male players cleared his throat. “Can we proceed, Turner?” he asked facetiously. “Or do you plan on spooning with your sweetie some more first?”
Like startled cats, Olivia and Griffin leaped apart.
That didn’t stop the entire bench of players from laughing.
Or dissuade the whole pile of spectators from hooting.
Well, it was too late for decorum now, Olivia decided, casting her friends and neighbors a discomfited glance. She needed to show Griffin a little of her true self, didn’t she? Otherwise, he’d be duped into marrying someone she wasn’t.
At that thought, she went still. She didn’t want to fool Griffin. She only wanted to love him. If the woman she was wasn’t good enough for that—with her love of science and fiddles, inventions and baseball, philosophy and books—well, if she wasn’t good enough, Olivia thought with a sudden burst of rebellious courage, she might as well learn that hard truth now.
Because, true to her challenge to him at the handicrafts show, Griffin had appeared in public while hatless and wearing nonblack clothes. He had changed his ways. Olivia could see with her own eyes the tight-fitting tan britches and white Henley shirt he’d borrowed for the baseball game. As for his hat...
Well, it might never be recovered. The wind had it now.
Further, it occurred to her, it had been days since she’d last glimpsed Griffin drinking whiskey. It had been even longer since he’d smoked a cigarillo. For her sake, he’d left his hotel suite and gotten to know Morrow Creek. He’d trusted her.
Wasn’t it time, Olivia wondered, that she trusted him?
You must show yourself, she remembered him saying while urging her to claim her inventions as her own. Otherwise, you’ll never really be happy. Suddenly, she believed it was true.
“I’m sorry. We’re finished,” Olivia told the other player. She recognized him as local rancher Everett Bannon, whose meddlesome vaqueros had doubtless accompanied him to town today. They were a famously interfering lot of cowboys—unrepentantly so—but they all meant well. Olivia turned to Griffin. “You’d better get back to it,” she advised him. “As soon as you men are finished playing, the ladies on my team have some fantastic athletic feats to show you. See? I’m already prepared.”
Bravely, Olivia unbuttoned her coat. She removed it.
At the sight of what she’d worn beneath it—what she’d fearfully hidden all day, only to reveal now—Griffin’s eyes widened. “Your lady’s rational cycling skirt! You wore it.”
“I thought it would be ideal for many different sporting activities,” Olivia said. “It’s a flawless fit, too. I sized the prototype to my own specifications. It was only convenient.”
Griffin’s approving gaze said he agreed. Unreservedly.
The increasingly impatient grumbling of the crowd said otherwise. The spectators and players wanted to continue.
Olivia could cope with their impatience—and even with their potential disapproval—she realized. Because as long as she believed she was doing the right thing, she was. For her.
Not that her father’s shocked face in the crowd didn’t give her a moment’s pause. It did. But she smiled at him...and Henry Mouton gamely smiled back. He was absentminded. But loving, too.
“Good luck!” Olivia curtsied in her shirtwaist and clever divided skirt. She slung her lightweight coat over her arm, done with it now. “I’m sorry for the interruption. Please, carry on!”
The players did, even as Olivia tromped gamely over to the ladies’ practice area of the field. There, the former Crabtree sisters—Grace, Sarah and Molly—greeted her with enthusiasm.
“Your sporting costume is ingenious!” Grace marveled, clearly wanting one of her own. “I should have guessed, when Molly was cutting it and Sarah was sewing it, that its creation was your doing, Olivia. You’ve always been so imaginative.”
“Your Mr. Turner brings out something special in you,” Sarah added with a gentle smile. “I can see it, plain as day.”
“I knew my spice cake could work magic!” Molly finished, cheerfully handing Olivia a bat to practice with. “Next thing you know, it’ll be wedding bells for you two! Mark my words.”
Hoping Molly was right, Olivia rested her bat on her shoulder. In thought, she turned to watch Griffin on the bench.
He wiped his brow. He saw her. He smiled broadly at her.
As one, all the women on Olivia’s quilt audibly sighed.
Well, that clinched it. For better or worse, Olivia realized, her infatuation with Griffin was public knowledge.
She turned back, intending to practice her batting swing...and met the three sisters’ inquisitive gazes instead.
Grace, in particular, appeared full of questions.
“So,” she said directly and without preamble, “exactly why do they call Mr. Turner The Tycoon Terror?”