Take Care, Sara

“Liar.” She was almost to him.


“It has a much nicer disposition.”

Sara stopped before him, smelling sunlight and sweat, and underneath that, Lincoln. Emotions welled up, threatened to burst through her and expose all she felt.

“Why are you here, Sara?” Lincoln repeated slowly, his eyes locked with hers. There was something in his expression, a vulnerability she’d never seen before. Her heart squeezed.

“I’m leaving.”

He stiffened, his eyes, his face, everything shutting down. “What?”

Sara brushed hair from her face with a trembling hand. “I got a temporary place up north. I’m going to stay there for a month or so, maybe two. The house…” she trailed off, her throat tightening.

“What about the house?”

“I’m going to accept an offer on it tomorrow. I’m getting rid of everything, Lincoln. I’m…” Sara stopped when Lincoln showed her his back. It was taut, sculpted, and shaking. Her fingers yearned to touch him, to trace a pale thin scar on his left shoulder blade, to take the quiver from it.

“You’re leaving,” he said in a dead voice.

“Only for a little while. Just until…until I have things sorted out.” Sara watched his back move with the force of his breaths.

Lincoln turned and glared at her. “What is there to sort out?”

You. I’m scared of what I feel for you. I don’t know how to accept it yet. I’m scared of what you feel for me. The way you look at me; like I’m everything, it scares me. When I look at you, I’m lost in you. I’m trying to find myself and I can’t do that with the distraction of you. You consume everything. But she couldn’t say any of that.

Sara swallowed, glancing down. Her throat was dry. “Me, Lincoln. I need to sort me out.”

“Up north where?”

“I don’t know if—if I should tell you,” she said, looking down at the ground.

“Afraid I’ll follow you? Don’t worry. I won’t.” His words were cold, final, and they hurt.

Sara’s eyes jerked to his and Lincoln looked away from the pain on her face, his expression ashamed. “That was uncalled for.”

“You leaving is uncalled for,” he snapped back. Lincoln closed his eyes, taking a deep breath. “God, I’m saying all the wrong things,” he groaned. Lincoln rubbed a hand on the back of his head. “I feel like we’re going around in a circle, you and I. If you know you don’t feel the same as I do, if you know there’s no chance for us, at least tell me, Sara. You don’t have to escape Boscobel to escape me. I’ve kept my distance, for you. It kills me, but I’ve done it. I’ll leave you alone, if that’s what you want. Is that what you want?” Lincoln’s pain-filled eyes met hers.

It broke. Whatever had been keeping her emotions in check shattered and Sara reached for him, feeling complete, centered, only when she finally held him. Lincoln’s skin was hot and hard against hers, wet with sweat, and when his fingers gripped her waist, digging into her flesh, when the hardness of his body was flush with the softness of hers, Sara was lost again. Or found. Maybe Sara had to be lost in him to find herself.

“I love you, Sara, love you so much,” he murmured into her ear, his hands holding her face steady as Lincoln studied her. “I love you,” he repeated, his words thick with the truth of it.

Sara blinked her eyes and tears slid down her cheeks. She couldn’t say it. She loved him; she loved Lincoln, and Sara couldn’t say it. She’d always loved him; that hadn’t changed, but the way she loved him; that had. So much.

He stepped away, dropping his hands from her. She fought the need to touch him again. Lincoln’s face was blank, his eyes dim. Her heart cried at the devastation in the set of his shoulders, in the way he held his head. Sara wanted to ask him to wait for her, to not give up on her, but that wouldn’t be fair to him.

“Have a nice trip,” he muttered, striding for the house.

No. Don’t leave like this. Don’t let it be like this, Sara. Go to him! Run. Tell him you love him. Tell him! No matter how loudly or passionately her conscience shouted at her, Sara didn’t have the power to do it. She couldn’t. Instead she turned around to begin the long walk to the house that soon would no longer be her home.





17

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