the book to mark his place and closed it.
She glanced at the cover.
âGulliverâs Travels?â
Though what she really wanted to say was...
You shaved?
âI carry a few favourites around with me in my pack.â
She slid in opposite him, completely unable to take her eyes off his new face. At a loss to reconcile it as the under layer of all that sweat, dust and helmet hair sheâd encountered out on the road just a few days ago. âWhat makes it a favourite?â
He thought about that for a bit. âThe journeying. Itâs very human. And Gulliver is a constant reminder that perspective is everything in life.â
Huh. Sheâd just enjoyed it for all the little people.
They fell to silence.
âYou shaved,â she finally blurted.
âI did.â
âFor dinner?â Dinner that wasnât a date.
His neatly groomed head shook gently. âI do that periodically. Take it off and start again. Even symbols of liberty need maintenance.â
âThatâs what it means to you? Freedom?â
âIsnât that what the Bedford means to you?â
Freedom? No. Sanity, yes. âThe bus is just transport and accommodation conveniently bundled.â
âYou forget Iâve seen inside it. Thatâs not convenience. Thatâs sanctuary.â
Yeah...it was, really. But she didnât know him well enough to open up to that degree.
âI bought the Bedford off this old carpenter after his wife died. He couldnât face travelling any more without her.â
âI wonder if he knows what heâs missing.â
âDidnât you just say perspective was everything?â
âTrue enough.â
A middle-aged waitress came bustling over, puffing, as though six people at once was the most sheâd seen in a week. She took their orders from the limited menu and bustled off again.
One blond brow lifted. âYou carb-loading for a marathon?â
âYouâve seen the stove in the Bedford. I can only cook the basics in her. Every now and again I like to take advantage of a commercial kitchenâs deep-fryer.â
Plus, boiling oil would kill anything that might otherwise not get past the health code. There was nothing worse than being stuck in a small town, throwing your guts up. Unless it was being stuck on the side of the road between small towns and kneeling in the roadside gravel.
âSo, you know how Iâm funding my way around the country,â she said. âHow are you doing it?â
He stared at her steadily. âGuns and drugs.â
âHa-ha.â
âThatâs what you thought when you saw me. Right?â
âI saw a big guy on a lonely road trying really hard to get into my vehicle. What would you have done?â
Those intriguing eyes narrowed just slightly but then flicked away. âIâm out here working. Like you. Going from district to district.â
âWorking for who?â
âFederal Government.â
âOoh, the Feds. That sounds much more exciting than it probably is. What department?â
He took a long swig of his beer before answering. âMeteorology.â
She stared. âYouâre a
weatherman
?â
âRight. I stand in front of a green screen every night and read maximums and minimums.â
Her smile broadened. âYouâre a weatherman.â
He sagged back in his chair and spoke as if heâd heard this one time too many. âMeteorology is a science.â
âYou donât look like a scientist.â Definitely not before and, even clean shaven, Marshall was still too muscular and tattooed.
âWould it help if I was in a lab coat and glasses?â
âYes.â Because the way he packed out his black T-shirt was the least nerdy thing sheâd ever seen. âSo why are my taxes funding your trip around the country, exactly?â
âYouâre not earning. You donât pay taxes.â
The man had a point.