putting his things on the edge of the sink.
âMy hair is fine. Now go change those sheets youâve been fussing about.â
She made no argument but went and located a linen closet at the top of the stairs. As Freeman had said, it had sheets for double beds, but she could easily tuck the excess under the mattress. The important thing was that the sheets were clean. They would do for now. Next time, she would have freshly washed and line-dried linen to go on his bed, provided he didnât fire her first.
When she finished the task and returned to the bathroom, she found him still sitting at the sink, shaving cream on his face and a razor in his hand. There were uneven patches of beard on his cheeks and a trickle of blood down his chin. Wordlessly, he handed the razor to her, grimaced, and clenched his eyes shut. She ran hot water on the washcloth, twisted it until the excess water ran out, and pressed it over his face.
Sheâd said that shaving Freeman would be no different that shaving her brothers, but as she stood there looking at him, she realized it was. It was very different. She had to steady her hands as she removed the washcloth and began with more shaving cream. Her pulse quickened, and she felt a warm flush beneath her skin.
Shaving Freeman was more intimate than sheâd supposed it would be and she was thankful that his dark eyes were closed. The act bordered on inappropriate behavior between an unmarried man and woman, but neither of them intended it to be anything other than what it was. Sheâd offered with the best of intentions and backing down now would be worse than going through with it, wouldnât it?
But what if her hands trembled and she cut him? How would she explain that?
She took a deep breath and plunged forward, silently praying, Donât let my hand slip. Please, donât let him see how nervous I am. The small curling hairs at the nape of her neck grew damp and her knees felt weak, but she kept sliding the razor down the smooth plane of his cheek. The blade was sharp, and Freeman held perfectly still. If heâd moved, even a fraction of an inch, she knew that the blade would break his skin, but he didnât, and she managed to finish without disgracing herself.
âAll done.â Heady with success, she handed him the wet washcloth. âSee, it wasnât that bad, was it?â
âThank you.â He wiped his face and opened his eyes.
âI could still do something with your hair,â she offered.
He wiped a last bit of shaving cream from his chin and tossed the washcloth in the sink. âQuit while youâre ahead, woman.â
She laughed. âYou do look a lot better.â And he did, more than better. Shaggy hair brushing his shirt collar or not, he had the kind of good looks that cautious mothers warned their daughters against. And with good reason, she thought, as she locked her shaking hands behind her back.
âIâm not a vain man.â
She couldnât hide a mischievous grin. âNe?â She thought that he wasnât telling the exact truth. In her mind, most men were as vain as any woman. They just hid it better. And Freeman had more reason than most to take pride in his looks.
âIâm a Plain man. I have more on my mind than my appearance.â
âI can see that,â she agreed. âBut no one said that a clean and tidy man was an offense to the church.â
He fixed her with those lingering brown eyes, eyes that were not as full of disapproval as they had been. âDo you have an answer for everything?â he asked. But she sensed that he was making an effort at humor rather than being sarcastic.
âI try.â She nodded. âNow Iâll leave you to finish washing up. Call when you need me to bring you back out to the kitchen.â
âI think I can push myself,â he grumbled.
Smiling, she left him to go throw the sheets in the wash.
Sheâd just started