1001 Dark Nights (6 page)

Read 1001 Dark Nights Online

Authors: Lorelei James

Tags: #1001 Dark Nights, #cowboy, #rodeo, #erotic romance, #Blacktop Cowboys, #Lorelei James

BOOK: 1001 Dark Nights
8.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Need help unloading your stuff?”

“No. My stuff is scattered throughout my camper, and I need to dig it out first.”

“Okay. If you need anything, holler.” Then he left the room.

London used the facilities and figured out the bare minimum of what she’d need. She practically tiptoed down the hallway, leaving the front door unlatched so she wouldn’t disturb Sutton with the door slamming.

She had packed a suitcase—full of dirty clothes—and set it outside hoping laundry privileges were included in her guest status. She unearthed a duffel bag and shoved the few clean clothes inside along with her makeup bag. Her laptop bag held all of her electronics and charging cords. Then she figured she’d need her boots and hat, which were in the back of her club cab. Since she’d be dealing with Dial, a notoriously stubborn horse, a crop would come in handy. She rooted around under the seat until she found it.

Looking at the pile, she wished she’d taken Sutton up on his offer of help. She slipped the strap of the duffel over her left shoulder and the laptop strap over the right. Hat on her head, boots teetering precariously on top of the zipped duffel, she reached for the suitcase handle.

“You’d rather sprain your damn neck than accept my help?”

She whirled around. Her hat, boots, and crop went flying. “Don’t sneak up on me like that!”

Sutton picked up her riding crop and muttered, “I oughta use this on you.”

“Okay.”

He shot her a look.

She didn’t break eye contact. Neither did he.

Then he offered her a mysterious smile, grabbed the suitcase and rolled it to the front door.

Whew. Talk about a hot moment. Scooping her hat onto her head, she trudged behind him. She met Sutton in the hallway. “When you’re done getting settled, I’ll be in the kitchen.”

I don’t know if I’ll ever be settled around you.

Not only was he…oh, a fucking dream man with those looks, those eyes, that body, enough amazing attributes to make any man cocky, he rarely acted that way. If she didn’t know better, she’d swear the man was…shy.

Nah. He couldn’t be.

Why not? Why do you think you know him? You’ve met the man
one
time. You’ve heard your parents talk about him, but you’ve had exactly one hour-long conversation with him.

But he hadn’t shied away from kissing her or from accepting her challenge to act like her boyfriend. And he’d all but told her she was crashing in his house, not her camper.

Those were the actions of a self-confident person, not the shy, retiring type.

Since when are those traits mutually exclusive?

Maybe she should stop staring at the closed door like an idiot, clean herself up, and go talk to him.

London changed from shorts into jeans. Hopefully the flies weren’t bad and she wouldn’t regret wearing a T-shirt instead of switching to a long-sleeved blouse. She tried to run a comb through her hair since she’d had the windows down on the way here, but the brush got stuck so she finger-combed it into a low ponytail. Not the best look, but she was headed into the pasture for the next couple of hours and bad hair days were why God had invented hats.

As she wandered down the hallway, she expected to hear the TV or maybe music, but the house remained quiet. She turned the corner into the kitchen and saw bags of groceries strewn across the quartz countertops. Whoa. That was a lot of food.

Sutton slammed the cupboard door and spun around. He seemed startled to see her. “Oh. There you are. That was fast.”

She shrugged. “I travel light. And I’m not much of a primper anyway.” Which is probably part of the reason her ex upgraded to a more feminine model. “What’s all this food for? You having a party? Feeding an army?”

He ran his hand over the top of his head in a nervous gesture. “The food is for you, actually.”

“All of it? Do I look like I eat like a fucking Broncos linebacker or something?” she asked sharply.

“No. Jesus.” Bracing his hands on the counter, he hung his head. “Look. I suck at this kinda stuff, okay? I never have anyone stay with me, say nothin’ of a woman. I figured I oughta stock up on girl food—yogurt, salad, fruit, diet soda, double-stuff Oreos—but I reached the checkout and realized I’d bought nothin’ for me. Then I worried maybe you didn’t like the stuff I’d picked so I ended up buying more. Now I’m staring at it, embarrassed as hell, knowing you’ll see all this food and think I’m some kind of freak for assuming we’ll eat together at all.”

Oh yeah. The man really was shy and unsure. And very, very sweet, worrying how
she’d
take
his
thoughtfulness in providing food for her. Impulsively, she ducked under his arm and set her hands on his chest. “Sutton Grant. You are a saint and a total sweetheart, and forgive me for acting like a thankless dick.”

“You’re not upset?”

“Only that you’d assume I eat girl food. Dude, I’m meat and potatoes all the way.” His heart thumped beneath her palm but he didn’t touch her. “Then again, I eat salad and other healthy stuff so I can eat Oreos.”

“I also bought cookies and cream ice cream.”

She licked her lips. “Another fave of mine. I always say I’ll have a little taste, but it never works out that way. I end up wanting more.”

“I know how that goes,” he murmured.

His gaze seemed stuck on her mouth.

As much as she wanted him to kiss her, she knew he wouldn’t. Not without a clear sign from her. “How about I help you put these groceries away?”

He retreated. “I’d appreciate it.”

“Then I’ll head out and catch Dial and see where we’re at.”

 

Chapter Five

Dial proved to be his usual dickish self to London.

Which was a relief. Sutton half expected the gelding would make him look like a fool by being compliant.

London suggested Sutton stay on the outside of the corral that way Dial knew she was in charge.

It took her thirty minutes to catch him and put a halter on him. Dial didn’t fight the saddle, but he needed the riding crop to get him moving.

For the next hour, he watched, mesmerized as London worked Dial over with a combination of firmness and a loving touch. He’d expected her to reward the horse with oats after she unsaddled him, removed the training bit and bridle, and thoroughly brushed him down. But she merely looked into his eyes and stroked his head as she spoke to him.

For once, Dial stood still.

Yeah, Sutton wouldn’t move either if London had her hands all over him as she murmured in his ear.

Since the moment she’d driven up, her interest in him still apparent after he’d given her some time to think it over, he realized that pretending they were crazy about each other wouldn’t be a problem.

London bounded across the corral, her dark ponytail swinging behind her. She was long and lean—it looked like a strong wind could knock her over, so it was hard to imagine her forcing her will on animals five times her size. He’d watched as she’d approached Dial, and her presence exceeded the size of her body.

She exited through the gate and he walked over to meet her halfway. “You all right?”

“Sore.”

“Where?” he asked, alarmed.

“Don’t worry. Just my arms and neck, nothing serious. Dial gets it in his head to resist and he pulls like a damn draft horse.”

“You’re welcome to use my hot tub if you think it’ll help loosen your muscles.”

London tipped her head back and squinted at him, raising her hand to block the sun. “You being a nice guy ain’t an act, is it?”

“You run into guys like that? Where it’s an act?”

“Guys who are assholes beneath the slicked up public persona? Yep. That’s how most of them are.”

Sutton started walking toward the house. “I didn’t see the point in maintaining a public and a private face. If it wasn’t for sponsor’s requirements, I wouldn’t have any public presence in the world of rodeo.”

“So the perfect day at the rodeo for you?”

“Do my runs. Take my turn as a hazer. Collect my check and visit with the rodeo officials and coordinators. Hop in my truck and haul my horse home. Then have a beer on my back patio and reflect on my performance—whether I win or lose.” He shot London a sideways glance. “Pretty boring, huh?”

“Not at all.” When she looped her arm through his, he managed to keep his feet moving instead of stumbling over them. “Attitudes of entitlement among the rodeo participants is why I rarely take jobs with them. They want me to fix a horse in a day, when the problem’s usually been years in the making. They’ve watched ‘The Horse Whisperer’ way too many times and they believe that shit is real.”

“You mean that one session with Dial didn’t cure him?”

“Not. Even. Close.”

“Dammit. Way to dash my hopes. You’re fired.”

London hip-checked him.

They fell silent on the rest of the short walk, but London didn’t pull away until they reached the patio. “This is such a great space. No neighbors, no traffic noises, no cattle. I could sit out here for hours and just enjoy the solitude.”

“Hang tight. I’ll grab us a couple of beers.”

“Sounds good.”

When Sutton returned, he saw that London had ditched her hat and her boots. With her face aimed toward the sky, her dark hair swaying in the breeze, a slight smile on those full lips and the sexy way she spread her toes out in the patch of sunshine, he was absolutely poleaxed. Not only by lust, but by the premonition this would be the first of many times they’d be together like this.

You wish.

When she opened her eyes and smiled at him, lust muscled aside any feelings of destiny. He ached to see her mouth wrapped around his cock. He wanted to see the diamond pattern from the metal table imbedded in her skin after he pinned her to it and fucked her hard.

“Sutton? You okay?”

“Yep.” He handed her a Bud Light.

“This is perfect. Thank you.”

He sipped and asked the question that’d been weighing on him. “So what’s the deal with Dial?”

She expelled a long sigh. “He’s got deep-seated anxiety about his ability to perform, not only to the level he’s reached, but on any level at all. He feels he’s being punished for a mistake that clearly wasn’t his fault. And in horse years, that punishment seems like years instead of months. So he’s resentful of you and the only way he can show that resentment is by not doing what you ask or demand of him.”

Sutton’s jaw dropped. “Are you freakin’ kidding me?”

London laughed. “Of course I’m bullshitting you, bulldogger. Sheesh. That kinda psychobabble about a horse’s psyche is a bunch of horseshit—pardon the pun. Dial hasn’t been worked with for months. He’s rusty. He’s ornery. Does he miss being a workhorse and doin’ what he was trained to do? No idea. Alls I can do is hope the training we both did over the years kicks in at some point.” She swigged her beer. “It ain’t a one day fix. But hell, maybe he’ll snap back to it and he’ll be ready to hit the dirt in a week.”

There was his nightmare scenario.

She leaned forward and pulled a folded piece of paper out of her back pocket and dropped it in front of him. “Take a look at those numbers.”

“What’s this?”

“My rates.”

He unfolded the paper. Stopped himself from whistling when he saw the amount. London Gradsky commanded a pretty penny for working with pretty ponies.

“Of course, I wrote that out yesterday before you offered me room and board.”

“So do you need a pen so you can refigure the amount?” he teased.

“Nice try, but no. The dollar amount stays the same, but I’ll double the amount of time I work with Dial until there are results.”

“Sounds fair.” He offered his hand and she shook it.

A meadowlark trilled and she smiled. “Your house is centrally located to how far I have to drive to my clients. I will be so glad not to have to leave my camper at a campsite.”

“I’ll be a snoopy bastard and ask why you’ve distanced yourself from Grade A Farms. Your folks know about you living in your camper, parking at different campsites every night?”

“No. And please don’t tell them.” She paused. “My parents are great people. No complaints on the familial relationship. But their business goals are different than mine. They breed horses and sell them. They’re shrewd in that they demand stud and genetic shares from those sales, but refuse to get into the sperm collecting and artificial insemination portion of the business. For a while they were trying to fit each high-end horse to the specific rodeo discipline. I was all for that.”

“They don’t do that anymore?”

“Nope.”

“What happened?”

“My big shot lawyer brother stuck his nose in. He created a spreadsheet that showed how much money they lost in a five-year period by doing it that way and cross referenced it with the number of national champions who were using Grade A livestock to compete. They were losing capital for a few lousy bragging rights. They revamped their policies, which is why they had no issue selling Dial to you.”

“So you weren’t really pissed off at me for suggesting they castrate Dial?”

“Oh, I was plenty pissed off at you about that. I’d had my sights set on breeding him with a gorgeous paint. She was sturdy, sweet-tempered, and would’ve done fine with the beast mounting her. Anyway, that was when I knew I had to fully strike out on my own. While some aspects of what I do are still the same, I’m not in the same place, day in, day out. My clients are varied, not just monied rodeo stars. Plus, I’ve tried other training disciplines, not just the ones my dad used.” London nudged his knee with her foot. “You played a part in me making that decision.”

“Then I think I deserve a deeper discount on your services.”

She laughed. “Don’t push your luck.”

Sutton stood and held out his hand. “Time to earn your keep, whip cracker.”

London took his hand without hesitation. “Which is what?”

“Helping me get supper on the table.”

 

* * * *

 

Later that night they sat side by side on the swing on the patio, watching the flames crackle in the fire pit.

They’d shared a meal together, cleaned up together, and talked about everything under the sun, except rodeo and horses. Sutton expected she’d bring up the other part of their deal, acting like a couple. One thing he hadn’t been clear on was whether they were telling their families they were involved or if the only place they were “out” was on the weekends at the fairgrounds. The other thing he needed to know? If London was trying to get Stitch back. He was onboard to help London save face, but he wouldn’t be happy if she planned on returning to her ex. He’d played the chump before.

Other books

Twisted Agendas by Damian McNicholl
Jim the Boy by Tony Earley
Eat, Brains, Love by Jeff Hart
The Thrust by Shoshanna Evers
Death Sung Softly by David Archer
Amber by Deborah Challinor
Peach Blossom Pavilion by Mingmei Yip
Whisperings of Magic by Karleen Bradford