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Authors: Sherryl Woods

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BOOK: Joshua and the Cowgirl
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She shuddered so hard, her whole body shook. “No-o-o. No-o-thing.”

“Then we’ll keep going. Why don’t you tell me about Chicago? I’ve always liked it there. Why on earth would you ever leave?”

Her expression altered at once. An unforgiving chill turned her eyes as icy as their surroundings. “I—I h-hated it.”

Sensing that he’d touched on a nerve that could stir her blood with anger, he pushed. “Why?”

Her gaze skittered away evasively. “I—I just did.”

“But the drive along Lake Michigan is beautiful. There’s so much to do—theater, art, restaurants, shopping in the Loop or Watertower Place. All women love to shop. You left that behind for this?” He waved his hand at the snowy spread of lonely emptiness.

She glared at him and to his relief he could practically feel the heat rising inside her.

“Mind you, I’m not thrilled with the fix we’re in right now,” she said, “but I’d take this over Chicago any day. The skies are endless washes of blue. There’s no crowding, no city crime, no deep-down dirt. Life here is so uncomplicated. The people are honest and decent and hardworking. When I was a little girl, I used to dream of places like this. I couldn’t wait to come.”

“Casey said you worked in a diner when you first got out here.”

“I waited tables, did a little cooking until the customers rebelled at my burnt toast. The couple who owned it were kind. They didn’t ask a lot of questions about my past.”

He heard the hint of censure in her voice, but it only spurred his curiosity. “What kind of past could an eighteen-year-old girl possibly have had that she’d want to hide?”

She didn’t reply for so long that he thought he’d gone too far. Finally, her voice faint but defiant, she said, “I was sure you’d guessed by now. I was pregnant.”

Left unspoken was the fact that she’d obviously been unmarried, as well, and that she was still deeply ashamed. He wished with everything in him that he’d been around to protect her back then, to claim her and Casey as his own.

“You aren’t the first woman to make a mistake,” he reminded her gently.

“Casey was not a mistake,” she said fiercely. “I love her. She’s the very best thing in my life.”

He squeezed her hand tightly. “Sweetheart, I know that. Anyone seeing the two of you together would know it. But at eighteen you were alone and scared. It must have been hard for you.”

“It was hard and it was lonely, but it was heaven compared to what I’d left behind.”

She pulled her hand free and lurched on ahead, obviously desperate to put distance between them. Questions raced through Joshua’s mind, but this time he wisely kept them to himself. Probing Garrett’s secrets, understanding how she had become the pricklish, solitary woman she was today were not on tonight’s agenda. Tonight was all about survival, getting the two of them to that cabin before this hateful blizzard froze them to death. If nothing else, he had touched a nerve so sensitive that the fire of her anger would keep her going awhile longer.

* * *

Garrett hated remembering. She had spent too many years forgetting, setting up a dam against the inevitable tide of hurt. Yet no matter how hard she tried, the memories always flooded back. Every time they did, they were just as fresh, just as painful as they’d been on the day she’d caught the bus west from Chicago. Right now, hip-deep in another drift of snow, she hated Joshua for making her remember. She wanted to get as far from his penetrating questions as she could.

It was only when she’d covered another half mile or so with him trudging silently behind her that she realized he’d purposely goaded her. He’d given her the incentive to keep going when her whole body had wanted to sink into nothingness.

The irony, of course, was that the farther she went, the closer she came to the time when they would be alone in that cabin with no way left for her to avoid the probing questions about her past. She could retreat into stubborn, defiant silence, but she had a feeling Joshua knew exactly how to get around a woman’s resistance. If she didn’t want to talk, he’d suggest occupying her time with something far more intimate and dangerous. Every kiss they’d shared told her that she’d be far better off talking, gabbing until she was blue in the face. She’d be wise to tell him about the cattle, about Casey, about Wyoming, even about the past, if only it would keep the undeniable, growing attraction between them safely at bay.

Realistically, though, she knew there weren’t enough words in the world to do that. As miserably cold as she was, she had only to look into his eyes to feel a stirring of heat. She had only to feel the strong clasp of his gloved hand around her own to feel warmth spreading through her. His kisses exploded into welcome fire.

And that meant trouble. She knew it as well as she knew that another hour out in this weather and she’d have more to worry about than the effect of a few stolen kisses. It was unbearably cold. In all the years she’d lived in Wyoming, she had never been exposed for this long to the bone-chilling iciness. Her feet and hands were dangerously numb, probably close to frostbitten.

Still, they trudged on, Joshua keeping up a running patter of nonsensical, one-sided conversation. At least she assumed it was nonsensical. She couldn’t seem to concentrate on what he was saying. She only wanted to sleep, to hibernate like a bear until this awful storm ended and spring emerged to turn the prairie grasslands an undulating green.

“Garrett. Garrett! Come on, sweetheart. You have to pay attention.”

Joshua’s words seemed to reach her through a thick fog. “Pay attention to what?” she said finally, because he seemed to expect her to say something.

“The landmarks. What should we be looking for?”

“Trees. Cottonwoods. The creek. It’ll be frozen now.” She tilted her face up to catch a snowflake on the tip of her tongue. For a moment she forgot to be afraid, forgot that she was with the man who threatened her peace of mind. She was a child again and the world was a beautiful, magical fairyland. “Do you skate, Joshua? We could go ice-skating on the creek.”

“If you ask me, we’re already skating on thin ice. This is about as dangerously as I care to live.”

“I could teach you to do a figure eight. Mrs. Mac taught me.”

He regarded her incredulously. “You and Mrs. Mac went ice-skating?”

“It was the first year I was at the ranch. Casey was only a baby, so it must have been…” She tried to make the calculations, but the numbers seemed to be elusive. “A long time ago. Mrs. Mac loved to skate. She said it reminded her of when she and her husband were courting. He drank himself to death. Did you know that? Then her daughter, Cal’s mother, ran away and married a man Mrs. Mac didn’t approve of. It was very sad.”

She felt the sting of sympathetic tears in her eyes. “Did you know she’s been running this ranch by herself for nearly fifty years? She’s even been president of the cattlemen’s association. Isn’t it nice the way women are respected in Wyoming? They always have been, you know. They got the vote here really early. It’s probably because men saw how well they coped with the hard life here. Women are much tougher than men think.”

She cast a curious gaze in Joshua’s direction, wondering what his reaction would be to that declaration. “Well?” she insisted. “What do you think?”

“About what?” he said distractedly.

“About women?”

“I’m rather partial to them.” An unmistakable gleam lit his eyes.

“That is not what I asked you. I asked if you agreed that we’re tougher than men think we are?”

“I think you are very tough.”

She smiled. “Thank you.”

“Of course, I think your brain is freezing.”

She regarded him indignantly. “It is not.”

“Then explain to me why we are having this ridiculous conversation, when I need you to help me find that line shack.”

“I am helping.”

“How?”

That was a tough one. So far, he was the one who’d kept them moving. “I’m watching for the trees.”

“Any sign of them?”

“No,” she admitted dejectedly. “Actually, I’m really tired, Joshua.”

“I know you are, sweetheart, but it’s bound to be close. Is it on the road?”

“No. It’s a few hundred yards to the east.”

Joshua groaned. “Then how the hell are we supposed to see it from the road?”

“I keep telling you about the trees. Aren’t you listening?” she replied testily.

“I don’t see any damn trees.”

Challenged, Garrett peered through the blinding, whirling snow. She could barely see Joshua, much less anything at a distance. His doubts, however, had given her the incentive to keep going. She would prove to him, prove to all of them that women were tough, that
she
was tough. She’d been trying to prove it her whole life.

Drawing on her last reserves of energy, she plowed on through the snow, knowing that they had to be close, fearing that if they didn’t find the cabin soon, she and Joshua would become one of those tragic cases of people who died of exposure only a few feet from warmth and protection.

Now it was Joshua who was lagging behind, dispirited. It was up to her to save them now. He had gotten them this far by badgering and cajoling. The tactics had been underhanded but clever. Once again she admitted she was going to have to revise her initial impression of Joshua. He might be a greenhorn, but he had a streak of inventiveness and determination in him she had to admire. She wondered if he would be equally as resourceful as a lover. She flirted with the idea for several minutes and decided the possibilities were fascinating. Wasn’t it odd, how he’d started her thinking about sex? She’d studiously avoided thinking about it for a long time now. Garrett glanced sideways and caught his bleak expression. This was no time to be indulging in impossible fantasies, she reminded herself sternly.

“I think I see the trees,” she lied, using hope as an incentive.

“Where?”

“Just ahead. Come on, Joshua. We’re almost there.”

“There are no trees.”

“Damn it, I see them,” she insisted. “Walk.”

“I am walking.”

“Faster. It’ll keep your blood circulating.”

“I wonder if the stories are true,” he said.

“What stories?”

“About people who’ve frozen to death coming back to life once they’ve thawed out.”

“I will not allow you to think like that,” she said furiously. “We are not going to freeze to death. We are not going to require thawing out.”

He turned a silly, endearing grin on her. “I’d enjoy thawing you out, Garrett.”

She moaned at his craziness, but she couldn’t deny that the mere suggestion had sent a gentle wave of heat washing through her. Definitely a resourceful lover, she decided, intrigued again by the thought. If the image stirred her blood, maybe it would do the same for his.

“What is the first thing you’re going to do when we find the cabin?” she said.

“Build a fire.”

“And then?”

“Get out of these wet clothes.”

That aroused some provocative images. She was getting warmer by the second.

“And then?”

He regarded her intently. Heat was definitely flaring in his eyes. She congratulated herself as he asked, “Are you deliberately leading me on here?”

“Leading you on?” she repeated innocently.

“Planting seductive little notions in my mind just to turn up my thermostat?”

“Would I do that?”

“You would if you thought it would motivate me to keep going.”

“Is it working?”

“It’s working, sweetheart. If my body ever gets as hot as my thoughts, you’re in a whole pile of trouble.”

The prospect might have daunted her but just then she saw the landmark they’d been watching for, the stand of trees and the creek just beyond.

“Joshua,” she breathed softly, reaching out to clasp his hand.

He went absolutely still beside her. “What?”

“We’ve found it!”

“The cabin?” he said doubtfully, peering through the curtain of snow that fell before them.

“The creek, but the cabin won’t be far now.” Impulsively she threw her arms around him. “We made it, Joshua! It’s okay. In no time we’ll be in front of that fire.”

She looked up then and caught the blaze in his eyes. Suddenly reality caught up with seductive fantasy. She realized what she had done by planting all those provocative possibilities in his head…and in her own. He’d pretty well summed it up, in fact. She was in a whole pile of trouble.

Chapter Five

N
ever in his life had Joshua been so relieved to see a primitive little snowbound shack in the middle of nowhere. Half buried in snow and totally unprepossessing, it was as welcome as any suite in any five-star hotel he’d ever visited in some exciting world capital.

The last hour had been pure hell. He’d been terrified that Garrett was going to give up before they reached safety. Then he’d been struck by a sudden inspiration. He’d guessed that she would rally if he challenged her, if he made it a test of her fortitude against his. For some reason she seemed to feel a deep need to prove herself to him, to declare her independence and strength at every turn. Discovering why could prove to be fascinating, if only he could stop this violent shivering long enough to put his mind to the task.

“We’re going to have to break in,” he said, already looking around for something heavy to use on one of the narrow windows. They’d have to patch it later to keep the cold out.

“No, it’ll be unlocked. It’s left that way specifically for emergencies like this. We just have to get to the door.”

Even that appeared a daunting prospect with drifts blocking their way. “I don’t suppose you have a folding shovel tucked in your back pocket?” he asked.

“Afraid not.”

“Then let’s get to work.”

With stiff hands that would barely do his bidding, he scooped away snow that was piled halfway up the cabin door. Garrett worked silently beside him until at last they were able to get to the handle and push the door open. Snow trailed in behind them and the vicious gusts of wind made closing the door again almost impossible. They both put their weight against it to slam it closed.

Only when it was shut did he think to ask, “Is the firewood outside?”

BOOK: Joshua and the Cowgirl
12.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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