belly, had nothing to do with the July
heat and everything to do with the man
watching her. And he was all man. Those
six years between them weren’t too much.
Not at all.
“I want to try something,” she said.
“Alright.” He stepped back from the
tree, leaned against the side of the pickup
patiently. Waiting for her.
This was it, she told herself. This was
the new start she’d wanted for them. He
was looking at her and she had a chance.
Don’t screw up, she told herself fiercely.
Get this right. But the words weren’t
coming, were drying up in her throat. He
was perfect. She sure as hell was not.
Palms damp, she swung off the ATV.
She was going to do this. This was going
to work. Screwing up her courage, she
threw herself at him. Her breasts hit that
hard, firm chest, his arms closing
reflexively around her, steadying her.
God, he felt good. She wanted to just stay
like that, wrapped up in him, but she had
to do this before nerves got the best of
her.
“Rose—”
He
sounded
irritated.
Impatient.
Before he could say anything else, she
reached up and tugged his head down. He
let her. She didn’t know if that was
because she’d clearly surprised the hell
out of him or because he wanted to be
closer. Please let it be the latter.
Still, she looked up because she needed
to see him coming closer. His lashes
swept down over those dark eyes of his as
he watched her carefully. Screw it. She
reached up and got her mouth on his.
He tasted perfect, felt perfect. His lips
were firm and so very male. She parted
her lips, coaxing him to open up. To come
out and play as her tongue licked the
closed seam of his mouth.
Perfect, but only for a too brief handful
of seconds. His hands carefully moved
her backwards and away from him.
“Christ, Rose.” He sounded tired. “I
don’t have time for your games today. Go
cause trouble somewhere else.”
Shame hit her hard. He thought she
was playing games.
“Cabe—” she held out her hand to
him.
“Go home, Rose,” he said, already
turning back to the olive trees. “No more
games. ”
So much for her chance. She’d screwed
it up. Again. Just like always.
After that, she’d decided that if she
couldn’t have Cabe as a boyfriend, she’d
settle for keeping him on his toes. She’d
devoted every day to proving all the
reasons she wasn’t good enough and
pushing all of his buttons.
She didn’t like the direction her brain
was headed now, so she picked out the
lawyer’s office. Right where it had always
been. With a little sigh, she bent down and
grabbed the handle of her suitcase. It was
missing a wheel, but, if she got it balanced
just right, the bag would roll, and she
wouldn’t have to sort out the paperwork
the lawyer had e-mailed to her from her
clothes.
If today’s meeting worked out, she’d
finally have a place to call home. Even
from beyond the grave, Auntie Dee was
watching out for her.
“You need some help, miss?” One of the
cowboys loitering in front of the bar
strolled over, offering his assistance. And
probably something else, too, but she
wasn’t going there.
She didn’t want his help. She didn’t
need
his help. The bag wobbled and then balanced.
See?
She could do this. “I got
it,” she said cheerfully, because there was
no point in burning bridges, and he’d meant
well. Those cowboys couldn’t really help
themselves, now, could they? Certain
things—like well-intentioned, teeth-gritting
chivalry—were practically imprinted on
their DNA from birth.
The guy tipped his hat at her. “If you’re
sure.”
“Positive.” She laid in a course for the
lawyer’s office. “And I’m only going a
hundred feet. I’ve got it.”
The cowboy nodded, as if good manners
had him pretending to believe her, but he
backed off. “You have a good day, then.”
She shot him a quick smile and got her
feet moving. Her destiny was waiting for
her inside the lawyer’s office, and Rose
had her fingers crossed.
God, she needed this to be a good day.
Twenty minutes he’d been waiting in
this office. Rose Jordan was late.
Again.
Cabe Dawson hated late.
Swinging the straight-back chair around,
Cabe straddled the seat. Pinning the
squirming lawyer with his eyes, he crossed
his arms over the back. He had calving
cows back on the ranch and a chore list
longer than his arm. Blackhawk Ranch was
fifty thousand acres. He ran cattle and had
a half dozen orchards. The size and reach
of his holdings made him a powerful man
in Northern California, but, even though he
owned this particular part of California, it
also owned him. His father, who’d married
into the ranch, might not have led by
example, but he’d sure as hell shown Cabe
what happened when a man didn’t take
responsibility for his land.
The lawyer looked as if he would have
given just about anything to be anywhere
but on the receiving end of that stare. Cabe
got that a lot. Most times, his hard-eyed
gaze was an asset. Right now, though, it
wasn’t working. Mitch tugged on his bow
tie—who the hell still wore a clip-on bow
tie?—and cleared his throat.
“We’re just waiting for Miss Jordan,”
he said, and Cabe wanted to no-shit the
man. Rose had never managed to be on
time even once in her life.
Auntie Dee hadn’t had any biological
family, not as far back as he could
remember. Just Rose Jordan, who’d come
up from Los Angeles that one memorable
summer as a skinny ten-year-old with all
this fine blond hair that stuck out in a cloud
around her head. Rose had stayed in
Lonesome until she’d finally headed off for
college, leaving Auntie Dee alone again.
Hell, that was why Cabe had made his
neighbor the offer he had—he would
reverse-mortgage her place, give her the
money she needed to live, and she’d give
him the property when she passed on. She
wouldn’t take his money any other way,
and Cabe figured he could always use
more land. Kept it quiet, though, because it
was nobody’s business but his and Auntie
Dee’s. Auntie Dee had her pride. When
he’d struck water on that land, he’d been
even more sure the mortgage was the right
angle to take. She needed something. He
needed something. They were square
enough. He’d given Auntie Dee more than
a fair market price for the place, but there
was no denying that the water made the
property more valuable.
When the whirlwind that was Rose
Jordan exploded into the room—late, as
always—her very fine ass bumping open
the door, he was more than ready to finish
up the arrangement. The arousal that flared
inside him wasn’t part of the plan,
however. He’d told himself that last night
was an aberration. He couldn’t possibly
still be attracted to Rose Jordan. She
wasn’t his type. All flustery blond, not
cool brunette. Not to mention, there was no
reason to believe she’d have him.
No reason at all.
“Am I late? I am, aren’t I? Did you start
without me?” She jimmied the door open
another foot and jerked hard on an
impossibly large black rolling suitcase that
had to weigh as much as she did.
He
couldn’t
stop
the
sensual
appreciation that had woken right up inside
him when she’d opened the door. He
should have been putting some much-
needed space between them, but instead
his feet and his upbringing had him
standing to help her. Before he could stop
himself, he had one hand wrapped around
her waist to steady her, and he was tugging
the bag from her fingers as she spluttered
some nonsense about
I have it
and
That’s
mine
. Since she clearly didn’t
have it,
he
stashed the bag in the empty space behind
Lawyer Mitch’s two guest chairs.
Rose needed to learn how to accept a
little help.
And she
was
late. They both knew it. Of
course, for Rose, twenty minutes late was
probably on time. Which was why he’d
told her the meeting started thirty minutes
earlier than it did. He was learning—
finally.
He didn’t know where she’d spent the
night, but, looking at her now, he had a
sneaking suspicion she’d once again failed
to plan ahead. He should have asked her
last night if she had a place to stay, but
she’d had him off balance from the moment
she’d surfaced in his swimming hole.
The lawyer did his thing, reading the
will really quickly. Rose got the house and
whatever was in it. Cabe had known that.
He cut the lawyer off, though, when the
man would have launched into the list of
outstanding debts the estate needed to
settle before Rose could claim free title to
the place. Maybe Rose would be
reasonable. Maybe, after last night’s swim,
she’d thought things over and come to the
logical conclusion.
Hell, a man could hope.
Before she could get her questions off,
he leaned in and made his offer. Money
would make this easier, and he didn’t mind
paying. “You don’t want the place, Rose.
It’d just be a giant headache for you. We
both know that. Tell me what you want for
it, and I’ll write you a check.”
“Don’t tell me what I want, Cabe
Dawson. You have no business even being
here today.”
“On the contrary, darlin’.” His slow
smile was a warning. “I’m just as
necessary here as you are. If you’d read
any of those letters I sent you, you’d know
why.”
She crossed her arms over her breasts,
which she wouldn’t have done if she’d
known what it did to the top of that
sundress. Her breasts were pretty little
mounds peeking over the band of ribbon,
and part of him wanted to cross the room
and trace that naughty line, first with his
fingers and then with his mouth.
“I’m waiting for an explanation.” She
was glaring at him now, just as impatient
as always.
“Well, the way I see it, you owe me. For
last night, at the very least.” He nodded
meaningfully, and the lawyer’s eyes just
about bugged out of the man’s head as he
misinterpreted Cabe’s words. The way
Cabe saw it, Rose had started the battle,
pulling him into the swimming hole the
night before.
“I’m the executor, darlin’, and it’s up to
me to settle Auntie Dee’s estate,” he said.
“So you’re in charge. As always.” Her
expression was mutinous as she faced off
with him.
Yeah, his Rose was going to be trouble.
Just like always.
Cabe Dawson might think he was in
charge, but there was no way he was going
to run this show. She thought she’d
demonstrated that last night. She wasn’t
about to let him take away her home.
Sure, she didn’t have the money for
renovations or property taxes or even the
damn electric hookup, but by being back in
Lonesome, she was one step closer to
realizing her dream. A home of her own. A
place where she belonged.
She wasn’t selling out to Cabe Dawson.
Words were easy—the bigger-than-life
problem was sprawled in a chair two feet
away, his jeans-clad knee almost brushing