Texas Wildcat (15 page)

Read Texas Wildcat Online

Authors: Lindsay McKenna

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Fiction

BOOK: Texas Wildcat
6.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The roar of the blowout continued unabated in the background. The rays of the sun were slanting into the room at a low angle, indicating that it was probably around six a.m. Sam stirred, his hand brushing the curve of her breast, then coming to rest upon her ribcage. Slowly, he opened his blue eyes. Strands of dark hair lay across his forehead. Kelly reached up, running her slender fingers through the strands, and brushed them back into place.

“Good morning,” she whispered, her lips a mere inch from his mouth.

He gazed at her through half opened lids. “It is,” he agreed, his voice still thick with sleep. “This is the way it should have been,” he muttered.

“What?” she asked, a smile lingering in her eyes.

“Yesterday morning when I woke up. You weren’t there. I expected to wake up and see you sleeping in my arms.”

She leaned forward, her lips brushing his strong, masculine mouth. A shiver coursed through her as she felt him slide his hand upward to caress her breast. “I had other plans, Sam Tyler,” she told him throatily.

He smiled, rising up on one arm and tucking her into the curve of his body. Her red hair flowed across the pillow, making her skin appear paler than ever. “I’ve got a few plans myself,” he admitted, tracing the curve of her cheek with his finger. “And you’re included in them.” He caressed her shapely lips. “Whether you like it or not.”

“Don’t start giving me ultimatums!” She was up in one fluid motion. “You ought to know by now, that doesn’t work.”

A lazy grin pulled at his mouth. “I love it when you get angry. Do you realize your eyes are like an incredible green fire?” Sam reached up and pulled her back into his arms. He pressed his mouth insistently to her lips and felt her response. Her lips were soft, searching, parting beneath his mouth like the petals of a flower. Gradually, he raised his head so that he could study the gold flecks in her wide, lustrous eyes. “That’s better,” he growled. He wanted to make love with her again, but this wasn’t the time or the place.

“I’ve got to go in a minute,” he said. “Kelly, there’s something that’s been bothering me and I want to ask you about it.”

She nodded. Her body craved more of his kisses. The memory of their lovemaking a day before swept through her like white-hot lava. No man had ever made her feel more alive, more of a woman, and she knew that her love for Sam had much to do with it. “What?” she asked, her voice wispy.

He rested his hand near her hip. “That first day I met you, I saw Gage Wallace drive up as I was leaving. And then the second time I came to your office, he was with you again.” His hand tightened on her waist. “Does he mean something to you, Kelly?”

Her features contorted and she struggled to sit up. “Oh, he means something all right. Sam, he maneuvered my ex-husband out of their partnership in our steel company. And then he tried to court me, which made Todd jealous.”

Sam ran his hand down her bare arm. “Care to tell me about it?”

Her lips set in a grim line. “Wallace would deliberately come over to my father’s regional office, which I managed, to make Todd envious. He tried to get Todd to think we were having an affair!” Her voice shook with disgust.

“Were you?”

“I’m not sure that even deserves an answer!”

“You get angry in a hurry, woman.”

She allowed herself to be mollified by his teasing tone. “The answer is no. He’s a slick businessman, Sam. His morals are worse than a snake’s. Sure, his steel company is one of the few in the United States making big profits. But I’d hate to tell you how he gets those profits!”

“Other than the tie with your ex-husband, what does Wallace have to do with you now?”

Kelly pushed the hair away from her face in a gesture of annoyance. “The second time he visited, when you came in to tell me about the blowout, Gage had the audacity to suggest I marry him.” She looked up at the ceiling in furious silence.

“Why did he suggest that?”

“He said Blanchard Pipe’s image had suffered in the marketplace. Our credibility was damaged beyond repair because of the pipe failures we had. He sweetly suggested that he buy into my father’s company to salvage it and then marry me too. Convenient, isn’t it?”

Sam’s brows furrowed. “Yes,” he murmured, trying to make sense of Wallace’s activities. He caught Kelly’s indignant look. “Well, are you going to sell him shares or marry him?” he goaded, a hint of mirth in his voice.

Kelly glared at him. “Sometimes, Sam Tyler, I think you get immense pleasure out of teasing me unmercifully,” she declared between clenched teeth.

His grin widened. “You’re so easy to tease. You’re like fifty pounds of dynamite ready to go off on a second’s notice.”

Smiling, Kelly reached over and placed her slender hand on his shoulder. Each time she touched him, a pang of longing went through her. “The answer is no to both your questions.”

“I expected as much.”

“Oh, stop being so arrogant!”

“You wouldn’t have it any other way, Kelly Blanchard. Now quit spitting and clawing for two seconds and come here.”

This time, he kissed her deeply, stroking the fires within her. Satisfied, Sam raised his head. There was a tender light in his eyes as he watched her. “Listen,” he began huskily. “Today you stay in the shack and rest. You’re not well yet. I’ll have someone go over to the gauges and read them for you. No more sun for you, woman. Not until I say so. Understand?”

Kelly’s breathing was shallow, her heart was beating wildly in her breast, and her body ached to fulfill the needs that Sam had effortlessly coaxed to life within her. “Yes,” she whispered, “I’ll stay here today.”

Giving an approving nod of his head, Sam stood and then placed the thin blanket across her. “Good. I’ll be back over here in a few hours to check on you.”

* * *

She slept again after Sam had left. The next time she awoke, it was almost noon. After changing into her white coveralls, Kelly padded out into the main area of the porta-camp. She looked out the window and saw that they were beginning to position the heavily wrapped blowout preventer over the roaring flame. Forgetting that she was both hungry and thirsty, Kelly stood mesmerized by the spectacle.

Sam directed the bulldozer that was pushing the unmanned athey wagon forward. At the stake, they halted the bulldozer. Five water monitors continuously spewed thousands of gallons of water upon the flame. Kelly tensed as the crane hook carrying the preventer was nudged into the roaring fire. Flames exploded in all directions as the massive apparatus hung over the blowout. The men’s actions were smooth and carefully calculated as Sam positioned the crane at just the right angle.

Kelly had no idea how Sam could know exactly where to place the preventer. But when Sam gave the final hand signal, Kelly watched in amazement as the blowout preventer slid over the pipe. The raging fire now shot out the top of it. Taking a deep, shaky breath, Kelly realized the worst was over. All that remained to be done now was welding the preventer to the pipe. After that, they would begin to control the blowout by capping the main fire and redirecting it into the smaller pipes located on each side of the preventer. At no time would they allow the flame to be extinguished. If they did, the H2S gas would kill everyone working at the wellhead.

It was almost three in the afternoon before Sam managed to get away from the welding job on the pipe. Kelly’s heart pounded when he entered the trailer. Taking off his hardhat, Sam cast a look in her direction.

“How are you feeling?” he asked.

Kelly had never realized just how brutally demanding the job of an oil well firefighter was until now. Sam’s face was glistening with sweat, his dark hair plastered to his skull, the coveralls clinging to his muscled body. “Better. You were right. I needed to rest today.”

He opened the small refrigerator, digging out several pieces of fresh meat and the leftover stew from the day before. “Can I get that in writing? Kelly Blanchard admitting that maybe someone besides herself has a good idea?”

Kelly laughed with him. “Here, I’ll fry the meat.” She looked at it more closely. “What kind of meat is that?”

Sam handed it to her. “Goat.”

She wrinkled her nose. “Oh.”

He left her to the kitchen duties and sat down at the table, where he drank nearly a quart of water. “Damn, what I’d do for a cold beer.”

“I noticed the absence of liquor around here,” Kelly observed.

“Yeah, it’s against the Moslem laws to consume liquor. If you get caught, it’s a jail sentence. And if you can get it on the black market, it costs around eighty American dollars for a quart of whiskey.” He shrugged. “I’ll just be damned happy to wrap this particular well up and get back to Texas,” he said good-naturedly. He sat back, watching her work over the old, dilapidated gas stove. Kelly had piled her thick mane of hair high on her head with feminine-looking pink combs. Tendrils had escaped to fall around her face, giving her an ethereal look. Sam watched her worriedly. Her peach-colored skin was almost transparent and he couldn’t ignore the shadows beneath her emerald eyes.

“Boots and Coots don’t anticipate any trouble with the pipe, Kelly. Colly’s bringing up the gauge readings in a while.” He toyed with the salt shaker on the table, choosing his words carefully. “You know, in another three days at the most, we’ll be finished here.”

Kelly fried the goat steaks as if they were beef steak. The odor was different, but not unappetizing. “That’s good,” she commented, smiling. “I’m dreaming of a hot bath.”

“You could have it earlier, you know….”

She gave a stubborn shake of her head. “I’m going to stick it out, Sam.”

His mouth became a grim line and he withheld a few well-chosen expletives. In no time Kelly had finished cooking the goat meat and made him a fresh pot of coffee.

Kelly sat opposite him, happy despite the stark surroundings. Had she ever enjoyed Todd’s company like this? No, a voice answered. There was something pleasurable in watching Sam wolf down the food. He enjoys life, she thought. Just like he enjoys me. She frowned, suddenly feeling alarm. The love she felt for Sam was all-consuming. She craved his company, treasured the time simply spent conversing with him. But did he need her as a bed partner only? Was that all he wanted from her? Or did he want something more? She wished with all her heart that she could remember those fragmented days of delirium in the hospital at Abu Dhabi. Had he said he loved her? Or was it simply her drugged brain making it all up?

She stole a look up at him only to discover he was watching her. A blush stained her cheeks.

“Do you always stare?” she challenged.

“When something’s worth staring at, yes.”

“Well…” she muttered, “it’s embarrassing.”

A smile tugged at the corners of his mouth. “Your ex-husband was a fool,” Sam decided. “No man in his right mind would ever leave you.”

Nervously, Kelly entwined her fingers. “Most men don’t feel the way you do, Sam. Thank you for the compliment anyway. It does my sagging ego good.”

Sam rose to his feet. “Like I said, I’ll be glad when we get back to Houston,” he repeated enigmatically.

Kelly gazed up at him, her lips slightly parted. “Sam…I need to know something.”

He halted. “Sure. Anything.”

Kelly swallowed hard. “That confrontation with Gage last time. From the look on your face you knew him….”

Sam grimaced. “Unfortunately, yes, Kelly. After Fay divorced me, she met Wallace. He strung her along and she ended up getting hurt by him. Fay comes from a very rich oil family and Wallace courted her with an ulterior motive.” His eyes narrowed in memory of those times. “She was vulnerable and hurting. Wallace walked right in and after five dates with her, professed he loved her.” He spat out the words. “The bastard would have married her to get to her money. It was as simple as that.”

Kelly chewed on her lower lip. Sam didn’t believe in overnight love…and that was all that they shared. A new sense of despair washed over her and she tried to hide the hurt beginning to ache within her. “What did you do?” she asked faintly.

“I was finally able to talk some sense into Fay. Wallace had gone so far as to buy an engagement ring for her. I gave him some ultimatums that he didn’t appreciate. Since then, we’re like two pit bulls around one another. He knows I’d take great pleasure in beating the hell out of him.”

* * *

Kelly remained in the trailer throughout the next three days, going out into the desert to read the gauges on the water monitors only when necessary. Soon, the blowout preventer was welded to the pipe and the fire was rerouted through the arms. Smaller flames roared out across the desert away from the main area. Kelly watched with mixed feelings as the H2S gas was harnessed and capped. The desert suddenly grew silent. The men of Boots and Coots tiredly looked at one another. Coots Matthews gave new orders and soon the reloading of their equipment was begun. By the evening of the next day, they would all be back in Houston. Kelly’s green eyes were shadowed with regret and anguish.

Had her brief affair with Sam been only that? He had made no attempt to sleep with her again since the first evening when she had had nightmares. Of course, that was understandable in the present circumstances, she told herself. There was no privacy in the shack. But he rarely touched her now and never kissed her. A growing coldness in the pit of her stomach made her feel nauseous. She would get back to Houston and take up the management of her father’s company. Blanchard Pipe had stood the test. All that remained was for her office manager to bring her the lab’s test results to find out why that one order of pipe had failed out in the field. Kelly turned away from the window, feeling depressed. She should feel excited about gong home, but she didn’t. Her heart was aching with a loss she knew would come very shortly. Closing her eyes, Kelly pressed her hand against her chest. What a fool she had been, falling so artlessly in love with Sam Tyler! At her age, blind love was the result of sheer stupidity, not ignorance. And yet, she could feel no regret for her actions, because Sam had shown her that she was worthy of a man’s attention. He had shown her she was a woman with a capacity for feeling that even she had not suspected.

Other books

Wanda E. Brunstetter by Twice Loved
Muhammad by Karen Armstrong
The Story of an Hour by Kate Chopin
The Lifeboat Clique by Kathy Parks
Lily and the Lion by Emily Dalton
Defense of Hill 781 by James R. McDonough
Chocolate Dreams by Helen Perelman