The Rouseabout Girl (13 page)

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Authors: Gloria Bevan

Tags: #Harlequin Romance 1983

BOOK: The Rouseabout Girl
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CHAPTER SEVEN

Lanie was
so fearful of sleeping in in the morning that she awoke long before the time set on her small travelling alarm clock. Swiftly she dressed, pulling on shabby jeans, a loose shirt of white cotton, slipping her feet into rubber thongs. Her bright hair she coiled in a knot on top of her head to give some protection from the dust and wool of the shearing shed.

Through the window she could see a tumble of pink clouds that heralded the sunrise, hear the boom of the surf on the sands that mingled with the lowing of cattle and the crying of seabirds. For no reason at all she felt a surge of happiness. Today, on this freshest of mornings, where the bush in the gullies was veiled in mist and the hills sharply outlined against the translucent tender blue of the sky, just being here was sufficient to send her spirits soaring. It’s a new world to me, the thought sang through her mind, and I love it! Even the prospect of working under the directions of the boss in the hot shed down on the beach couldn’t dim her new
l
y-found happiness. She picked up her denim cap and pulled it over her hair. Tendrils of red
-
gold escaped and she tucked them determinedly out of sight.

As she reached the back door of the homestead she ran into Jard, and for a moment their glances held. In that instant some irresistible force quivered between them, something that made Lanie’s pulses leap and sent vibrations quivering along her heartstrings. To break the moment of awareness she jerked her peaked cap over one eye, planted her feet together and raised a hand to her forehead in a mocking salute. ‘Reporting for duty—sir!’

A reluctant smile played around his lips and almost she could read his thoughts. She won’t be feeling so
cheeky after a gruelling day’s work
in
the hot woolshed.

‘I was just on my way over to give you a call. Edna’s got breakfast on the table.’ This time he sent her a real grin. ‘How does that strike you?’

‘Just
f
ine.’ She smiled back at him. It must be the effect of the breathless morning air, she told herself, that was giving her this sense of heightened perception as if everything in the world were suddenly fresh and new, even Jard’s feeling for her.

Edna, who evidently believed in a rouseabout being fed in the sa
me manner as the rest of a sheari
ng gang, had dished up a. massive meal of chops, sausages and egg. Lanie did her best with the egg and tried to avoid Edna’s disapproving glance.

Presently she went with Jard to the car waiting in the driveway, eyeing his well-shaped hands as he worked the controls. She was trying to memorise the gear movements which fortunately appeared to be the same as the van she had driven. With Jard, she reminded herself, you had to be one step ahead. She had a suspicion that his present pleasant mood wasn’t going to last for ever. It didn’t. The next moment his tone was definitely that of a boss giving orders to one of his staff. ‘I’d better give you the run-down on what you have to do


‘I know,’ she cut in, and rattled off quickly: ‘Push sheep into the pens for you to shear, sweep up the wool and sort it out on the table, go up to the house in the
car and bring back smoko


‘You’ve got it.’ They were taking a curving track cut through sandhills and leading to the grassy flats by the sea. As they swept down the rise Lanie glimpsed the bleached logs piled up on black sandhills of glittering irons
and the tossing surf and the fiery ball of the sun flaming over the horizon.

Presently they were approaching the drafting pens adjoining the old timbered woolshed Jard braked to a stop and soon they were mounting the
kauri
steps leading up to the shed. At that moment however a truck came roaring down the slope and Lanie went with Jard down to the yards where the driver was unloading sheep from his truck.

‘Right.’ He was a young man with twinkling dark
eyes and a friendly grin. They’re all yours, Jard


He couldn’t seem to take his gaze from Lanie’s face.

Briefly Jard made the introduction.

Merv
y
n, this is Lanie.’ He added carelessly, ‘Lanie’s my rouseabout.’

The stranger looked su
r
prised. ‘You could have fooled me!’ His appreciative glance was taking in Lanie’s clear skin and trim figure, the expression of excitement that lit her small face. ‘I would never have thought


‘Let’s get cracking, shall we?’ Jard cut in impatiently. He was giving some ‘hurry-up’ to the ewes he was guiding into a pen.

‘See you.

With a lingering glance in Lanie’s direction and a lift of his hand, the driver swung the truck around and took the sandy track along the beach.

Lanie had already forgotten him. She was moving with Jard up the steps of the shed once again. She glanced up into his closed face and once again the inexplicable surge of wild sweet happiness coursed through her. It must be something about the freshness of this magical morning, alive with birdsong from the trees around them. ‘He didn’t look geriatric to me!’ she teased. She mocked in her sweet husky tones, ‘ “Not up to doing much around the place” was the impression I got, from what you told me about your neighbour.’ Jard glanced down at the lively little face beneath the jauntily set cap and a flash of humour chased across his features. ‘True, true.’ In the end it was Lanie who dropped her lashes and looked away. At last, she thought triumphantly, she had got through to him, and couldn’t resist the temptation of adding, ‘The way he was tossing those sheep about, he looked healthy enough to me!’

‘Oh, he is.’ Jard’s voice was deadpan.

Only thing is, he’s a lawyer who works in Wellington and drops in now and again to spend holidays with his uncle. Shearing sheep isn’t his thing.’

‘I see.’ Privately she was of the opinion that at least Mervyn was pleasant and outgoing. His admiring glance for her had beamed an unmistakable message:
‘I’
d like to get to know you better.’ He had a smile for her too
,
not like Jard, she mused vindictively, who was nice to her only once in a while and then you could see it was only because he had forgotten to put up his guard. Unconsciously she sighed. If only Sandy hadn’t suffered that heart attack!

Jard flung open the heavy doors of the shearing shed and they moved together into the shadowy interior of the building. Her gaze moved over the five stands with their electrical equipment, the great presses and piles of wool bales. ‘Right! Let’s get on with it!’ Jard had paused to pull his T-shirt over his head, emerging with rumpled dark-blond hair, and looking, she thought, more approachable, younger, less Jard-like. Seeing him stripped to the waist, the rippling muscles of his chest and sinewy body tanned as deeply as arms and face, made her aware all over again of the aura of powerful masculinity he emanated. Thank heaven he couldn’t read her thoughts.

‘Lanie!’ Lost in her thoughts, she blinked as his stern tones recalled her to her reason for being here.

‘Sir!’ She straightened and opened her eyes wide in
mock alarm. ‘Orders are

?’

He eyed her narrowly, that mesmeric gaze she found so difficult to sustain. ‘You know what you have to do?’

She nodded. ‘I’ve got a fair idea. At least, I’ve read all about it.’

‘Read about it
?’
He bent on her his formidable stare. ‘This is for real, and you’d better pay attention!’

‘Sir!’

He refused to be amused He was wearing his familiar ‘must-keep-young-Lanie-under-control’ look, she reflected as he went on in the inexorable tones he seemed
to keep just for her. ‘For starters, you’ll need this


Striding away, he returned a few moments later with a straw broom. ‘When I’ve freed the fleece and released the ewe then you move in with your broom to clear the
stand and take the fleeces over to the sorting table. Dags, bellies and pieces all go into separate piles—I’ll show you how it goes with the first lot and after that it’s over to you—think you can handle it?’

Lanie wrinkled her nose at him. ‘It looks as if I’ll have to,’ she told him with spirit.

‘That’s my—the ideal’ She could have sworn he had been about to say ‘that’s my girl’ and had hurriedly changed the words. The suspicion went to her head and all at once she felt confident of carrying out the unfamiliar tasks.

‘It’s a bit different today from when the gangs are in action,’ she brought her mind back to his tones, ‘then the pace is always on, but all the same it’s the team spirit that counts. It’s a matter of timing and working together.’ He bent on her one of his swift penetrating glances. ‘You did say you’d have a go at anything?’

‘It’s good experience, I think,’ she declared warmly, ‘being part of a team. Especially,’ she couldn’t resist the opportunity of getting something of her own back, ‘when it’s a man-and-woman team!’

The moment the words left her lips she knew she had gone too far. For something leaped in his eyes, kindling flames he couldn’t hide from her gaze, and she knew it was only with an effort he was restraining himself from physical retaliation. A kiss, another kiss in the intimacy of the shadowy surroundings—was that what he imagined she was angling for? At the thought she felt her cheeks flame and hurriedly she averted her face.

He said tautly, ‘You’d better give me a hand to get sheep into the pen.’ She was only too glad to do as he said.

Before long Jard was bent over a ewe, one hand holding the animal while with the other he sheared away the heavy fleece. As Lanie watched his expert movements she realised why shearing was regarded as the hardest seasonal farm chore, depending on the shearer’s physical strength combined with a coordination of eye and hand. Intent on watching his rippling muscles under the mahogany tanned skin, it was only as the fleece fell to the slippery floor that she recalled her own job of work in the team. A man-and
-
woman team with a difference, she thought wryly, and began to pick up fleeces and carry the armfuls of soft; wool to a long table. Soon she was sorting out the wool for impurities as he had shown her. Before she had made much headway, however, it was time to clear the stand, and she picked up the straw broom and swept away the scraps of wool from the littered floor, while Jard went to the back door to bring another sheep to the stand.

It was a pattern of work repeated again and again. As the hours wore on the sun mounted in a cloudless sky, its rays beating down on the iron-roofed shed. Now Lanie’s white shirt, sleeves rolled above her elbows, was streaked with dust, her forehead beaded with perspiration, and in her nostrils was the musky smell of sheep under strain. Now there was no opportunity for talk or for anything else, for that matter. Jard worked hard and fast, maintaining a smooth steady pace and somehow it had become very important for her to keep up with him.

Head bent over the sorting table, she classed the fleeces as best she could, hoping feverishly that she wasn’t making any frightful blunders, for if so she would hear about them from Jard, no doubt about that!

‘Smoko!’ The cry rang through the shed and Jard, returning after releasing a sheep in the pen outside, strode forward.

‘Am I welcome or aren’t I?’ called a cheerful masculine voice, and Lanie paused in her task. Wiping a hand over her wet forehead, she met Mervyn’s grin.

‘Are you ever!’ Lanie didn’t know when she had been so glad to see anyone. ‘If I wasn’t such
a
mess. I’d throw my arms around your neck to thank you, I’m so glad to have a break!’ She perched on the table, swinging a bare foot, for she had long since kicked off her rubber thongs.

‘I don’t mind about your being a mess


Grinning, he set down on the table a wooden tray with a long handle, then placed beside the tray a billy of tea. ‘You look fine to me! Hi,’ he called as Jard returned from the side door where he had released a newly-shorn sheep, and came to join
them. ‘Your lady cook roped me on this job,’ he explained cheerfully, ‘told me if I was just going to hang around the house all day waiting for the sheep to be shorn and something else,

he threw Lanie a laughing glance, ‘but I won’t go into that. I might as well make myself useful.’ He was pouring steaming tea into cups and handing one to La
ni
e. ‘Your Edna isn’t the sort of woman one argues with. Seems I’ve got myself a job in the catering department!’
H
is warm glance
w
ent to Lanie, her face flushed and hot from the soaring temperatures of the shed and tendrils of red-gold hair lying damply against her forehead. ‘Not that I’m complaining

just hoping that if I stick
around long enough

’ He had a pleasant way of
speaking, Lanie thought, slow and sort of smiling.

‘Make it quick
,
Lanie!’ Jard

s terse tones cut across the lazy accents. ‘We haven’t got all day.’

She took a gulp of hot tea that burned her lips. The sudden harshness of Jard’s tone took her by surprise, and even Mervyn appeared somewhat taken aback. Had she not known Jard to be incapable of such an emotion concerning his new shed-hand, almost she could have imagined he was displaying jealousy, just as he was in the habit of doing with dear old Sandy. Sandy, of all men! It was absurd, of course—she shook the thought away. He was the big boss of Rangimarie and accustomed to ordering people around to suit himself, dam him! The maddening thing was that in situations such as this he happened to be in the right. All the same, she mused resentfully, he had no reason to look so ste
rn
and somehow ... angry. Mervyn hadn’t done a thing to merit Jard’s displeasure, except to pay her some attention.

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