Looking for a sexy cowboy romance?
From New Times
and USA Today bestselling author,
Ruth Cardello,
comes Book One of the Texan Nights Series:
Gentling the Cowboy
Available now for pre-order on Amazon
Release Date: Sept. 16, 2013
Tony Carlton knows trouble when
he sees it—especially when it comes in the form of a gorgeous, innocent and
very naked blonde stranger dancing in his shower. When circumstances force his
uninvited guest to spend the night, Tony decides there are some home invasions
he could get used to.
Sarah Dery is a frustrated writer
who takes her twenty-fifth birthday as a wake-up call. She sets off for Texas
thinking that a summer on a working ranch will finally inspire her. When one
wrong turn leads her into the arms of a hot, broody cowboy, she discovers her
spicy inner voice.
But is it enough? He says he’s
not capable of love. Can she gentle this cowboy?
Chapter One
No real adventure ever started by waiting patiently on a doorstep.
Still, Sarah Dery hesitated
before reaching for the handle of the screen door of her friend’s immense,
white farmhouse. The shelter of the wrap-around porch did little to alleviate
the heat of the Texas midday sun, but was that a good enough excuse to enter? What if no one is home? With no cell
phone coverage, there wasn’t much else she could do unless she was willing to
wait in her SUV.
Wiping one suddenly cold hand
across a jean-clad leg, Sarah straightened her shoulders and opened the door
decisively. She hadn’t survived the three-day drive from Rhode Island only to
pass out from heat exhaustion on the porch because Lucy was late.
“Hello,” she called out. “Anyone
home?” No answer.
The interior of the house was
similar to the mammoth horse barn she’d searched a few minutes ago: well
maintained, but lacking any personal touches. She was surprised that her friend
lived like this, but perhaps when you worked all day on a ranch, decorating
wasn’t a priority.
Sarah assessed the living room.
It looked and smelled clean—the best compliment she could give it. The few
pieces of wooden furniture with outdated, plain blue cushions had probably
never given a person a moment of comfort. She returned to the main foyer and
appreciated the beauty of the woodwork even as she noted the lack of photos and
artwork on the walls.
The house reminded her of the
mansions in her hometown built by wealthy factory owners who had long since
left the area along with their businesses. Although this house had no obvious
signs of disrepair, it felt cold. Empty. Can
a house be sad?
She wandered through the
downstairs rooms and marveled at the lack of electronics—no television, not
even a radio. Lucy had hinted that her life in Texas wasn’t happy, but this was
the first time Sarah had been given a glimpse of how truly barren her life down
here was.
No wonder she invited me.
Although she hadn’t seen her old
roommate since college, they’d kept in touch via email and the occasional,
uneventful video chat. Until Lucy had asked, “How’s your writing going?”
What writing?
“I’ve been busy,” Sarah had said
lamely.
“Didn’t you say that you’d taken
the job at your parents’ company so you’d have time to write?”
Yes.
Apparently, time was not the issue.
Can you be a writer if you don’t write? Like a musician who never picks
up an instrument? Who are you when the person you are in your heart doesn’t
match the life you’re living?
I always wanted to be a writer––tell stories that would sweep readers
away on a journey of laughter, tears and growth. I dreamed of discovering
myself through the characters I’d craft.
So why can’t I write?
What’s stopping me?
God, I need this trip.
Lucy said she was desperate for
companionship, and the offer of spending a summer on a working Texas cattle
ranch had been too tempting to pass up. Taking a deep breath, Sarah announced
to the empty house, “I’ll admit so far this isn’t living up to how exciting I
thought Texas would be, but it’ll work out.” Maybe I watched too much “Dallas” but I’m not ready to give up on my
fantasy just yet.
She could almost hear her
brother’s telltale sigh that was often followed by a lengthy lecture. Charles
Dery was a successful Wall Street investor by profession and a self-appointed
dictator when it came to his little sister. Moving to New York rather than staying
and working for their family’s construction company hadn’t stopped him from
getting involved as soon as she’d announced that she was taking a leave of
absence from her office job at Dery and Son—a company that should have been
named Dery and Reluctantly-Employed-Daughter.
“Mom and Dad called me. They’re
upset. There is no way you are quitting your job to travel cross country
alone.”
“Yes, I am, Charlie.”
“Why the hell are you doing
this?” he’d stormed.
“I need this,” Sarah had fired
back, knowing that a conversation of more depth wasn’t possible between them. I need this.
Before it’s too late.
Maybe it already is.
Twenty-five.
What is it about a milestone age
that makes a person reassess their life? She’d graduated from the University of
Rhode Island with a bachelor degree in English, but she could easily have
gotten a degree in basket-weaving for all she’d done with it since.
Lucy’s question had haunted her,
especially during her last birthday party when the forest of candles on her
cake had hit Sarah like a bucket of ice-cold reality. How did I lose myself?
She wished there had been one
grand event she could blame, but the truth was it had happened much less
dramatically than that . . . more like a flower wilting in the sun until the
life she thought she was meant for was nothing more than a pile of dried-out,
brittle regret.
Charlie said I should think of
how this is affecting others and not be so selfish. Easy for him to say from
New York.
I tried to be the one who stayed behind to make everything okay, but
the price was too high. Be good. Follow the rules. Avoid all unpleasant topics.
I can’t do it anymore. I can’t be the perfect daughter in the perfect family. I’m
an adventurer. A pioneer. Texans hadn’t stay where the boat dropped their parents.
They’d boldly left for parts unknown.
Like I did.
Life in Rhode Island wasn’t
awful. Her office position at her parents’ company paid enough for her to have
her own apartment and be able to afford a horse that she rode four nights a
week at an exclusive equestrian facility.
I didn’t have anything to complain about.
Nor anything to look forward to.
Until Lucy called.
“Hello . . . anybody here?” The
silence was eerie, but this wasn’t the movies––nothing extraordinary was going
to happen.
Sarah grimaced. Nothing ever did.
Lucy had probably run to the
store for some last minute supplies. Isn’t
that the way it always works? You step away for just a minute and your company
arrives.
A bead of sweat trickled down
Sarah’s neck. The light cotton shirt she had chosen so carefully that morning
was now plastered against her back. Sarah plucked at it while renewing her
resolve. She’d adjust to the heat. Comfort didn’t matter. This was about
finding herself, finding her voice.
She returned to the living room,
plopped on the unforgiving couch and flung out her arms in victory. I did it! It may have taken her three
days because she’d wanted her horse to rest along the way, but even that part
of the journey had been amazing. Each bed and breakfast she’d stayed at on her
way down had intensified the anticipation. Each time she’d told the other
guests where she was going it had given the trip more vitality.
This is what life is about: seeing new places, meeting new people,
grabbing life by the balls and squeezing until it coughs up a story worth
telling.
I should write that down.
She whipped out her purple,
spiral notebook she’d purchased specifically for this trip and stopped halfway
through recording her thoughts, hesitating before writing a word she normally
avoided—balls.
I’m twenty-five, not five. Writers are not afraid of words. On the
very first page of her notebook, she wrote, “Balls. Balls. Balls.” And smiled
with pride. With renewed enthusiasm, she wrote, “Big balls. Hairy balls. Bald balls?”
Chewing on the end of her pen
thoughtfully, Sarah decided to designate a section of her notebook to research
topics. She drew a margin on the right side of the paper. In her finest
penmanship, she wrote: Do some men shave
their balls?
I should write: What woman my age doesn’t know that? But this is not
about passing judgment. Positive energy brings positive results. Acceptance of
yourself is the first step toward improvement.
God, I’ve been reading too many self-help books.
It’s time to stop thinking about why I’m not living the life I want and
just live it.
Which was why she’d chosen to
bring a notebook instead of her laptop. Real change sometimes requires a clean
sweep. No more wasting time searching the Internet hoping a topic would end her
writer’s block. No more reading countless articles on how to write. Just a pen, a notebook, and Texas. If I
don’t write something this summer, I deserve to work for my parents for the
rest of my life.
Time to color outside the lines.
No more settling for good enough.
Like Doug.
Her recent breakup with the man
she’d dated chastely in high school, then slept with through college, had been
as unexciting as any of the sex they’d ever had. Not that they’d had sex in
months anyway. Which should have mattered, but it hadn’t. Because I didn’t love him. Just like every other choice I’ve made up
until now, he was safe and the type everyone expected me to be with. Smart,
successful, and someone who fit into her parents’ social circle. He’d never said a single thing anyone
objected to. Tapioca in a suit. Bland in
and out of bed.
Why was I with him for so long?
The wrong size shoe doesn’t fit just because you want it to.
She slammed her notebook shut and
hugged it to her chest as she took another look around the room before
whispering, “The only one who can give me the life I want is me. Right now.
Right here.”
Returning to her more immediate concerns,
Sarah looked down at the damp cotton material of her shirt. Who knew how long Lucy
would be gone? What if she comes home and
she’s not alone? I can’t meet people looking like this.
Coming to a quick decision, Sarah
rushed back to her SUV for her luggage and a change of clothes. She left the
heaviest pieces in the hallway and went with her small bag to search for a
place to freshen up.
The downstairs bathroom was
bleached white and as spartan as the rest of the house, but it revealed a
beautiful . . . no, a heaven-sent shower.
She closed her eyes for a moment and imagined washing off the dirt and sweat
under the cool spray.
Would it be so wrong?
Tony considered taking the
shotgun from the back of his truck when he saw the vehicle parked in his driveway,
but quickly decided to toss this intruder off his land with his bare hands. Hell, it might even make my day.
A Rhode Island license plate? Someone
had traveled a long way for a good, old-fashioned Texas beating.
Course, there was a slim chance that
David had invited a buyer to pick up his horse directly from the ranch. No, David’s not that stupid.
Tony opened the door of his truck
with more force than necessary and took stock of the scene in his driveway. No
one he knew would have driven the flashy gray, two-horse trailer and matching
silver Lexus SUV—neither of which appeared to have ever seen a day of work.
Upon closer inspection, it looked
more like a delivery truck than a pickup. The rear-loading ramp was still down.
Someone had clearly unloaded a horse and led it into the barn.
He checked the barn’s interior
first. Nothing out of place. The stalls were secure. He scanned the paddocks. All
his horses were accounted for.
What the hell? Whoever had driven that trailer had the gall to put
their small horse in one of his paddocks, smack dab in the middle of his prized
quarter horses.
A delicately boned bay horse, Paso
Fino by breed. Tony’s eyes narrowed. Pampered by the looks of it. Definitely
not used to working. The sparkling painted black hooves and pink halter stopped
him in his tracks.
The intruder is a woman. Cursing, Tony strode toward the house, the
pace of his footsteps picking up speed as his anger grew.
He considered each of his past
female companions, although none were recent. He chose partners with
care—experienced women who understood that he had nothing more than a few hours
of mutual pleasuring to offer them. He didn’t promise them anything and they
were too smart to think they could come to his ranch uninvited and receive anything
but a cold escort to the road. The only people who were welcome on his ranch
were the ones who worked there, and even they knew to stay out of his way.
The pink and green, checkered
luggage that greeted him as he entered the house brought a rush of heat up his
neck. He heard the downstairs shower running and a female voice mixed with the
sound of the spray. Almost positive he must have fallen asleep at the wheel of
his truck in the heat of the day, he walked toward the bathroom. With a bang,
he opened the door, stepped inside and stopped dead when he saw the outline of
a small woman dancing behind the fogged glass.
She must not have heard him
because she kept singing—some pop song, he figured. Not a tune he knew. The
tone he chose was one that had cowered many grown men over the years. “What the
hell are you doing in my shower?”
The water cut off, a quick hand
shot out, grabbed a towel, and snatched it back behind the glass door. A second
later, a wet blonde head stuck out, “Hi. I’m Sarah,” she stated as if that explained
everything. “I didn’t think you’d mind if I took a quick shower while waiting for
you. Sorry if I surprised you.”
Her face had a warm, sheepish
smile even while water dripped down from her hair across her forehead. He
caught a glimpse of a bare arm as her hand came out to wipe the water away. His
gut tightened in response.
Gorgeous.
Long, wet eyelashes framed two
unguarded brown eyes. Small dimples made her classically beautiful features
less intimidating. Here was a woman who seemed unaware that a man could have
the air sucked right out of his lungs and be rendered speechless with just one
look at her.
The front of his jeans became
uncomfortably tight as his body came alive with the desire to strip and join
her in the shower. He could see the outline of her towel-clad body and the
expanse of exposed legs behind the lightly fogged glass. In her rush to cover
herself, she hadn’t taken the time to dry off. He imagined sinking to his knees
and burying his face in her damp pussy. Would it taste as sweet and fresh as
her lips looked? Would she throw her head back and to the side when he lifted
her naked against the wall of the shower and suckled the full breasts he could
now only see the rounded top of? Would those full lips round in a gasp of
pleasure as he drove his cock into her for the first time?
He wasn’t an impulsive man when it
came to women, but the throbbing need that swept through him made him want to
be now.
Easy, cowboy. A man can’t be blamed for where his thoughts go when he
finds a beautiful, naked woman in his shower, but thinking and acting are two
different things. She could be anyone with God only knows what sort of
intentions. Something that appears too good to be true almost always is. “I
don’t know what made you think—”
Securing the towel chastely
around herself, Sarah stepped out of the shower. With shocking audacity, she
smiled and put her hand out to shake his. “I admit I wasn’t sure if it was okay
to take a shower before you came home, but I figured since I’m staying here for
the summer you wouldn’t mind.”
Oh, hell no. “You’re what?”
Her extended hand shook then fell
to her side. She took a quick step back, eyes darting past him to a pile of
clothes she had stacked on the counter near the sink. “I thought you knew.”
He towered over her, more out of
habit than a desire to intimidate her. The press had become more creative
recently in their attempts to interview him, but would they go this far? Her
pale, creamy skin and her pink manicured toenails warned him she’d be trouble. But,
damned if he didn’t care. “I’m listening.”
She looked down at her state of
undress and then back at him. Her eyes were as wide and expressive as a young
filly’s. “I’m not dressed,” she said.
He hoped his swollen dick wasn’t
as obvious as it was painful. “I noticed.”
Emotion deepened her already dark
brown eyes. A line of exasperation creased her brow. “I’m sorry you didn’t know
I was coming. I’m sorry I made myself at home while you were out.” She stopped
and her voice softened. “The truth is I’ve driven a long way to get here and I’m
just too tired to fight about it. I’d like to get dressed. Did Lucy come home
with you?” She began to slide around him, inching toward her clothing.
He sat back on his heels a bit. “Lucy?”
“Your sister.”
“I don’t have a sister.” This
pretty little woman was about as loony as they come, but a man couldn’t be
blamed for overlooking that when she stood there with her skin still pink from
the heat of the shower.
She stumbled back a bit at that. “Y-you
don’t?” Eyes rounded with surprise, she chewed her bottom lip nervously. “But
this is the Double C Ranch.”
“Yes, ma’am, it is.”
“And you’re Lucy’s brother,
Steven Albright.”
“No, ma’am, I’m not. My name’s
Tony, Tony Carlton.”
He waited for a reaction to his
name, but received one he hadn’t expected. His little shower beauty rubbed her
forehead with the back of one hand. He watched her and worried for his sanity
as he once again became mesmerized by her movements. He should care who Steven
was, but instead all he could think about was how he wanted to redirect that
hand to rubbing something else, something that was craving her touch in a bad
way.
“I don’t understand. Isn’t this
the Double C Ranch in Mavis?”
He removed his hat and wiped the
wet sheen from his forehead. The residual steam from the shower added to an
overall temperature spike caused by prolonged exposure to a scene worthy of
mention in a men’s magazine. “Fort Mavis.” Her mouth dropped open and her eyes
rounded with real shock. Not too much amused him, but her look of horror
tickled what was left of his funny bone. “We’re almost a day’s drive west of
Mavis,” he added.
A deep red flush started at her
neck and ran straight over her face. She went pale then red again.
“You all right, ma’am?” he asked
and went to her side right quick. He was not about to explain to Doc how a near-naked
city woman cracked her fool head in his bathroom. Desire took second seat to
concern.
Thankfully, she sat on the closed
toilet seat. Her adorable shoulders slumped and she covered her eyes in a
child-like attempt to disappear. “So,” the little beauty groaned, “I’m in the
wrong town.”
“Yes, ma’am, it sure sounds that
way.” He knew he should step out of the bathroom and let her get dressed. The
mystery was solved. She wasn’t a reporter or a thief. No, she was just . . . blonde.
The thought had the corners of his mouth itching to smile.
Regaining some of her composure,
she brought her delicate hands down, stood, squared her shoulders, and met his
eyes—knocking all coherent thought clear out of his head. “I knew I shouldn’t
have trusted that gas station attendant. I was just so happy that he’d heard of
the place.” Her color was back to normal, but her voice was a bit strained. “Does
Texas have a lot of ranches named Double C?”
“Appears we have at least two,”
he said and this time he could not restrain the lusty grin that spread across
his face. She was as adorable as she was sexy—a disconcerting combination. Had
she turned up the heat and come on to him, he would have lost interest—well,
after sampling whatever she’d offered.
Apparently a man could only go so
long without sex before he lost his damn mind because she hadn’t shown the
least bit of interest in him. Truth be told, as the enormity of the situation
sunk in, she wasn’t paying very much attention to him at all.
“I can’t believe I did this . . .”
A look of self-disgust crossed her delicate features. “Oh, my God. My brother
will never let me live this down. Only I would drive all this way to the wrong
ranch.”
She paused and her eyes widened. “The
wrong ranch.” Repeating the words slowly with new emphasis. She retightened the
top of her towel with hands that shook a little. “I should get dressed.”
Even though the towel concealed
more than shorts and a tank top would have, knowledge of what lay beneath . . .
or rather, of what didn’t, was torturing him. He’d managed to clear his head of
images of her, writhing with pleasure beneath him, but they were clamoring to
return. It was time to make a hasty exit while he still had the mind to.
Mustering a nod, he stepped outside and closed the door behind him.
Too soon, she was with him again.
No makeup. No shoes. A simple flowered, sleeveless blouse and pair of tan
shorts, which were likely considered a modest mid-thigh length, still drove him
damn near crazy. He wanted to run a hand up one of her long legs to test if
they were, in truth, as soft as they appeared.
She rushed by him and disappeared
into the living room. He followed, aroused but trying to remain irritated by
the presence of a stranger in his home.
She has to go.
“I really am sorry about this,”
she burst out with her rapid-fire northern accent. “You probably think I’m
crazy. I guess I am.” She paced back and forth in front of him, a barefoot
beauty. “I knew I should have bought a map.” She waved her cellphone in the
air. “It worked the rest of the way down here, but not when it really
mattered.”
Leaning against the door jam, he
felt the stirring of something even more worrisome than lust. A tickle of
adrenaline licked through his veins as his high-energy intruder came to a stop
in front of him. It had been years since anything had made his heart race and
his breath catch in his throat. Something about this woman pulled at a part of
him he’d considered long dead.
Appearing oblivious to how close
he was to hauling her to him and tasting those tempting, pursed lips, Sarah
said, “I’ll get my stuff and be out of here before I cause any trouble.”
“Trouble?” Dammit, now why didn’t I simply agree?
She turned away, bent and gave
him a delightful view of her never-ending legs as her shorts rose up. She
didn’t seem to notice, just kept rummaging through her luggage. “With your girlfriend
or wife or whatever.”
“No trouble,” he drawled. Crazy
must be catching because he was having difficulty reconciling what he knew he
should say with the damn fool things coming out of his mouth.
“There they are,” she exclaimed
happily and pulled out the most impractical pair of boots he’d ever seen: knee-high,
polished leather with ridiculously spindly heels and some sort of strap across
the top. She held them up next to one leg. “I bought these special for this
trip. Do they match?”
Who the hell cares? No man would ever ask her to take them off. No,
those were the kind that stayed on all night.
She sat on the couch as she pulled
them on. Her big brown eyes studied him intensely. He’d bought horses with less
of a perusal than she was giving him. He wished he had taken the time to shave
that morning. His plaid shirt was covered with dust and sweat from working in
the heat of the afternoon. The old jeans he’d thrown on without a second
thought that morning were layered with grass stains. Not much to look at.
“Could I bother you for one more
thing?” Her voice was huskier than before. “May I use your phone?” She held up
her cellphone. “This thing is useless here and my friends must be worried by
now. They expected me hours ago.”
He nodded, not trusting himself
to answer. The way she continued to look him over . . . slowly . . . from head
to foot had him fumbling for sanity. He pointed to the land phone on the small
table in the corner of the room and wordlessly watched her walk to it.
Damn.
“There’s still no answer.” She waved
the handset helplessly in the direction of her distant friends. “I guess I
should just head over there and wait till they get home.”
“Are you sure you can find the
place?” he asked without missing a beat, surprising himself.
Replacing the receiver, Sarah’s
eyes narrowed at him even as her dimples revealed her good humor at his teasing.
“A cowboy and a comedian?”
Tony shrugged. “Can’t say I’ve
ever been accused of being funny before.” He’d never had much to laugh about
and didn’t see any merit in acting the clown since the world was full of those who
took to idiocy naturally.
Her expression softened. “Well,
you should try it more often, it suits you.”
The compliment jolted him like a
brush with electric fencing. Tony retreated a step and almost fell when the
back of his boot met her suitcase.
Sarah advanced and reached to
steady him but he stepped back again, evading her touch.
The sound of the front door
opening had never been so welcome. Women
make men stupid. Plain and simple. Wasn’t that what his father had always
said? He didn’t need more proof than practically falling on his ass because a
woman half his size had complimented him.
The shuffle of boots across the
wooden floor announced someone’s intention of joining them. Melanie. Her presence wasn’t a surprise.
As his housekeeper, she used his kitchen on a daily basis to prepare meals for
him. Normally, however, she was better at minding her own business.
Yep, she was fixing to break the
one rule he’d laid down the day he’d hired her and, for a reason he wasn’t
comfortable exploring, he wasn’t prepared to correct her in front of Sarah.
She came to a stop at the
doorway. “You have company? Do you need anything?” She looked Sarah over as she
spoke and for a moment the two women simply stared at each other.
A man would have been hard-pressed
to say if these two women could get along. Life hadn’t been kind to Melanie and
she’d spent almost as much time hiding on his secluded ranch as he had.
Although she was likely only a few years older than Sarah, they couldn’t have
been more different. If the two were cats, Sarah would be the fluffy white, pampered,
city-type that would likely run at the first sign of a rodent. Melanie was a
brown, bad-tempered, barn cat: useful to have, but better kept outside.
Not that she ever showed her
temper around him, no one did and stayed.
He was still debating how to get
both out of his house, when Sarah stepped forward with the huge, welcoming
smile he’d seen on her face when she’d thought he was her friend’s brother.
She took Melanie’s hand in hers
and shook energetically. “Hi, my name’s Sarah.”
Melanie pulled her hand free. Did
he imagine the hiss? Careful, Sarah.
Feral cats aren’t real good when cornered. He figured he could intervene
before things got ugly, but most creatures got along better if you let them
sort it out for themselves.
Sarah’s smile didn’t dim as she
waited for the other woman to speak.
“Melanie,” his dark-haired
housekeeper said curtly.
In the high speed way she spoke,
Sarah said, “I can only imagine what you must be thinking, but this is much
more ridiculous and innocent than it looks.” She took her phone out of her back
pocket and waved it between them. “I mean who knew it wouldn’t work out here,
right?” She looked over her shoulder at Tony and said, “Your husband was just
letting me use your phone.” Then she flushed a delightful shade of pink. “Okay,
your shower, too, but he didn’t let me use that. I mean, I did use it, but that
was before I knew you would both be here. Which, you should be, because it’s
your house. So why wouldn’t you be here? I’m the one who shouldn’t be here. And
I’m actually just leaving.”
Melanie, who’d simply stared at
Sarah during the overflowing river of speech, raised her eyebrows and stated succinctly,
“I’m not his wife.”
“Whew,” Sarah said with a laugh,
then stopped and looked at both of them again. “I didn’t mean that the way it
sounded. If you’re his girlfriend or whatever, I’m cool with that. It was just
that—whoa, explaining this to a wife would be so much worse. Not that anything
happened.” Sarah closed her eyes briefly as if the though pained her and then
continued earnestly, “Unless you count that he saw me naked, and that totally
wasn’t his fault.”
Melanie said blandly, “I work
here.”
“Oh, I thought . . .”
“No,” Melanie and Tony said in
unison.
Another blush spread across
Sarah’s cheeks. The quick look she gave Tony sent his heart racing and his
thoughts scattering.
“Sarah isn’t staying,” he said
gruffly. “As soon as she locates her friends, she’s leaving.”
Sarah deflated a bit at his harsh
declaration. “Yes, in fact, they should be there now. I should head out.”
I’ll probably regret this. “Melanie, make a second plate for dinner.
Sarah and I will eat in the dining room.”
Hard to say which woman he’d
shocked more. Sarah looked back and forth between them as if seeking a
reassurance. “I am hungry. If you’re
sure it’s not too much trouble?”
Melanie didn’t say a word, but
she didn’t have to. In fact, he preferred she didn’t. He wasn’t ready to
explain to anyone, not even himself, why he was reluctant to see Sarah leave.
It was more than how his body
responded to hers. He wanted . . .
He wasn’t sure what exactly.
Was it because she had no idea
who he was? She was neither intimidated by his reputation nor excited by the
idea of being with a man many considered dangerous. No, she looked at him like
there wasn’t a reason in the world why they couldn’t be friends . . . or more.
Tony had been alone so long that
he’d begun to believe he preferred it that way. In the beginning it had been
easier, and over time it had become comfortable. Tonight he didn’t want to be a
man with a past he regretted. He didn’t want to be angry. He wanted to have an
uncomplicated dinner with a beautiful woman. Knowing she was leaving after
their meal made it much easier to allow himself to enjoy it.
Melanie had just finished setting
two places at one end of his dining room table when he and Sarah entered the
room. No one would have guessed this was the first time anyone had sat there in
the five years he’d owned the place. He preferred the solitude of the small
kitchen table. He wasn’t about to mention it though––women would falsely read
meaning into something like that.
Chapter Two
Standing in the doorway of the
dining room, Sarah wished life had a pause button. She wanted to slow time and
savor each moment of this. Another woman might have been afraid, but the joy of
the unexpected was the reason Sarah often chose riding the trails instead of
remaining in the ring at the barn she belonged to. Outside of the riding ring
she was free and anything was possible.
This wasn’t how my trip was supposed to go, but look at me, standing
next to a real cowboy—one with a shy smile and a slow, southern drawl. He belongs in a book. He was in his late
twenties or early thirties, but the rugged lines of his face spoke of years of
hard work and his callused hands held a powerful promise she’d never imagined
in the manicured, smooth texture of the city men she was used to.
He even smells like the outdoors.
How strange would I look if I took out my notebook and jotted down all
the things I don’t want to forget about him? I’d start with those muscles. Those
heavenly muscles. Unlike the hulking men who strutted like peacocks at her
local gym, this man had the understated, quiet strength that Sarah found a
million times sexier. He earned those
delicious biceps and that rock-hard body in a way that wouldn’t have diminished
the size of his . . .
In the middle of an appreciative
sigh, Sarah realized her gaze had followed her thoughts in a less than subtle
ogling of his lower assets. She looked up quickly, her face heating with a
blush, when she met his eyes. Quick. Say
something. “I like your . . . uh . . . jeans.”
Who the hell says that?
“Pardon the dust.” He brushed his
hand down one thigh, a move that sent responding flicks of heat through Sarah.
There it was again, that almost smile. “I usually shower when I get home, but
it was already occupied.”
You could have joined me, Sarah thought, smiling, surprised at herself.
Oh, my God, I’m smiling like some street lunatic. Don’t look guilty; look
away or he’ll know what you were thinking. She met his eyes and the heat
that flew between them made her start considering all sorts of impulsive things—many
of which included the removal of some or all of their clothing.
Sarah gulped.
Okay, this is not a good idea. I don’t know this man.
But I’d like to.
Oh, how I’d like to.
Stop, that! She chastised her raging libido. This summer is about breaking free, living, finding my writer’s voice––not
about having a one-night stand just because my sense of direction sucks.
She sought sanity by turning her
attention to the table. The very long, very sturdy table. What would it be like to push the plates aside and . . .
A huge smile spread across her
face as images of them entwined passionately elicited another thought. I have a naughty side.
Me.
Who knew? All I needed was the right inspiration!
Tony moved to stand behind one of
the chairs and held it out for her to sit on. When she sat, he pushed it in
with more force than she’d expected and she gasped. He took the seat across
from her, but looked far from happy about it, making her wonder if their
attraction was indeed mutual.
Sarah had never considered
herself a beauty, nor was she used to men glowering at her like she was an . .
. uninvited guest? I’m such an idiot. He’s feeding me out of
pity. This isn’t a date. No amount of leering at him will change that. Sarah
groaned, pushed her seat back, and stood. “I should go.”
“Sit,” he said in an authoritative
voice she was sure moved most people to obedience.
At first glance, she’d thought
his eyes were hazel, but in the dim dining room lighting they were a deeper
green. The air thickened with tension. Heart pounding in her chest, Sarah stood
immobile, like prey frozen in a field.
What would it be like to be with a real man? One who wouldn’t fumble with a bra strap or ask you if you really
wanted to do it so many times you had begun to ask yourself the same question.
No, Tony would take what he wanted.
She shivered with pleasure at the
thought.
Taken.
Now that would be something to write about.
“Sit,” he ordered again, more softly,
and Sarah did so only because her knees gave out beneath her. He could ask me for almost anything in that
tone and I wouldn’t refuse.
I should leave now.
He could dangerous.
Or he could be the best mistake I’ve ever made.
The sound of Melanie organizing
plates in the adjoining room shook Sarah free of her hormonal stupor. She said
the first thing that came to her mind. “I saw your horses. They’re beautiful.
How many do you have?” She wasn’t sure he was going to answer her at first. If
the harsh set of Tony’s jaw was anything to go by, he was enjoying their time
together much less than she was.
“Depends on the season,” he
answered vaguely.
“And they’re all quarter horses?”
Is it wrong to ask questions just so I
can hear his knee-melting drawl again?
“Most of ’em.”
Melanie placed two glasses of lemonade
between them.
Sarah thanked her and took a long
sip of her lemonade, half closing her eyes as she enjoyed the refreshing
coolness of it. When she opened them, Tony was watching her intently, looking
even less happy, if that were possible.
It made her nervous, and when she
was nervous she tended to ramble. “Did you see Scooter outside?” she asked, but
continued without waiting for him to answer her. “I put him in a paddock
because it was too hot to leave him in the trailer. I hope that was okay. I
thought I was at Lucy’s place when I did it.”
“Are you married?” His voice
broke through her monologue like a bolt of lightning.
“No,” she said quickly, her mouth
working faster than her brain. “I’m single. Totally single.” She grabbed a
napkin and practically shoved it in her mouth to stop the flow of words. Could I be more obvious?
Think.
Think of something cool to say.
Nothing came to mind.
Melanie returned with generous
platters of steak and vegetables, explaining she would be back in the morning
to clean up. The click of the outside door announced her departure and echoed
through the quiet house. They ate in silence for what seemed like an eternity.
“I don’t usually do this,” Sarah
blurted out. “Not that we’re doing anything more than eating and, of course, I
do that on a regular basis. Eat, I mean. I just don’t . . .”
“Do more than dinner?” he asked,
his expression unreadable as he laid his fork down beside his plate.
She nodded. “Yes, that part. I
don’t want you to think because you saw me in a towel . . .”
The corners of his eyes crinkled
with humor.
Oh, God, he’s laughing. My
fantasy cowboy is laughing at me.
Embarrassed, she threw her napkin
at him. “It’s not funny.”
A slow smile spread across his
face. “It is, actually.”
Sarah crossed her arms with a bit
of a huff. “It had to be said or things could get awkward.”
“You mean more than this?” His grin was unrepentant.
Imagining the evening through his
eyes, Sarah groaned. He was probably hoping she would talk less, eat more, and
get out of there quickly. “I do appreciate you not calling the police when you
found me here.”
“The sheriff would have loved
that. Best break-in story ever.”
“I didn’t break in—” she started
to say, but stopped when suddenly all of the emotions of the day rushed in and,
adding to her fatigue, brought an embarrassing sheen of tears to her eyes.
All humor left Tony’s face. He
looked at the door quickly as if that would somehow conjure up his housekeeper.
“Don’t cry . . .”
“I’m not crying,” Sarah denied
hotly and sniffed. Great, I bet my nose
is turning red. A man like Tony probably dated sophisticated women: women
who would know exactly how to flirt with him. They’d entice rather than
entertain him.
What do I do when I’m given an evening alone with the sexiest man I’ve
ever met? Sarah sniffed again and looked around for a tissue. Nothing worth documenting unless I decide to
write an article about how to make an idiot of myself in ten easy steps.
He stood abruptly; his chair
teetered and almost toppled behind him. “You should try calling your friends
again.”
Party’s over.
Get out.
Sarah stood and followed him back
to the living room and the phone.
Hey Texas, so far you’re not that good for my ego.
“Thanks, but it’s probably best
if I just load Scooter and go. Sounds like I have a night of driving ahead of
me.”
He stopped and turned so abruptly
that she walked straight into him. Everything she’d admired earlier was acutely
more amazing pressed up against her. He steadied her with a hand on either arm
and eased her back, but not before she’d experienced her first dose of gut-clenching
lust that tempted her to launch herself back into his arms.
Although that would make a good story to tell my friends.
I thought you said he didn’t call the sheriff when you broke into his
house, so how did you end up arrested?
Oh, that happened when I mauled him even after he kept asking me to
leave. You would have, too. He was gorgeous.
His hands dropped away and for a
moment Sarah forgot why she’d followed him to the room. You know, besides wanting to stare up at him speechlessly and drool for
one last time before I leave.
“I can’t let you go . . .” he
said.
Thank God.
“. . . until you contact someone.
No telling where you’d end up on your own.”
Okay, that last part killed the mood a bit.
Now I remember why I want to write. Reality sucks. Watch out, Mister
Cowboy. When I put you in a book, you’re going to be kissing my feet and
begging me to stay. Sarah raised her chin with renewed pride and said, “I’ll
call them one more time, but I’m leaving even if they don’t answer. Where I end
up is none of your concern.”
Now I sound like a heroine in a romance novel.
Take that Mr. Sexy Cowboy.
Tony looped his thumbs through
the belt on his jeans and said, “In Texas, if you find someone in your shower,
you’re responsible for their welfare for at least twenty-four hours.”
Sarah opened her mouth to argue
the point, then cocked her head to the side and asked, “Did you just make
another joke?”
The corners of his eyes crinkled
ever so slightly. Note to self, dry humor
in an otherwise stern character is intriguing—would be even sexier if I wasn’t
the butt of his joke.
She defended her arrival. “I
wouldn’t be here if all the damn ranches in Texas didn’t have the same name.”
A hint of a smile curled one side
of his mouth. “Yes ma’am.”
“Just give me the phone,” Sarah
said and stepped past him.
He caught her mid-step, spun her
and held her just in front of him by her arms. The hot look in his eyes sent
another rush of desire through Sarah. He
wants me. Her mouth went dry and she flicked her tongue over her bottom
lip.
The move caught his eye, but
instead of crushing her to him with the kiss she anticipated, he set her back
from him again and said, “My number is near the phone if you want your friends to
call you back here.”
With that, he turned on his heel
and left.
Fanning her face, Sarah picked up
the nondescript, black phone and reluctantly dialed her friend’s number. Lucy
was probably frantic by now. The phone rang once. Then twice.
Or not.
A machine picked up after the
fifth ring. “Hi, Lucy. It’s Sarah. I had a little trouble finding your place so
I am at—I’m at a friend’s house. Anyway, when you get this message please call
me.” She left Tony’s number and hung up the phone.
He wanted me.
I know he did.
Or I’m desperate enough to see only what I want to see . . . like a
cattle ranch where there are only horses.
End of Chapter Two
Gentling the Cowboy will be available at all
retailers on September 16, 2013
Pre-order available at:
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