Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
wasn't sure how to react. He wanted this land for himself, for the Stars
and Bars, as an added buffer against the encroachment of outsiders - of
Bryce in particular. He had hoped it would be offered for sale by
Daggrepont to settle the estate, though that scenario held no guarantees
the land wouldn't go to Bryce. Still, Daggrepont was a local. Marilee
Jennings was a wild card. There was no telling what she would do with
it.
The only thing he knew for certain was that she thought he was a jerk.
And she was right. He'd been nothing but a bastard to her from the word
go.
"Swell," he muttered.
Marilee wheeled on him, eyes flashing. "Thank you for your kind
condolences. It means so much to know people care."
"I won't pretend I liked her," he growled.
"Fine. Then I won't pretend I like you either."
She started to walk away from him, but his hand snaked out and caught
hold of her upper arm. Furious, she twisted around and glared at him.
"Get your hand off me, Rafferty. I'm sick of being manhandled by you.
And I'm sick of your snide remarks about Lucy. I don't give a shit what
she did to you. She was my friend. I didn't always like her. I didn't
always agree with her. But she was my friend, and I'll be damned if I'll
put up with your smart-ass remarks. If you can't manage to master any of
the greater social graces, you can at least show a little respect."
J.D. let her go, watching pensively as she stalked to the gatepost and
took down a big tin Mr. Peanut. She stood with her back to him, holding
the thing against her. Guilt gnawed on his conscience. She was right. He
should have had better manners than to speak his mind about Lucy.
Especially with the woman who had just inherited her property.
The addendum sat about as well as a gallstone in his gut. His personal
code didn't allow for ulterior motives.
A man conducted himself accordingly, regardless of circumstance; it was
a matter of honor. Well, he thought, chagrined, Lucy had always managed
to bring out the worst in him. Seemed she was still doing it,
manipulating him from the next dimension.
He blew out a heavy breath and jammed his hands at the waist of his
jeans. Women. They were more trouble than they were worth, that was for
damn sure. His mouth twisted as he stared at the back of Marilee
Jennings. She was crying. He could tell by the jerky movements of her
shoulders. She was trying valiantly not to.
He could tell by the halting breaths she snatched. A sliver of panic
shot through him. He didn't know what to do with a crying woman. The
only things he knew to do with women were avoid them or have sex with
them.
Neither option applied.
Feeling awkward and oversize, he walked up behind her and debated the
issue of touching her. An apology lodged in his throat like a chicken
bone, and he wished fervently that the world would just leave him alone
to tend his ranch and train his horses. And people like Marilee Jennings
and Lucy MacAdam and Evan Bryce would just stay down in California where
they belonged.
"I-a-um-I'm-a sorry."
He practically spat the word out of his mouth. Marilee would have
laughed if she hadn't felt so miserable. She suspected words didn't come
easily to a man like Rafferty. He didn't need an emotional vocabulary to
deal with horses and cattle.
Clutching the peanut tin to her chest, she sniffed and tried to swallow
her tears, embarrassed to shed them in front of a man who was
embarrassed to see them. But they pushed back hard, slamming up against
the backs of her eyes, swimming up over the rim of her lashes. Lucy's
dead. Lucy's dead. Lucy's dead. The line chanted over and over in her
mind, and echoing back were words that made her feel selfish and
frightened. I'm all alone. I'm all alone. I'm all alone.
The shoulder she would have cried on had been reduced to ashes. She felt
bombarded - by the decisions she had made about her own life in the past
week and by the shocks that had been delivered since her arrival in
Montana. All mental circuits overloaded and blew up.
Sobbing, she turned and fell against Rafferty. Any port in a storm. It
didn't matter that he was a jerk. He was something big and solid and
warm to lean against. And he owed her, dammit. After all his insults,
the least he could do was hold her while she cried.
She buried her face against his shoulder and pinned the peanut tin
between them, heedless of the thing's edges.
For a moment, J.D. was motionless and dumbfounded, panic bolting through
him. Then, almost of their own volition, his hands came up and settled
on her shaking shoulders.
She was small and fragile. Fragile. The word reverberated as he listened
to her cry. Her tears seemed to soak through his shirt and into his
heart. He couldn't imagine Lucy crying over anything; she had been too
tough, too cynical. But little Marilee cried as if the world were coming
to an end. Because he'd hurt her feelings. Because she'd lost a friend.
"Hush," he whispered, his fingers stealing upward into the baby-fine
hair at the nape of her neck. The soft, fresh scent of her hooked his
nose and lured his head down.
"Shh. I'm sorry, honey. Don't cry. Please don't cry."
The peanut tin was poking him in the stomach. J.D. ignored it. Dormant
instincts stirred to life inside him, feelings that were basic and
male - the desire to protect, the need to comfort. They slipped through
the wall of his defenses in a spot made soft by this woman's tears. She
cried as though she had lost everything in the world. He told himself a
man had to be made out of stone not to feel sympathy.
She turned her face and shuddered out a breath, and his head dropped
another fraction. His cheek pressed against hers.
"Shhh. Hush," he whispered, his lips moving against her skin, Soft as a
peach. Warm. Damp and salty with tears. His fingers slid deeper into her
tangled mane, cupping her head, tipping it. "Hush now," he murmured.
His gaze locked on her mouth. Her lips were plump and ripe, slightly
parted, shiny, tempting.
Marilee stared up at him, her heart thundering. His eyes were the warm
gray of old pewter, the pupils dilated and locked on her mouth. He
seemed to be breathing hard.
They both were. His lips were slightly parted. She remembered the feel
of them, the taste of him. A weird magnetism pulled on her, pulled her
toward him. He wanted to kiss her now. The message vibrated in the air
between them. She wanted to kiss him back.
would he blame her for it afterward?
She stepped back as J.D. started to lower his mouth toward hers. He
didn't like her. She ripped herself up one side and down the other for
wanting to kiss a man who had treated her so badly. She may have done a
great many stupid things in her life, but falling for Neanderthals was
not among her faults.
"I need to blow my, nose," she said, doing a wonderful job of killing
the sexual tension. "Have you got a tissue?"
J.D. fished a clean handkerchief out of his hip pocket and handed it to
her, telling himself he was glad that the madness had passed. He was
going to have to go and see about getting this need taken care of soon.
As soon as the branding and vaccinating was done . . . and the cattle
had been moved to the summer pasture . . . and the yearling colts had
been gelded . . .
Marilee blew her nose and tried to ignore the adolescent surge of
embarrassment at her body functions. "I never mastered the art of crying
delicately," she said, folding the handkerchief and stuffing it into her
pocket. "My sisters can do it. I'm pretty sure they don't have any
sinuses."
She wiped away the last tears from her eyes with the sleeve of her shirt
and shot a sheepish glance at Rafferty.
"Thanks for letting me cry all over you."
He shrugged, feeling awkward and hating it. Annoyance pulled his brows
down. "You didn't give me much choice."
"God, you're so gracious."
The big sorrel horse he had charged in on and then abandoned stepped
toward her, his big liquid eyes soft with what looked for all the world
like concern mixed with curiosity. He was a handsome animal, his coat a
dark, glossy copper, a big white star between his eyes. He inched toward
her, his reins dragging the ground. Slowly, he stretched his head out
and blew on her gently, then stepped a little closer and brushed her
cheek with his muzzle. The gesture struck Marilee as being sweet and
comforting, and a fresh hot wave of tears rose inside her with a weak
laugh.
"Your horse has better manners than you do."
"I reckon that's true enough," J.D. said softly. Sarge caught his subtle
hand signal and stepped back from Marilee, nodding his head
enthusiastically. She laughed, and J.D. ignored the fact that the husky
sound pleased him. He hadn't done the trick to impress her, just to stop
her from crying again, that was all.
"What's his name?"
"Sarge."
He gave her the information almost grudgingly, as if he thought
admitting he had given the animal a name showed some kind of hidden
weakness. Marilee bit down on a smile. "He's beautiful," she said. One
arm still clutching her peanut tin, she reached up and stroked the
gelding's face, indulging his begging for an ear-scratching. He closed
his eyes and groaned in appreciation.
"He's a good horse."
The words betrayed no overt sentiment, but Marilee caught the carefully
even tone and her gaze sharpened on the seemingly mindless pat on the
shoulder he gave the horse as he caught his reins and hooked one loosely
around a rail in the corral fence. The gelding wasn't fooled either. He
gave his master a hooded look and nipped at the flap on his shirt
pocket. Grumbling, Rafferty fished a butter mint out and handed it over.
Some tough guy. Marilee tried to steel herself against the insidious
warmth curling around her heart. Just because the horse liked him didn't
mean he wasn't a jerk.
"So what are you doing here anyway, Rafferty?
Besides spoiling my fun."
"I came to look after the stock," he said, shooting her a sideways
glance as he loosened the cinch on his saddle.
"Nobody told me not to."
Stock. She'd forgotten there were animals here, hadn't given a thought
to the fact that she owned them now too.
In fact, she had yet to see them. She hadn't gotten any farther than
the corral in her exploration of the place.
The burning of the business suits had demanded all her attention. She
couldn't have considered accepting Lucy's bequest until she had
officially broken that symbolic tie to her past. Now she thought of
livestock and panicked.
"Stock?" she said, falling into step beside Rafferty as he headed toward
the old barn. "What kind of stock?
I'm not sure I'm ready to handle
anything that could be considered stock."
J.D. shot her a look. She couldn't have been much more than five feet
five. What there was of her was swallowed up by a huge purple shirt. The
tails hung nearly to the ripped-out knees of her tight faded jeans. Her
hair was a mess, and there was a smudge of dirt on her upturned nose.
She looked up at him with those huge, clear, deep-set eyes, her dark
brows knit together in uncertainty.
"Come to think of it," she went on, suddenly pensive, "I can't see Lucy
handling 'stock' either. Christ, she never even wanted to open her own
beer cans for fear she'd chip a nail." But then, there were a great many
things about Lucy that suddenly made no sense. Marilee bit her lip and
cast a worried look down at the peanut tin in her arms.
"What is that thing?"