Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
and was stronger for it. "Since the war," he added.
He said it as if there had been only one in the last hundred fifty
years, as if this corner of Montana had somehow existed out of time with
the rest of the modern world. Sitting there in the ranch yard, the wild
country all around them and no sign of civilization in sight, Marilee
was almost tempted to believe that could be true.
"The Civil War," she clarified.
"Yes, ma'am."
"And the Raffertys were Southerners?"
"Yes, ma'am. From Georgia."
His answer made her think of his manners. When he chose to display any,
they were quaintly formal, the courtly manners of the old Deep South,
polished Southern chivalry that had grown a little rough around the
edges out in the wilderness. The thought that those customs had survived
at all over four generations suggested they had been very carefully
handed down, like cherished heirlooms, like his pride in his land and
his fierce distrust of outsiders.
She turned sideways on the buggy seat and leaned a shoulder against the
rough wall of the barn. "You're very lucky," she murmured, "to have that
kind of sense of who you are and where you belong. I come from a place
where almost no one is a native, where tradition is something we get out
of Emily Post."
"It'll be that way around here soon enough."
"Only if all the natives leave."
"Plenty already have. Most can't afford not to."
"Because of people like Lucy buying land?"
"Nothing's sacred to people with money."
"You say that like they're evil. Maybe they love it here as much as you
do. Take it from me," she said dryly, "belonging doesn't necessarily
have anything to do with birthright."
J.D. said nothing. His feelings were too strong for words. No one could
love this land more than he did. It was as much a part of him as his
heart, his hands. He couldn't imagine an outsider feeling that. He
didn't want to.
He cut a sideways glance at Marilee. She seemed lost in thought,
pensive, her plump lower lip caught between her teeth while she fiddled
with the frayed ends of a tear in the leg of her jeans. Stray strands of
blond hair fell against her cheek. He had to admit, she didn't look much
like any of her fellow newcomers. She didn't dress to impress in
designer western wear. She didn't even wear makeup - not that she needed
any. She certainly didn't bear much resemblance to Lucy with her
expensive clothes and long, lacquered fingernails. There was no choking
cloud of perfume hanging around her. He pulled in a deep breath and
shifted positions, detecting a hint of lemon oil.
"You worked on the house all day?" he said, trying his best to sound
nonchalant.
"Mmm."
"Why?"
"Why?
Because it needed to be done."
"You fixing to move in, Marilee?"
"No. I-"
She heaved a sigh and looked across the yard to the house and the valley
that lay beyond. It was hers. She still couldn't get that into her head.
This place was hers and she couldn't accept it, yet she had pulled the
plug on the life she'd led before coming here.
Where did that leave
her?
In limbo. What a curious place to be. A fog, where contact to the past
had been severed and the future lay beyond the thick white mist. What
else was there to do but float along in it, let it take her wherever?
That was what her vacation to Montana was supposed to be about anyway - to
shut down for a time, to live in the moment.
"I don't know. I didn't come here with the intention of staying. I only
wanted some time to decompress. I just dumped my career, and then there
was this guy-" She cut herself off, sending Rafferty a rueful look.
"Well, that's another story. Anyway, I actually got some poor
unsuspecting innocent to buy all my stenographer's equipment. I was
coming here to celebrate. Lucy would have loved it - the ultimate
nose-thumbing of convention and all that . . . I sure as hell didn't
bargain for any of this."
A shiver ran through her, and she pulled her old jacket a little closer
around her, the appalling state of her fingernails catching her
attention. The ones she hadn't bitten off had broken off during her
cleaning marathon. Her fingers were chapped and raw from countless
cycles of wet and dry. Lucy would have hustled her off for an emergency
manicure.
"Should have worn gloves," J.D. murmured. He turned her hand over and
studied her palm and the callused tips of her fingers. Rubbing those
pads of hard flesh, he could still remember the sound of her guitar and
her low, husky voice, the sweetness, the poignancy of the music made by
these fine-boned hands.
Marilee's breath went thin in her lungs as he examined and explored her
hand. Currents of something warm and intoxicating traveled up her arm
and spread through her body in waves. She stared at him, wondering
exactly what it was, wondering if he felt it too. His hand was warm and
rough and huge, swallowing hers up as if she were a child. The latent
strength in it set off a fluttering in the base of her throat.
"You'll end up with rancher's hands," he said.
Instantly, she thought of his rancher's hands touching her, dark skin
against light, calluses caressing the softest parts of her - and a flash
fire swept through her.
This is weird, Marilee. Chemistry - that was the explanation. Too bad she
didn't understand chemistry any better now than she had in high school.
J.D. raised his eyes to meet hers and felt as if he had been lulled into
some kind of trance. He wasn't the kind of man to lose control, to act
the fool over some pretty blonde. That had been his father's role in
life. And Will's.
But not even that bitter reminder could make him pull his hand away from
Marilee's or make him look away from her. She stared up at him, her
deep, dark, clear blue eyes awash in wonder, her lips parted slightly in
surprise. The taste of those lips lingered in his memory, teasing him,
tempting him.
It's just sex, he assured himself. Nothing more complicated than a rush
of hormones.
He leaned down and settled his mouth over hers. She opened to him
readily, a symbolic gesture that shot molten heat through the pit of his
belly. He slid his tongue into her mouth, completing the symbol, taking
them to the threshold of the next level in the age-old game.
He kissed her deeply, possessively, sliding his free hand into the
tangle of her hair to cup the back of her head and hold her at the angle
he liked best. His other hand was still twined with hers between them.
As desire pooled and throbbed in his groin, he drew her hand to him,
bent her small fingers around his erection, and groaned at the heady
combination of pleasure and pain.
"That's how much I want you, Marilee," he whispered roughly, dragging
his mouth from her lips to her jaw to the shell of her ear. He pulled
the lobe between his teeth, biting gently, then sucking.
"That's saying a lot." Marilee's voice was as thin as gauze. Her brain
felt wrapped in gauze, logic trapped between the layers of mindless
need, overwhelmed by Rafferty's masculinity and sexuality.
"Let me give it to you, Marilee," he breathed urgently. "I want to be
inside you. I want to feel you around me. Hot. Wet." He wedged a hand
between her legs and rubbed her through her jeans. "Are you hot for me,
Marilee?"
A moan was the only response she could manage. The heat was incredible.
She felt as if she were melting, her whole being liquefying and flowing
into Rafferty's hand.
She stroked her palm down the length of him and imagined too easily how
he would feel entering her, filling her, stretching her.
He kissed her again, roughly, wildly, thrusting his tongue deep into her
mouth. His fingers fumbled for the tab of her zipper.
"Let me," he growled, his breath rasping, his lungs working like
bellows. He nipped the side of her neck, then kissed where he'd bitten.
"Let me fuck you, Marilee."
His blunt language shot a jolt of excitement through her. At the same
time, it struck a tender nerve. This would mean nothing to him but
slaking a need. He had been very plain about that from the start. He
didn't have to love her. He didn't even have to like her.
She wasn't a prude. She had gone to bed with men she didn't love. But
there had always been a mutual respect and friendship, if nothing else.
Here there was nothing else.
And still she wanted him.
The conflicting emotions swirled through her head, making her dizzy,
making her feel as if she were falling.
Then her backside hit the ground so hard, her teeth snapped together and
her eyes popped open. She had managed to fall off the bench.
"Wow." She struggled to her feet, knees wobbling, and dusted off the
seat of her jeans. "I've heard of kisses knocking a girl on her butt,"
she joked weakly, "but I never took it literally."
Embarrassment burned in her cheeks, and she turned slightly away from
him, rubbing the sensation with her fingertips as if she could erase any
telltale sign of it. Her hands were trembling. God, her whole body was
shaking. Amazing. When was the last time a man had made her tremble with
the power of his kiss?
Never. And when was the last time a man had made
her want so badly, her brain shut down and primal instincts took over?
Never.
You're in big trouble here, Marilee.
J.D. took her by the arm and turned her toward him.
"Let's go up to the house and finish this in a bed."
Marilee stepped away from him, shaking her head. Her hair tumbled down
around her face, partially hiding her.
"No."
"No?" he said, incredulous. Anger and sexual frustration pounded inside
him. "I didn't hear you saying no when you had your hand wrapped around
my dick."
"I'm sorry," she whispered, nearly choking on the tension within her. "I
can't do this."
"The hell you can't, Marilee," J.D. growled. "You drop your panties,
spread your legs, and I make us both happy. It's as simple as that."
"Not for me, it isn't. I don't have sex with a man just because I happen
to be handy when he needs it."
"Lucy did," he said cruelly.
Marilee lifted her chin and stared at him through a thin sheen of tears
as hurt coursed through her. "I'm not Lucy."
Her pride kicked him square and hard in the chest. She wasn't being coy.
She wasn't playing games. She was standing up to him. Again. And damned
if she wasn't pretty, standing there with those big, jewel-blue eyes
glaring at him through her tears and her tangled blond hair.
The hard throb of need ebbed a bit. J.D. reached into his hip pocket and
pulled out a handkerchief. Scowling, he swiped the tears that had
spilled over her lashes, leaving them spiky and dark. He gave her the
handkerchief and ordered her to blow her nose. Then he combed her hair
back with his fingers and tilted her face up.
"This isn't finished, Marilee," he said, his voice quiet, his expression
stern. "Not by a long way. It might not happen tonight or tomorrow, but
it's damn well gonna happen. That's a promise."
It sounded more like a threat, but Marilee said nothing as he turned and
went into the barn.
Twilight was fading fast. Night crept down the mountainside in long,
cool, black fingers that carried the scent of pine and damp earth.
Somewhere along the valley a bull elk called to his harem, a
high-pitched, whistling squeal that looped into a trumpet blast. Eerie
and beautiful.