Foxfire Bride (44 page)

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Authors: Maggie Osborne

Tags: #General, #Romance, #Historical, #Fiction, #Western, #Adult

BOOK: Foxfire Bride
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Pacing the length of his parlor, he combed his mind for a hint of where she might be. What was she thinking now? When and how would she go after his father? He knew in his gut that he could change her mind somehow because that had to be true. But he couldn't think of anywhere else to look for her. He'd exhausted all the possibilities.

A pounding on the door interrupted his thoughts. He peered at the clock but couldn't read the time since he hadn't yet lit the lamps. He wasn't expecting anyone. The pounding continued and he waited in annoyance, then recalled that he'd dismissed the servants for the evening.

"Damn it." Striding into the foyer, he pulled open the door, prepared to send away whoever he found there. But a beautiful young woman stormed past him in a swish of skirts and a waft of rose scent. "Fox? My God, is that you?" He couldn't believe his eyes. She was the loveliest creature he'd ever seen.

"It's me, all right," she said, rounding on him and jabbing him in the chest to punctuate her words. "Like father, like son. If one of you isn't stealing my money, it's the other."

"What?" She wouldn't be here if she'd killed his father. A slow grin of relief and joy spread across his face. She had come to him. "I don't know what you're talking about, but I know I want to kiss you until you scream."

"Our deal was that you pay me half up front, and the other half when I dragged your butt into Denver." The finger poking at his chest became several fingers unbuttoning his shirt. "You didn't pay me."

"Good Lord. You're right. I forgot about it until this minute." Sweeping her into his arms, he kissed her forehead, her eyes, her cheeks, the corner of her lips.

She licked his earlobe, and his thighs tightened painfully. "I suppose you're going to claim that the money you owe me is upstairs in your bedroom." Her arms wound around his neck and she grabbed him, kissing him hard, kissing him until they both were gasping.

"That's exactly where my money is," he said hoarsely. "Do I take it correctly that you didn't kill my father?"

"I didn't kill him," she said, not sounding happy about it. "You and me, we've got some family problems to work out, namely that I may occasionally still want to kill that bastard, your father. On the other hand, he has a way about him."

"I want to hear every detail about what happened later." Tanner slung her over his shoulder and gave her fanny a long caress, remembering fondly when that fanny had smelled like bacon. He started up the staircase. "I hope you aren't tired, I promise you, this is going to be a long night." Stopping midway up the stairs, he threw back his head and shouted. "I love you, Eugenia Foxworth soon to be Jennings."

She smacked his back with her fists. "Not Eugenia, damn. And not Jennings. Can't we be Tanner?"

"We can be whatever you want us to be!"

Kicking open his bedroom door, he set her on her feet beside the bed and lit the lamps. He wanted to see her as he undressed her, wanted to see and touch and taste every piece and part of her. Good God, she was beautiful. Glowing. Radiant. Cupping her face, he gazed into the face he loved so well. "You aren't going to change your mind, are you?"

"About not killing your father?"

"About loving me."

"Oh Tanner." She touched his lips with a trembling finger. "I'll love you forever, until we're as old as those fossils you're going to find. I'll keep your house, grow your radishes, and raise your babies. I'll fight your enemies and try to love who you love. Or at least tolerate him."

He hadn't wept since he was a child. The hot sting behind his eyes surprised him. Then he laughed as she hopped up on the bed, sent her bonnet flying across the room and shook the hairpins out of her magnificent hair, letting it shimmer and fall to her waist. She arched an eyebrow and crooked a finger. "Come here and I'll show you how much I love you. That will never change. Never. Truth is, I can outdrink you, outshoot you, and outlove you."

"You can outshoot me, but you can't outlove me," he said, loving her so hard he couldn't breathe.

She smiled and opened her arms, her eyes soft and shining in the lamplight. "Let's find out."

He suspected it would be a contest they'd be waging when they were old and holding each other in the bedroom of the house he would build for her. They were about to embark on the greatest journey of their lives. When he took her into his arms, he knew the journey had begun.

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