Authors: Diana Palmer
She stared at him over Lillian’s supine form with troubled eyes. He had an unscrupulous reputation. She wasn’t so innocent that she hadn’t recognized that evident hunger in his hard mouth just before she’d started fighting him.
But his green eyes mocked her, dared her, challenged her. She’d stay, he told himself. He’d coax her into it. Then he could find some way to make her show her true colors. He was betting there was a little of Caroline’s makeup in her, too. She was just another female despite her innocence. She was a woman, and all women were unscrupulous and calculating. If he could make her drop the disguise, if he could prove she was just like all the other she-cats, he could rid himself of his unexpected lust. Lust, of course, was all it was. He forgave Lillian for her fall. It was going to work right in with his plans. Yes, it was.
Chapter Four
L
illian was comfortably settled in a room in the small Ravine hospital. The doctor had ordered a series of tests—not because of her broken leg but because of her blood pressure reading taken in the emergency room.
“Will she be all right, do you think?” Mari asked Ward as they waited for the doctor to speak to them. For most of the evening they’d been sitting in this waiting room. Ward paced and drank black coffee while Mari just stared into space worriedly. Lillian was her last living relative. Without the older woman she’d be all alone.
“She’s tough,” Ward said noncommittally. He glared at his watch. “My God, I hate waiting! I almost wish I smoked so that I’d have something to help kill the time.”
“You don’t smoke?” Mari said with surprise.
“Never could stand the things,” he muttered. “Clogging up my lungs with smoke never seemed sensible.”
Her eyebrows lifted. “But you drink.”
“Not to excess,” he returned, glancing down at her. “I like whiskey and water once in a blue moon, and I’ll take a drink of white wine. But I won’t do it and drive.” He grinned. “All those commercials got to me. Those crashing beer glasses stick in my mind.”
She smiled back a little shyly. “I don’t drink at all.”
“I guess not, tenderfoot,” he murmured. “You aren’t old enough to need to.”
“My dad used to say that it isn’t the age, it’s the mileage.”
His eyebrows arched. “How much mileage do you have, lady?” he taunted. “You look and feel pretty green to me.”
Her face colored furiously, and she hated that knowing look on his dark face. “Listen here, Mr. Jessup—”
“Mr. Jessup.” His name was echoed by a young resident physician, who came walking up in a white coat holding a clipboard. He shook hands with Ward and nodded as he was introduced tersely to Mari.
“She’ll be all right,” he told the two brusquely. “But I’d like to keep her one more day and run some more tests. She’s furious, but I think it’s for the best. Her blood pressure was abnormally high when we admitted her and it still is. I think that she might have had a slight stroke and that it caused her fall.”
Mari had sudden horrible visions and went pale. “Oh, no,” she whispered.
“I said, I think,” the young doctor emphasized and then smiled. “She might have lost her balance for a number of reasons. That’s why I want to run the tests. Even a minor ear infection or sinusitis could have caused it. I want to know for sure. But one thing’s certain, and that’s her attitude toward the high blood pressure medication she hasn’t been taking.”
Ward and Mari exchanged puzzled glances. “I wasn’t aware that she had high blood pressure medication,” Ward said.
“I guessed that,” the young doctor said ruefully. “She was diagnosed a few weeks ago by Dr. Bradley. She didn’t even get the prescription filled.” He sighed. “She seems to look upon it as a death sentence, which is absurd. It’s not, if she just takes care of herself.”
“She will from now on,” Mari promised. “If I have to roll the pills up in steak and trick them into her.”
The young resident grinned from ear to ear. “You have pets?”
“I used to have a cat,” Mari confided. “And the only way I could get medicine into him was by tricking him. Short of rolling him up in a towel.”
Ward glared at her. “That’s no way to treat a sick animal.”
She lifted her thin eyebrows. “And how would you do it?”
“Force his mouth open and shove the pills down his throat, of course,” he said matter-of-factly. “Before you say it,” he added when her mouth opened, “try rolling a half-ton bull in a towel!”
The young doctor covered his mouth while Mari glared up at the taciturn oilman.
“I’ll get the pills into her, regardless,” Mari assured the doctor. She glanced at Ward Jessup. “And it won’t be by having them forced down her throat like a half-ton bull!”
“When will you know something?” Ward asked.
“I’ll have the tests by early afternoon, and I’ll confer with Dr. Bradley. If you can be here about four o’clock, I’ll have something to tell you,” the young man said.
“Thank you, Doctor…?”
“Jackson,” he replied, smiling. “And don’t worry too much,” he told Mari. “She’s a strong-willed woman. I’d bet on her.”
They stopped by Lillian’s room and found her half sedated, fuming and glaring as she sat propped up in bed.
“Outrageous!” Lillian burst out the minute they entered the room. “They won’t give back my clothes. They’re making me spend the night in this icebox, and they won’t feed me or give me a blanket!”
“Now, now.” Mari laughed gently and bent to kiss the thin face. “You’re going to be fine. They said so. They just want to run a few more tests. You’ll be out of here in no time.”
That reassured the older woman a little, but her beady black eyes went to Ward for reassurance. He wouldn’t lie to her. Not him. “Am I all right?” she asked.
“You might have had a stroke,” he said honestly, ignoring Mari’s shocked glare. “They want to find out.”
Lillian sighed. “I figured that. I sure did. Well,” she said, brightening, “you two will have to get along without me for a day or so.” That seemed to cheer her up, too. Her eyes twinkled at the thought of them alone together in the house.
Ward could read her mind. He wanted to wring her neck, too, but he couldn’t hurt a sick lady. First he had to get her well.
“I’ll take good care of baby sister, here,” he said, nodding toward Mari, and grinned.
Lillian’s face fell comically. “She’s not that young,” she faltered.
“Aunt Lillian!” Mari said, outraged. “Remember my horrible experience!”
“Oh, that.” Lillian nibbled her lip. “Oh. That!” She cleared her throat, her eyes widened. “Well…”
“I’ll help her get over it,” Ward promised. He glanced down at Mari. “She’s offered to help me get some of my adventures in the oil business down on paper. Wasn’t that nice? And on her vacation, too,” he added.
Lillian brightened.
Good.
They weren’t talking about his “fatal illness” or her “brutal attack.” With any luck they wouldn’t stumble onto the truth until they were hooked on each other! She actually smiled. “Yes, how sweet of you, Mari!”
Although Mari felt like screaming, she smiled at her aunt. “Yes. Well, I thought it would give me something interesting to do. In between cooking and cleaning and such.”
Lillian frowned. “I’m really sorry about this,” she said, indicating her leg.
“Get well,” Ward said shortly. “Don’t be sorry. And one more thing. Whether or not this fall was caused by your blood pressure, you’re taking those damned pills from now on. I’m going to ride herd on you like a fanatical ramrod on a trail drive. Got that?”
“Yes, sir, boss,” Lillian said, pleased by his concern. She hadn’t realized she mattered so much to anyone. Even Mari seemed worried. “I’ll be fine. And I’ll do what they tell me.”
“Good for you,” Ward replied. He cocked his head. “They said it could have been an ear infection or sinusitis, too. So don’t go crazy worrying about a stroke. Did you black out before you went down?” he persisted.
Lillian sighed. “Not completely. I just got real dizzy.”
He smiled. “That’s reassuring.”
“I hope so. Now, you two go home,” Lillian muttered. “Let me sleep. Whatever they gave me is beginning to work with a vengeance.” She closed her eyes as they said their goodbyes, only to open them as they started to leave. “Mari, he likes his eggs scrambled with a little milk in them,” she said. “And don’t make the coffee too weak.”
“I’ll manage,” Mari promised. “Just get well. You’re all I have.”
“I know.” Lillian sighed as they closed the door behind them. “That’s what worries me so.”
But they didn’t hear that troubled comment. Mari was fuming all the way to the car.
“You shouldn’t have told her what the doctor said.” She glowered at him as they drove out of the parking lot.
“You don’t know her very well,” he returned. He pulled into the traffic without blinking. Ravine had grown in the past few years, and the traffic was growing with it, but speeding cars didn’t seem to bother him.
“She’s my aunt. Of course I know her!”
“She isn’t the kind of woman you nurse along,” he shot back. “Any more than I’m that kind. I like the truth, even if it hurts, and so does she. You don’t do people any favors by hiding it. You only make the impact worse when it comes out. God, I hate lies. There’s nothing on earth I hate more.”
He probably had a good reason for that attitude, but Mari wasn’t going to pry into his privacy by asking.
At least now she understood Aunt Lillian’s matchmaking frenzy. If the older woman had expected to die, she might also have worried about Mari’s future. But to try to give Mari to a man like the one beside her was almost criminal! The very thought of being tied to that ex-drill rigger made her blanche. He frightened her in a way no other man ever had. It wasn’t fear of brutality or even of rough behavior. It was fear of involvement, of being led on and dumped, the way Johnny Greenwood had teased her and taken her places, and then when she was drunk on loving him, he’d announced his engagement to someone else.
Ward Jessup wasn’t the man for marriage, but he wouldn’t mind amusing himself with a woman and then dropping her. He seemed to hate women, to be spoiling for revenge on the entire sex. She remembered him saying that he could only tolerate his grandmother and Lillian under his roof, and that said it all. She’d have to be very careful not to fall under his spell. Because he was just playing, and she didn’t even know the first thing about his game.
She went to her room as soon as they were back at Three Forks, and although she hated her vulnerability, she actually locked her bedroom door. Not that he’d try anything, she assured herself. But, just in case, a little precaution wouldn’t hurt.
The next morning she was awake at dawn. Rather than lie in bed and worry about Aunt Lillian, she got up, dressed in jeans and a yellow pullover and went to cook the beast’s breakfast.
She did love this house, indoor waterway and all. It seemed to catch and scatter light so that the darkest corner was bright and cheery. The kitchen reflected the rest of the house. It was spacious and cheerful and contained every modern appliance known to man.
She started the coffee maker and fried bacon. By the time the aroma of coffee was filling the kitchen, she had biscuits in the oven and was setting the big, elegant dining room table.
“What the hell are you doing that for?” Ward Jessup asked from the doorway. “I don’t mind eating in the kitchen.”
She jumped, turning in time to see him shrug into a chambray shirt. His chest was…incredible. She couldn’t help but stare. Despite her age and her exposure to men at the garage where she worked, she’d never in her life seen anything like Ward Jessup without his shirt. Talk about masculine perfection! His chest was as tanned as his face. Broad, rippling with muscle, tapering to his belt, it had a perfect wedge of dark, thick hair that made Mari’s jaw drop.
“Close your mouth, honey, you’ll catch flies that way,” he said, then chuckled, torn between exasperation and honest flattery at her rapt and explicit stare.
She turned back to her table setting with trembling fingers, hating her youth and inexperience, hating the big man who was making fun of it. “Excuse me. I’m not used to men…half dressed like that.”
“Then you should have seen me ten minutes ago, sprout, before I got up. I sleep in the raw.”
Now Mari was sure she was blushing. She pursed her lips as she put silverware at their places.
He came up behind her so that she could feel the heat of his big body and took her gently by the shoulders. “That wasn’t fair, was it?” he murmured.
“No,” she agreed, “considering what a beautiful breakfast I just fixed you.”
His lips tugged into a smile. “Do I smell bacon?”
“And biscuits and an omelette and hash brown potatoes and hot coffee,” she continued, glancing up at him.
“Then what are you standing here for?” he asked. “Feed me!”
She was rapidly becoming convinced that his appetite was the great love of his life. Food could stop his temper dead, keep him from teasing and prevent homicide, as that apple pie had done after she’d knocked him into the water. It was useful to have such a weapon, when dealing with such a formidable enemy, she thought as she went to put the platters on the table.
He ate without talking, and he didn’t sit and read a newspaper, as her father always had done in her youth. She watched him curiously.
His eyebrows shot up. “Something bothering you?”
“Not really.” She laughed self-consciously. “It’s just that the only man I’ve ever had breakfast with was my father, and he read his paper all through it.”
“I don’t read at the table,” he said. He finished his last mouthful of biscuit, washed it down with coffee and poured himself a second cup from the carafe. Then he sat back in his chair and stared straight into Mari’s eyes. “Why does my chest disturb you?”
She tingled from her head to her toes at the unexpected question and felt a wave of heat wash over her. Some old lines about fighting fire with fire shot into her mind. “Because it’s beautiful, in a purely masculine way,” she blurted out.
He pondered that for a minute before he smiled into his coffee. “You don’t lie well, do you?”
“I think it’s a waste of time,” she replied. She got to her feet. “If you’re through, I’ll clear the table.”