Cowboy All Night
by
Tina Leonard
Chapter One
"And the last lucky male who will grace the
floor tonight in the All-Night
Scoot-Til-Your-Boots-Stick Charity Dance is none
other than...Kyle
Masters of the Double Masters Ranch!"
His heart sinking, Kyle forced a smile for
the sparse crowd clapping its approval. Across
the room, his brother, Pete, grinned devilishly.
Since Pete was in charge of drawing the men's
names, and had insisted that both of them should
attend the annual fund-raiser, Kyle should have
known this would happen. While he was always
ready to contribute to a good cause, it had
never occurred to him that he'd be chosen to
dance.
But Pete was an ornery brother, always ready
to incur his older brother's wrath. Pete would
say "It's for charity, Kyle," and Kyle wouldn't
be able to argue with him. He could, however,
give Pete extra chores to do back at the ranch —
and he'd be within his rights to do so since his
own presence was now required at the charity
dance. All night.
"The oh-so-lucky lady who will be Kyle's
partner is none other than..." The gray-haired
older woman in charge of calling ladies' names
looked at the paper as if she couldn't read it.
She handed it to Pete, who glanced at Kyle, his
grin even wider.
Kyle's heart sank to unfathomable depths.
Pete wouldn't. Pete knew how Kyle felt about —
"Molly
Dewberry, Ike, Idaho's favorite daughter!"
The small crowd in the ballroom applauded and
hands pushed at Kyle's back, urging him to go
claim his partner for the evening. Out of the
corner of his eye, he could see Pete smirking.
Of all the single women in Ike, he had to be
partnered with the one woman he was least likely
to share a comfortable evening with. Dancing for
charity was sufferance enough — why Molly?
Molly Dewberry wasn't smiling, either. She
stared at him as he approached her, a vision in
a microscopic red velvet dress, a hot
firecracker of a girl with a notoriously aloof
manner with men. Her history he knew by heart —
it was the one thing they had in common: Molly's
grandmother had fallen in love with his
grandfather, who was too in love with rodeo to
settle down and marry her, even after they'd
been caught in a compromising position. Her
reputation ruined, Molly's brokenhearted
grandmother married another man to save face in
the town, never speaking another word to her
rodeo-loving beau.
As a result, Molly and Kyle had never spoken
five words to each other in their lives.
Equatorial poles could not be further apart, as
the wounded pride of one woman spilled into
descending generations. But the greatest curse
of his life was thinking the notoriously cold
Molly Dewberry, the sister of his childhood foe,
Dob, was the sexiest woman alive.
The next 12 hours promised to be the longest
of his life. Holding her would be sheer red-hot
hell. If he could simply keep from getting an
erection, maybe he wouldn't die a fool's
embarrassment in front of the assembly of
charitable-minded people he'd known all his
life.
"I believe we are partnered for the evening,"
Kyle said, holding out his hand to Molly. The
ballroom grew quiet, waiting with held breath to
see if Idaho's version of the Hatfields and the
McCoys could share dance space.
Without a word — had he expected her to kick
his shin with her red high heel? — she took his
hand. She was too short for him, too petite and
fine-boned, and after dancing 12 hours with her
he'd probably be hump-shouldered and stooped,
but if she was going to be a good sport about
this evening, he could be, too. After all, it
was a charity event — and he didn't have to wear
those outrageous red shoes
she had on.
"Hello, Kyle," she said, gazing up at him
with clear, blue eyes, tranquil as the sky on a
perfect spring day.
"Molly." Swallowing hard, he closed one hand
around her tiny waist and took her other hand —
also tiny — in his. He felt like a bear holding
a bee in his paw. Of course, she was small all
over — too short to be a model, which he'd heard
had caused her disappointment. And she wasn't
what any man would call stacked, unless it was a
short stack. But then, he figured in her case
less was more, because if she were any bigger on
top, she'd tip over.
"I thought this was supposed to be a
boot-scooting dance-a-thon," she said wryly.
He wondered about that himself, glancing over
at Pete, who was now assisting the disc jockey
with music selections, the first of which didn't
make for much boot scooting.
Five slow dances and no conversation later,
he was ready to rethink his policy on not using
his physical superiority against his younger
brother. Then Molly shifted, almost leaning
against him as if she needed his support, and
the feel of warm, supple velvet beneath his
fingertips took all the heat out of his temper.
For a short, slight, and stubborn girl with a
notoriously reserved manner with men, she was
managing to put that dreaded itch in his lower
region.
Her brother, Dob, glowered at them, waiting
for a chance to take offense.
She laid her head against Kyle's shoulder,
and he stiffened, realizing his unwanted
attraction was obvious to her.
"Take it easy, cowboy," she said. "I just
need a leaning post for a sec."
Chapter Two
Molly looked into his eyes — strangely blue
eyes on an auburn-haired woman — and said,
"Surviving?"
He nodded.
"I thought so." Smiling at him with a
mischievous wink, she moved against him,
dangerously close to that itch, which had
somehow worked into a long, hard prickle that
wanted foolishly to be scratched. He tried to
shift away, furtive with awkward, hot male
pride.
"It's okay," he heard her say as she lowered
her head to rest against his chest again. "I'd
be disappointed if you weren't attracted to me."
"I didn't say I was."
"You didn't have to." She looked up and
smiled, 30 years of confidence in her gaze. "I
can feel it."
He wasn't about to reply.
"It's the one disadvantage of being a man.
You give away your thoughts. Whereas you can't
tell if I'm attracted to you or not."
They were talking softly enough that no one
in the growing crowd could hear them, so
Kyle decided to see where this conversation
would lead them. It was certainly more
interesting than worrying about her brother
staring at them all night.
"
Are you attracted to me?" he asked,
more out of masculine pride than need to know.
She shook her head. "No."
He narrowed his gaze on her. "Are you telling
the truth?"
"Do you think I am?"
"I don't know."
She laughed, her smile teasing. "I will tell
you one thing: We've made it through the first
15 minutes, and with any luck, I might be able
to stand 12 hours with the one man I've never
expected to dance with."
Oh. That didn't sound like a woman who wanted
him. Damn. For a moment, he'd had fairy-tale
aspirations of finding out what was under that
flirty red skirt. "I never wanted to dance with
you, either."
"Well, you're stuck with me now," she said.
"I came here tonight to help out a good cause,
and to have a good time while I'm at it. I've
always wanted to dance all night, and this is
the first chance I've had. I' m not going to let
anything or anyone spoil it for me." It was
almost as if she was daring him to back out.
Then she gazed up at him. "Would you like to
kiss me?"
Chapter
Three
"Kiss you?"
Kyle asked, tempted. "No," he replied. He
was into saving pride at this moment.
"Are
you telling the truth?" she said,
teasing.
Molly smiled as if answering her own
question. "So, Dob tells me you're going back on
the circuit."
"As a guest judge to fill in for a friend of
mine who's having surgery. I'm looking forward
to it."
"How long will you be gone?" she asked.
He shifted his weight so that he could
maneuver her closer to him. "A couple of weeks.
I leave after the charity dance."
"Pete can look after the famous Double
Masters Ranch?"
"About as well as anybody. How's your ranch?"
She shrugged. "I don't know. I stay away as
much as possible now that Mom and Dad are gone.
This past summer I took my sisters to visit our
cousin, Mimi, in Union Junction, Texas. They've
got a small ranch, too, but at least it's a
manageable drive into Dallas."
"Get into any trouble?"
Her nose wrinkled. "Only when we went
picnicking with Mimi and some of the brothers
next door. There are 12 men on the ranch and
they're all pretty rowdy."
He stiffened, not liking the idea that she
might have been offended by a man. "Did they
bother you?"
Molly laughed at the idea. "It's never a
bother when men get into a brawl for your
attention." Molly laughed up at him. "Although
my youngest sister does tend to get weak at the
sight of blood."
"A fistfight over women?"
She laughed. "Mimi says the Jefferson boys
are generally well behaved but that the
occasional argument does break out."
"So, did you go out with any of the
brothers?"
"Oh, no. I don't date..."
"Cowboys," he said, finishing her sentence.
Her gaze caught on his. "Is that what you've
heard?"
"Yeah. I've heard you can be…picky."
Her eyes moved from his, which caused her
nose to tilt into the air. "My mother used to
say it was just as easy to love a dentist."
"Do you have bad teeth?" he asked, joshing
around in a brotherly manner he thought she
might be comfortable with, but she shook her
head, in all seriousness.
"No, but neither do I eat meat. Nor do I care
to live in the country all my life. As soon as
my sisters are more settled, I'm moving to New
York."
"To do what?" he asked, honestly curious as
to why she'd want to leave Ike.
"I want to go to law school," she said.
He nearly laughed, but stopped himself. Her
eyes told him she was serious. "Why?"
"I finished college but tried modeling
instead of going for a higher degree. I never
really had a future as a model, but even if I
was a foot taller, I wouldn't have wanted to do
it for very long. I've always wanted to do
something important, and now I'm ready.
"I like to debate, I like to argue, and I'd
like to help people who have no other voice out
there," she said firmly. "And because there's
only room for one lawyer in all of Ike, I'm
going somewhere I can really make a difference."
Tough as it was, he felt an inkling of
admiration for Dob's little sister. Maybe the
family tree wasn't totally blighted. The only
person Dob ever helped was himself.
Then again, this was a woman who didn't mind
men fighting over her. Was that a character
flaw? He wasn't certain. He'd probably consider
women fighting over him a plus.
"What will Dob do without you?" he asked.
"Continue annoying you and everyone else in
Ike." She shrugged. "It's your own fault, you
know."
Chapter
Four
"My fault? How so?"
Kyle frowned at
Molly, not wanting any blame where Dob was
concerned. From the playground to the barroom,
it had always been Dob picking fights with him.
"You let him get to you," Molly said. "If
there's a mosquito on your arm, you slap it off,
don't you?"
"Yeah."
"Think of him as a mosquito. You're too big
to be bothered by him. You're not boys anymore."
"Could be you're right." He didn't want to
talk about Dob. It was true that the family feud
had made them enemies while they were kids, and
the bad blood between them had only gotten
personal when they became grown men.
Kyle's fingertips walked the curve of Molly's
waist and his mind was on how fragile she was.
Unfortunately, Dob crossed his line of vision,
in the midst of eager men. "What is he doing?"
She looked up for a moment. "Taking bets, I
think."
"On what?"
"Whether we make it from moonshadow till
daylight," she said matter-of-factly.
Kyle had never heard anything so outrageous.
It was a charity ball, for heaven's sake!
Everyone besides the dancers was busy eating,
talking, or putting money into a large jar by
the doorway.
"You're letting him get to you now," she
said, noticing the change in his expression.
"How do you know?"
"I can tell."
She shifted close to where he'd been itching
before, but the sensation no longer alarmed
him — mainly because she was right. Dob's
machinations had a peculiar effect on his ardor.
"Let's play a game to pass the time, Kyle."
"All right," he said hesitantly. He wasn't
usually a man for playing games.
"Close your eyes. We both will." She did, but
he didn't, instead using the moment to drink in
the sight of her beauty. With her eyes closed,
she looked peaceful, as if she were asleep. It
was a very tempting picture.
Her eyes snapped back open. "Did you do it?"
"Do what?"
"Imagine anything?" she demanded.
Not wanting to appear unobliging, he nodded.
"Uh-huh."
"Good." She smiled. "Ladies first. I imagined
that we were having a wonderful evening
together."
Oh. He'd imagined seeing her lying in bed.
"Uh —"
She frowned teasingly. "You didn't play, did
you?"
He decided to forego the whole game. "Maybe
I'm not too good at imagination."
A light, fine brow cocked at him. "Then you
have to think up the next conversation. Time
will pass more quickly if we're having fun."
Clearing his throat, he said, "I imagined
that Dob disappeared. For tonight only," he
amended hastily. After all, he wouldn't like it
if someone insulted his brother, not matter how
ornery Pete was.
Now her frown wasn't teasing.
"Okay," he said, not wanting to appear too
mean-spirited. "I imagined what you looked like
asleep."
"Why?"
She
would have to delve deeper into
this matter, he realized with an inward sigh.
"Because when you closed your eyes, I couldn't
help myself. I just saw it. And that's the
truth," he stressed, going back to their
original cross-purpose.
She smiled. "Do you want to play 'fact or
fantasy' now?"
Chapter
Five
"No."
Kyle looked down at
Molly with something akin to extreme
discomfort. "Why would I?"
"So that we can spend the next 11 hours
getting to know each other. Can you think of
something better to do?"
Besides bribing the DJ to play faster music,
no. But then he'd be stuck jumping around in a
formal suit, and though it was February, it was
warm inside from the heating. Hers was a
harmless, social, conversational game, he
supposed. He could get through it.
"All right," he said, surrendering his
sanity.
She smiled at him approvingly and moved
closer against him. The sensation was like
liquid drowning all his senses, and he wanted
nothing more than to pick her up and slide her
down the length of his body.
Dob would kill him, she'd justifiably slap
him, all of Ike in attendance would laugh, and
he'd have to miss judging on the circuit if Dob
hit him because he didn't dare retaliate. Dob
was, after all, Molly's brother, and for some
reason, Kyle didn't want to look bad in her eyes
for beating her brother senseless.
Best to put the sliding-down-the-body fantasy
away
quick.
"Truth or dare?" she asked.
"I thought you called it something else.
Something with facts in it. I know lots of
trivia about sports," he said hopefully.
"Okay. If I was a ball, what kind would you
want me to be?"
His jaw sagged. His mind repeated her
question. Yes, it was sports-related, but with a
definite catch. Answer:
A handball, because
then I could hold you all I wanted.
Bzzz! Buzzer disallows answer.
Handball was a fast, rough sport.
A basketball. No good. He'd be
throwing her away all the time.
Bzzz!
Football. No, best to avoid that on
every level. He'd never thought so hard about
such a silly question, he was certain. There was
just no way he could answer this with dignity.
"A ball of cookie dough — preferably
chocolate chip," he said finally.
She shook her head. "I think you censored
your imagination."
She perplexed him. "How did you know?"
"Because you took forever to answer, and your
face was kind of stressed while you thought
through your choices." She gave him a mock
shame-on-you gaze. "So why a cookie-dough ball?"
"Because chocolate chip is my favorite
cookie." He was thinking a ball of cookie dough
was soft and sweet, just like Molly. But he
didn't dare tell her that.
Her look was questioning, then somewhat sad
as she put her face against his chest, hiding
her eyes and her thoughts from him.
"You didn't like my answer?" he asked.
Chapter Six
Molly knew
Kyle hadn't meant to be funny, but she had
to laugh at his answer just the same. She hid
her face so she wouldn't hurt his feelings.
She was attracted to him and that was a bad
sign. He was tall, chiseled, good-looking, and
humorless. He was trying to go along with the
moment, but it was like asking a mountain to
suddenly leap sideways. Kyle simply wasn't going
to be able to partner her in a lighthearted
manner and just say what was on his mind.
They'd never last through the night if he
didn't unbend. And she really wanted to win the
charity dance so the children's wing at the
hospital would receive the night's proceeds. For
those children alone, she was willing to dance
into next week with her brother's arch-rival.
Besides, the family feud had never made much
sense to her.
"I can make you laugh, cowboy," she said.
"Take a little starch out of that spine of
yours."
He grimaced, which probably served as his
smile since he was holding her. Definitely she'd
felt his attraction to her, but he wasn't about
to go further than a mechanical masculine sexual
response. Still, she had to get him to climb out
of his formal demeanor or he might back out on
her after a couple of hours.
"I don't have a very good sense of humor."
"All right, tough case. What's the difference
between snowmen and snowwomen?"
"I don't know."
She smiled at him. "Snowballs!"
He didn't laugh, but he did perk up at her
corny joke. He had to admire the way she was
trying to lighten up an awkward situation. Her
warmth was unexpected, given what he'd heard
about her, and considering their family history.
"Can I change my answer from
chocolate-chip-cookie-dough ball to snowball?"
"Why a snowball?" she asked, pleased he was
still trying to play along.
"Because…I think it sounds better, that's
all. It's the kind of answer I wish I would
think of off-the-cuff."
"I have trouble with spontaneous humor, too.
I always think of something better to say
later."
He nodded.
"But if I'm a snowball, I might hit you in
the face," she said.
"I'll catch you first and melt you in my
hands." This type of conversation was new to
him; most people in Ike stuck to cattle and the
weather.
Her eyes widened in spite of herself.
Creative progress points for him! And she'd love
to be his snowball for a night — she was already
feeling pretty melted in places she hadn't
expected to.
"So I'm a snowball. Hey, cowboy, do you know
why you can't hear bunnies making love?"
"No. Why?"
"Because they have cotton balls!" She only
knew two really corny jokes, and she wondered
briefly what she would do if this one didn't
make him laugh, if only out of embarrassment.
But he laughed, a real chuckle, his smile
almost…almost getting comfortable.
Dob appeared at their elbow suddenly, and
Kyle went stiff under her hand.
"They called break time but I don't think you
heard," Dob said, his words directed to Kyle.
"Fifteen minutes."
Kyle dropped his hand from her waist as if
he'd been burned.
"I'll see you in 15," he said courteously.
Then he nodded to her brother. "Dob."
Her brother barely nodded back.
The two men stared each other down before
Kyle looked at Molly once more, then walked
away.
"I don't like this," Dob complained. "He
holds you too close. People are staring."
"I like the way he holds me. He's been a
perfect gentleman. Far more perfect than I'd
like him to be, in fact." She enjoyed pushing
Dob's buttons.
"Just so long as it stays that way. I'm
watching every move he makes."
"I can take care of myself."
"Not where the Masters men are concerned. If
a woman could catch them, don't you think they'd
be caught by now?"
"You're not," she shot back. "And you're
Kyle's age."
"Yeah, but I appreciate solitude. Kyle
Masters chases all women, just like the rest of
them. And don't think I'll stand here and watch
you be ogled in front of all of Ike, Idaho."
"It's none of your business, Dob."
"Would you care for a drink?" Kyle asked,
coming back to stand beside them. He held out a
drink to her, and Molly realized he'd known she
wasn't going to get her break if her brother had
anything to do with it. Dob didn't mean to be
selfish, but he was totally overprotective, and
this made him oblivious to a lot of things.
"Thank you. I need to freshen up. Excuse me."
She left the floor but Kyle caught up with her
and took her elbow.
"Hang on," he said. "I have something to say
to you in private."
Chapter
Seven
Private sounded promising. Maybe
Kyle didn't mind her overprotective brother.
Perhaps he found her fun, intriguing company.
Or was he going to back out on her? Claim
tired feet? Early rise tomorrow to hit the rodeo
circuit?
Obviously he hadn't expected to hear his name
called for dancing tonight since he'd planned to
hit the road early. His chivalry in not begging
off for that reason spurred some begrudging
admiration. Dob, of course, wouldn't see it that
way.
Pooh on Dob, anyway.
Molly allowed Kyle to lead her into a
courtyard.
"Is it too cold out here for you?" Kyle
asked.
Shaking her head, she said, "I'm too heated
up at Dob to get cold."
"Is he always that way?"
"Short answer? Yes."
Kyle took her drink and placed it on a stone
fence on the clubhouse patio. "I have a
confession to make."
"Confessions will make the evening go
faster," she teased.
"I do think you're beautiful."
She was touched. "Thank you, Kyle."
"I thought you were beautiful even before we
danced."
"Is there a reason you're telling me all this
now?" She was terribly afraid he was making this
confession because he was going to leave her.
Find her a substitute. Abandon her to her games
and her silly conversation. Make her disappoint
the children at the hospital. And, just as bad,
get the town's people gossiping about history
repeating itself.
"Because I figure I'm no better than Dob. All
I've done tonight is dance around what I should
be saying." He sighed. "Conversation is not my
strong suit, and it caught me off-guard to find
myself wondering what you had on under your
dress. And I'd want you to be a
chocolate-chip-cookie-dough ball because I'd eat
you all up from toe to top. And if you were a
snowball that melted in my hands, I'd drink
every drop."
She felt herself blink with surprise.
"Surprised?"
"Did you really think all that?" she asked,
skeptical.
"Well, I don't really need to know what
you're wearing under your dress, but I did
wonder, yes. I mean, I'm not asking. But I did
think about it. And some other less-gentlemanly
things, obviously."
He was really cute when the tips of his ears
went pink. "That's kind of sweet," she murmured.
He didn't reply.
"Kyle, tonight we're just dancing. Nothing
more than that. The dance will end at eight in
the morning, and you'll hit the road. I'll make
plans to move to New York after my sisters are
back in school. Tonight's my night to be
Cinderella. And you can be my prince," she
finished softly.
Standing over her in the cold moonlit night,
she could barely see his face in the romantic
light from the swaying Japanese lanterns and
white mini-lights. But he was obviously watching
her, listening to every word she'd said,
digesting it. Inside the ballroom she could hear
people having a good time.
The truth was, she wanted to keep him with
her for the rest of the dance. And it wasn't
just about winning anymore. Or kicking up her
heels all night. If she was honest with herself,
she wanted this night with him.
"I've got a confession, too," she said. "I
want you to kiss me. And if you kiss me for
real, not like Dob's little sister, I'll tell
you what I've got on under my dress."
Chapter
Eight
"I thought you didn't like cowboys,"
Kyle said.
"Maybe I like
you," she replied.
"I'm mighty tempted, but to be honest, I
think you're just trying to make Dob mad."
"Why would I do that?"
He shrugged. "I don't know. He's got a
hair-trigger temper, though, and I don't aim to
stoke it. Not tonight."
He had many admirable qualities, but the
ability to forget who
Molly was for the night wasn't one of them.
She was nothing like he had expected, but it
seemed the past still stood between them. Or at
least Dob did.
"I'm sorry," she said, disappointed. So much
for Cinderella.
"For what?"
"For asking you to kiss me. And that you have
to partner me. I know you're only being a
gentleman."
Inside the ballroom, the announcer called the
couples back to the floor. Her pride hurt. She
didn't look at Kyle. She couldn't change the
past, and she couldn't be anyone except who she
was. And she wasn't going to keep trying to
pretend that this night could be fun for either
of them. She had hoped he saw the "feud" as she
did, but apparently it had meaning as far as he
was concerned.
He took her hand and silently they returned
to the floor.
Molly didn't offer any conversation. Neither
did Kyle. They slow-danced, holding each other
awkwardly. When a fast dance played, they didn't
change positions. This way, their eyes never
met.
But as much as they ignored each other,
staying lost in their own thoughts, Molly felt
the heat growing between them. A mutual
attraction simmered; it teased and tormented
with their every move. They'd shift to a
different, less ill-at-ease position, only to
find a different kind of tension building.
Everywhere he rested his hand, her skin burned.
She knew Kyle felt it, too, because he kept
clearing his throat. Once or twice she thought
he might say something, but he never did.
And then, to her very great surprise, exactly
44 minutes into the hour — one minute before the
break would be announced — Kyle moved his hands
to cup her face. Her gaze jumped to his. He
stroked her cheeks for a moment as he stared
down into her eyes, and then he bent down to
touch his lips to hers.
The entire ballroom went silent. No one could
miss a six-foot-four man bending down to kiss a
woman who barely reached his chest. Besides,
everyone had already been watching them out of
the corners of their eyes, expecting an argument
to break out at any moment.
She didn't care who was watching. Winding her
arms around his neck, she kissed Kyle back for
all she was worth. He smelled sexy, he felt
heavenly, and he knew what to do with his mouth.
"Break!" the DJ called.
Neither she nor Kyle took a break from the
smooching. If anything, she felt him put more
body into it. She moved closer between his legs,
tilting her head back for him to more easily and
deeply plunder her mouth.
"Break!" the DJ repeated loudly, sounding
desperate.
"Damn it! Break!" Dob hollered into the
microphone. "Can't you
hear?"
Kyle broke away to glance at Dob, who was
posed like a bantam rooster at the DJ stand.
Kyle also noted that the floor was empty. They
had a small audience of astonished and amused
people.
"I hear, but I'm not listening," Kyle said.
Chapter
Nine
"They have to take a break from the floor,
don't they?" Dob asked the DJ.
"The rules do state that everyone has to be
off the floor for a 15 minute break each hour,"
the DJ confirmed, almost apologetically.
Kyle turned back to her. "Hate to break when
it was getting good, but we must play by the
rules."
For once, she was glad for the rules. Her
face on fire from the whispering of spectators
and her brother's stormy expression,
Molly stepped from his arms. "I think it's
just as well."
Dob gained her side the instant she walked
from the floor. Taking her by the arm, he pulled
her outside. "Molly, what were you
thinking?"
"That it was the best kiss I'd ever had. Dob,
cool off. It didn't hurt anything."
He took a deep breath. "Molly, for years
you've been the mother figure to our two younger
sisters. I know you're ripe for striking out on
your own, maybe even for falling in love. But
what you don't know is what I haven't told you.
And I'm telling you now, Kyle Masters is not the
man for you."
"I wasn't looking for the man for me."
Truthfully, she'd wanted one night — this
night — with him. She did a lot for other
people; she'd come to the dance this night for
herself alone.
"If you want to throw away your good name, do
it," Dob continued. "But remember that his
grandfather played fast and loose with our
grandmother, and she was never the same after he
shamed her. Never."
"I don't know that I've heard the story that
way," Kyle said, coming to stand beside Molly.
Though Dob was tall and rangy, Kyle had him beat
by four inches he used to his advantage. "It
seems to me that our grandfather wanted to get
married, and your grandmother did not."
"Same thing! What's the difference?" Dob
looked at Molly triumphantly. "The Masters are
not known to settle easily."
"I don't want to settle him! I want one night
for myself. I didn't know Kyle would be my
partner; it was all about participating for the
charity and having a good time. But I can make
my own decisions, Dob. And if I want this one
night for myself, I'll pick up my own pieces if
I get broken." Molly was angry now.
"So be it." Storming off, Dob left the
ballroom altogether.
"Thank you for sticking up for me," Kyle
said.
"I didn't. I stuck up for myself." She looked
up at Kyle, Dob's warning ringing in her ears.
But I don't want to tie him down.
Yet, I sure as heck don't want to fall for
him, either. And whether I want to admit it or
not, he's a mighty tantalizing hunk.
"What are you thinking about?"
She shook her head. "I'm thinking that I'm
tired. Would you believe it? Only two hours into
it and I'm pretty sure I'm exhausted."
"Didn't you say to just 'slap him off like a
mosquito'?" Kyle asked softly.
True. But Dob's bite stayed with her. At the
beginning of this evening, she'd been
comfortable with Kyle, almost innocently so,
believing their story was a book with one
chapter, a chapter that read "The End" once the
dance was over.
She hadn't expected attraction. Or a kiss
that made her pulse race. And she certainly
hadn't expected the book "to be continued."
"Let me make you a totally unchivalrous,
selfish proposition," Kyle said.
Chapter Ten
"Unchivalrous and selfish? That might
actually be refreshing,"
Molly replied.
Kyle quirked a brow at her. "My suggestion
is that we forfeit the dance-a-thon."
She stared at him, disappointed. "That pretty
much hits unchivalrous and selfish in the same
bold stroke."
"Yeah, but here's the sweetener. I'm willing
to match the money won tonight for your
particular charity."
"That's quite a sweetener. It could be a few
thousand dollars, Kyle."
He nodded. "Worth it, though, since it's a
charity event. I'm not all dressed up in this
tux because I thought I was getting out of here
for free. I just never expected to be a
full-fledged participant."
"So we forfeit, you match the winning dollar
amount, and both of us go home happy?" Surely it
couldn't be that easy. That meant there would be
two big winners tonight: whoever won the
dance-a-thon, and her charity. Also, it was a
guaranteed donation, when she might not have
been the winner tonight, anyway. Not to mention
her fantasy of dancing all night had turned out
to be less fun than she'd imagined.
"Both of us go home right now to pack," he
said, "Because the catch to my offer is: since
I've spent a few hours dancing with you, in
front of too many interested busybodies, I'd
like you to spend a few hours alone with you."
"What?"
He grinned at her, sexy confidence all over
his face. "I guess I'm asking you on a date.
Fair is fair, right? That kiss…that kiss blew me
away. I'm even going to let you off the hook
about telling me what's under your dress, but I
want to spend more time with you, preferably
away from your brother and this crowd."
"So you can find out first-hand?"
Shaking his head, he touched the side of her
cheek with one finger, a stroke that sent her
pulse fluttering. "So, what do you say to
running away with me for one night?"
"It hardly seems like a fair exchange. I get
my charity donation, which means more to me than
you can know...what's the catch? Exactly how
alone are we talking?"
He smiled at her, but his dark eyes simmered
with heat. "The fair is in town. We could go get
stuck at the top of the Ferris wheel together.
It takes 45 minutes just to load the ride.
Forty-five minutes is a bunch of guaranteed
privacy."
From the top of the Ferris wheel, one could
see practically all of Ike, and the lights in
the nearby city. But that wasn't close to the
reason that she was tempted to accept his offer.
She liked him. He knew it. Dob knew it. Her kiss
had given her away.
She was the one who'd said she didn't want to
settle him. That was true. They were worlds
apart...but what could going with him for one
night hurt?
"I don't know if being stuck at the top of a
Ferris wheel with you is a good thing," she said
sternly.
He raised his hands in surrender. "You're
safe. Honest."
Then he laughed. Maybe at her.
Drat him! He knows he's irresistible. What
exactly could I do to keep myself from making
the monumental mistake of wanting him? If the
way he kisses is any indication of what would
follow, I'd be one happy lady….
"I have just one qualifier to this scenario,"
Molly said.
He grinned. "Why are you so worried about
being alone with me?"
"Because...because strange things have been
known to happen between Masters and Dewberrys."
"You might decide you like us."
She stared at him, trying to decide what his
words meant. Did he want her to like him, or was
he just like his footloose, rodeo-loving
grandfather? Would she be walking in her
grandmother's shoes, right down the path to a
broken heart?
Kyle gently touched her cheek. "C'mon," he
said. "I'm known for being a gentleman."
She cocked a brow at him doubtfully.
Gentleman? Actually, she had to admit she'd
never heard anything bad about Kyle, except from
Dob. Over the years, she had even admired many
things about him.
But right now it was annoying the way he was
smiling at her as if he knew a secret she
didn't!
As if he knows me better than I know
myself.
Well, she hadn't grown up with Dob trying
that same smirking attitude on her and learned
nothing. She knew how to wipe that
I-know-you
grin off a man's face.
"Kyle Masters, I'm more than willing to go
with you and be as much of a good sport as
you've been about this charity dance, but should
you and I end up sharing anything more than a
kiss, you have to marry me.
Pronto. I'm
not going to be the second Dewberry to be shamed
by a Masters in front of all of Ike, Idaho."
Chapter
Eleven
Kyle raised a brow at
Molly. "Folks are already talking, Molly.
Just us being on the dance floor together was
enough to keep folks hanging around to watch.
The donations tonight should be phenomenal." He
paused for a moment, studying the apprehension
in her face. "As I mentioned, it was an
unchivalrous proposition. You have more to lose
than me."
Her eyelashes lowered for an instant. With
Dob looking ready to start a fight any instant,
and with everyone who'd ever known them looking
on, Molly had no reason to leave with him. But
he figured they'd be better off going where
there were a lot fewer prying eyes — and
selfishly, now that he'd been able to get close
to Molly, he wasn't anxious to give up the
magic.
He had liked her for so long. He'd never
approached her, thinking that she despised him.
For good reason, sure.
But that didn't mean he had to give up the
one night he had to change her mind.
"You're a lovely lady, Molly. I'd never do
anything to hurt you," he said softly. "Stay or
go, the choice is yours."
Her eyes widened. She glanced toward her
brother. "I'll go," she said, her voice barely
above a whisper.
"Come on." He took her hand, pulling her
toward the DJ stand. "We're forfeiting," he told
Pete.
Since the microphone was on, the whole room
heard. A gasp went up from the audience, and
murmuring began. He could almost feel the relief
from the other dancers. He could feel Molly's
tension, too, as her hand clutched his.
"We wish all the remaining couples the best
of luck," he said into the microphone. Then he
put his hand over the mike. "Can I see you?" he
said to his smirking younger brother.
"Sure." Pete got down from the DJ stand and
followed them outside.
Dob barreled out, angrily standing between
Molly and Kyle as best he could despite their
clasped hands. "Just a minute, Kyle. Where the
hell do you think you're going?"
"We're going to the fair. We might get there
before it closes. Molly and I are going to ride
the Ferris wheel."
Dob's brows nearly jumped into his hair. "Oh,
no. I see plainly what you're up to, and I won't
allow it. You're not getting my sister alone on
a ride where no one can see what's happening.
And if you think I don't know that that's
exactly how your grandfather wooed our
grandmother, you've got another think coming."
It was true. The Ferris wheel — largest in
the country — was known for its size and the
supposed promise one man made to his woman while
at the top. The enclosed cage-like seats were
perfect for romance, and when Molly's
grandmother got off the ride, her face had been
glowing, her skirt just enough awry for people
to talk. Her reputation was ruined when her
Masters man didn't return from the rodeo circuit
to make it legal.
The Wheel of Romance, it was called now. No
one had ever really known if Kyle's grandfather
made love to Molly's grandmother while on it,
but the myth really alarmed Dob.
"Hold on, Dob," Pete said. "They're just
going for an innocent carnival ride. Forty-five
minutes. No different from a taking a ride into
town. Settle down."
"No! Molly, you are not going," Dob insisted.
"I am," she replied. "Dob, I love you, even
though you're bull-headed. But I am going with
Kyle, because I don't believe in family feuds.
And I'm not about to let any romantic fantasy
spoil my evening. It's one night at the fair —
and nothing more."
"He's already kissed you!" Dob shouted, his
tone desperate. "Don't you think more could
happen...up there?" he demanded.
"Tell you what." Pete shouldered his way
between Dob and Kyle, pushing them apart so that
Kyle and Molly were standing close again. "I'll
go with them and chaperon them. All right?"
Kyle didn't like that idea at all. They were
both adults, not a couple of teenagers. "We
don't —"
"Yes, you do," Pete insisted. "I'll be the
third wheel tonight, just to keep Dob from
having a seizure. Molly's got a right to a
chaperon, and it's either me or Dob, Kyle.
Choose."
Kyle sighed. Truth was, he'd walk through a
brick wall to have the chance to spend time with
Molly. "Come on, Pete," he said reluctantly. "If
you don't mind, Molly."
She looked at her brother, who still didn't
appear happy. "Good night, Dob," she said. "I'll
see you later."
The three of them walked off, heading toward
Kyle's truck. "Now I want you to get lost as
soon as we're out of Dob's eyesight," Kyle said.
"Uh-uh," Pete said, with a wink at Molly. "No
way. You need a bodyguard, Kyle, more than Molly
needs a chaperone. Consider me hired. 'Course,
you have to pay for my ride ticket."
How was he going to change Molly's mind about
him with Pete hanging around?
Chapter
Twelve
Even though
Kyle skipped right over her threat of having
to marry her if anything more than a kiss was
shared between them on the Ferris wheel, she'd
still decided to go with him. Why?
In one word: Dob.
Somehow, it felt very good to let go of the
past. After all, it had felt awkward over the
years not talking to Kyle and Pete, not
acknowledging them beyond a nod because of
something that had nothing to do with any of
them. And the kiss had done a lot to change her
mind. She had never been kissed like that in her
whole life.
Maybe she shared more in common with her
grandmother than a small stature.
The three of them got in the truck silently,
Molly sitting between the two men. Kyle
switched on the engine.
"You know, Molly, we don't have to do this,"
he said. "Maybe the Ferris wheel is a bad idea.
All that fresh air, all that wonderful
atmosphere — maybe we should go fishing instead.
You ever midnight-fished? Or maybe we could
drive into town and see a movie."
She stared at him. "Having second thoughts?
Or did you develop a latent fear of heights,
brought on by my brother?"
He rubbed at his jaw, not looking at her.
"Maybe both."
Pete sighed in disgust. "It's going to be
horrible listening to you fail at romance, Kyle.
There are some things that shouldn't be handed
down from brother to brother, and bad technique
is one."
"You just stare out the window and pretend
you're interested in the countryside," Kyle
instructed.
Molly leaned her head on Kyle's shoulder and
didn't say a word. What was she going to say?
There was nothing easy about either of their
situations.
"Or I could just take you home," he said
quietly. "We don't have to go out, Molly."
She looked up at him. "I know you're not
afraid of what people say about you, and I know
you're not really afraid of my brother. You only
acted like you cared about his opinion so he
wouldn't feel like a peon. So what are you
really worried about?"
He cleared his throat. "You, I guess."
"Why?"
"I don't want to hurt you."
Instantly, a spear seemed to fly right into
her heart. Did he mean that he knew he would —
eventually?
"I said I wouldn't, and I won't."
She thought she understood. "When you said
that at the dance, you meant physically. Now
you're having second thoughts because you mean
emotionally. Am I right?"
He glanced at her, their eyes meeting in the
dimness of streetlights. "Yeah."
"It's okay," she said. "Believe it or not, I
can fend for myself."
Kyle stopped the truck. "Pete, get out."
"What?"
"Go ride in the truck bed," Kyle told him. "I
want to talk to Molly without your big ears
hearing everything. What I've got to say is
between one man and one woman."
Chapter
Thirteen
Kyle's gaze seemed to glow at her in the
dark. Molly repressed a small shiver of
excitement as Pete got out, closed the truck
door — almost too eagerly, it seemed — and
hopped in the back. He banged on the roof, and
Kyle turned his attention back to the road.
Molly held her breath, her posture stiffer,
her head no longer resting on his shoulder.
"So...you had something to say?"
"I do." He seemed to choose his words
carefully before staring down at her. Then he
cupped her chin with one hand, guiding her head
back down to his shoulder. "I sure do like the
way you feel, Molly Dewberry. You just seem to
fit me right."
Her eyes went wide. She wanted to hear him
say it again, just so she'd know she hadn't
dreamed the words — or the emotion she'd heard
behind them. But she didn't say anything, her
feelings too carefully guarded as she tried to
keep herself from falling head over heels.
Ten minutes later, Kyle pulled up to the
county fair. "There's the Ferris wheel. Lots of
light, lot of people for safety. I think there's
safety in numbers, don't you?"
"I like to get lost in a crowd. Especially a
crowd of strangers." She got out of the truck
when Kyle came around to open her door. Pete
jumped to the ground as well.
"I hope he told you something really
important," Pete said. "'Cause my ears are
frozen from the wind."
She smiled at him. "He didn't."
Pete punched his older brother in the arm.
"It was cruel to kick me out if you weren't
going to go through with it."
"Shut up, Pete," Kyle growled.
Once inside the gate, Kyle threaded through
the crowd until they got to the Ferris wheel.
The neon lights on the huge wheel lit up the
darkness, and Molly thought she'd never seen
anything so romantic in her life.
"Hey, Penny," Pete said to the operator of
the Ferris wheel.
The petite brunette squealed and threw her
arms around his neck. "Now this is the way it's
done," he said to his brother, giving Penny a
big hug that mashed her whole body up against
his. "Since when did you learn to handle such a
big ride, honey?"
"Never you mind, Pete Masters. The ride is
now officially closed. That's the last time I'm
loading it tonight. And I'm free if you are,"
she hinted.
"I might be," he said smoothly, "if you'll
allow these two to have their own private ride
after everyone leaves."
Molly started to say that they didn't need a
ride on the Ferris wheel when she felt Kyle's
hand take hers in his. He really wanted to go on
the ride with her, she realized. And she really
wanted to go for a romantic nighttime ride with
him....
"There'll be nobody at the whole fair except
you and me. No one will even know we were here,"
he said. "Can't get any safer for your
reputation than that, huh?"
He was referring to the time her grandmother
and his grandfather had gotten off the ride
together, her skirt slightly askew. "I guess
not," she said, knowing full well that her
reputation might be safe, but not necessarily
her heart. But without the whole ride needing to
be loaded — a 45 minute process — they'd only be
up there for five minutes, max. "It'll be fun."
After the ride had emptied and the riders
departed, the carney workers began clearing
debris away. Penny motioned them toward the now
empty ride. "Help yourself," she said.
Feeling like she was embarking on a daring
adventure, Molly entered the steel cage and sat
down on the red vinyl seat. Kyle followed her.
Penny and Pete stared in at them, smiling, as
Penny locked the cage. "Have fun!" she told
them.
* * *
Up on the ride, Molly relaxed against Kyle,
his arm along her shoulders, as their car rose
higher and higher. Just as she could see the
whole city from the top of the wheel, the ride
came to a complete stop.
"Uh-oh," said Molly.
They sat up and looked down, but in the
darkness, they couldn't see much except some
carney workers scurrying to clean up and get
home. Lights were being shut off at various
tents. The other rides were dark.
"It's all right," Kyle said. "I'm sure that
this is my brother's way of getting back at me
for making him ride in the back of the truck."
Oh. A prank. She should have known.
"Or maybe," Kyle said, turning her toward
him, "maybe this is my brother's idea of giving
us some time alone together. In which case, I
don't want to let his efforts go unrewarded."
And then he kissed her, softly and sweetly,
and Molly heard herself moan, and suddenly she
knew why her grandmother's face had been glowing
and her skirt had been awry.
Chapter
Fourteen
"And then, maybe some things are better left
undone,"
Kyle said, his voice sounding a little shaky
to
Molly's ears after they finally pulled apart
from the kiss. She could feel her heart
hammering so hard she was certain he must either
hear, or feel it.
"I shouldn't take advantage of this
situation, now that I think about it," he
continued. He wanted her more than he'd ever
wanted a woman, but he also respected her
condition for coming with him tonight.
She felt like she'd been hit with icy water.
Had he not felt the earth move the way she had?
Or maybe it was only the Ferris wheel,
swaying slightly, or the cage itself moving from
their bodies coming together, then pulling
apart. Still, she had wanted him to feel the way
she had. This kiss felt just as earth-rocking as
the one at the dance had — or was she imagining
his heated response to her?
But all she said was, "Pete's a good brother.
And Penny seemed to like him."
"Penny likes anyone who pays attention to
her. Pete's always had a soft spot for her, but
she's not the type to commit to a relationship,"
he said.
Molly straightened. "I thought it was the
Masters men who were unable to commit."
Kyle shook his head. "Myth. Or what did you
call it? Fact or fantasy? That one's truly
fantasy. Come here. I don't want you to get
cold."
And he bundled her up next to him. She put
her feet up on the seat and leaned into his
chest, loving the feel of his arms around her.
"I wonder how long Pete intends to hold us
hostage?" he grumbled.
"I'm sorry you are having such a terrible
time. There are two seats in here, you know,"
she said, struggling to sit up. "And I'm not
that cold."
"Hey, wait a minute. All I meant was that my
brother isn't showing a lady a very nice time,
and I fully intend to remind him of that later.
I didn't mean I don't enjoy being up here with
you."
She looked at him. "Yell down at him to get
us out of here."
"No way." Kyle looked alarmed at her request.
"Look around at the city lights, Molly." He held
her closer, not allowing her to get into the
other seat. "I've always liked you, Miss
Dewberry," he said huskily, pressing kisses to
her neck. "I just want to be sure you like me as
much as I like you."
"I'm up here with you, aren't I?" She loved
what he was doing to her senses, as much as her
frightened heart tried to deny it.
"Yes, but I promised you a good time. It
doesn't seem fair to romance you when you're not
getting the ride I promised you," he said.
She pulled away and gave him an arch look.
"Are you saying if the ride were moving you'd
have a better shot?"
"That would be overconfident, wouldn't it?"
"Yes."
He laughed, and tugged her to him again so he
could wrap her in his arms. "I'll tell you a
secret if you don't tell Dob."
"I'd love to hear a secret that my brother
will never know."
"Your grandmother dumped my grandfather, not
the other way around."
She jerked away from him, her mouth dropping
open.
"What?"
Chapter
Fifteen
There was no better time to tell her, Kyle
figured. His heart was in such a terrified place
right now. Dob had filled her head with all
these horror stories about him over the years —
the Unsettled Masters Men theory — but that was
the biggest fantasy of all. "My grandfather
loved your grandmother," he told her.
"Why do I not know this?"
"Because Dob doesn't know it. Or maybe he
does and he choses to tell the story in a light
that gives him a reason to gripe about us. Maybe
he just sees himself in an underdog role. I've
always thought he just likes to fight about
everything, but that's just my opinion."
Molly pulled away from him. "My brother only
gets upset about your ranch. And it does have to
do with your grandfather." She stared at him.
"Is there a reason you're telling me this now?
Other than the fact that...you'd probably like
to...you know."
"Make love to you? I won't even try to deny
it. But I won't." He stared back at her
stubbornly.
"And why not?" she demanded, sounding
suddenly like a woman scorned.
"Because you think I'm telling you whatever I
have to just to get you into bed. It tells me
that we might never be able to put the past
behind us. We have to trust each other. Or
should I say, you have to trust me, Molly."
* * *
Molly stared out at the brilliant lights of
the city. The fair was now totally dark. If Pete
and Penny were down there, they sure weren't
giving any hint of it. "I think your brother
forgot about us," she said miserably, from her
place on the other seat.
"I think he did, too. His life is now
forfeit," Kyle said, sounding as if his teeth
were grinding together.
"Maybe you could explain to me one more time
what I'm not understanding," Molly said. "I've
heard the same story for a lifetime. It's going
to take more than a few minutes for me to
understand that it might have happened another
way."
Kyle sighed. "Your grandmother decided she
didn't want to be married to a man who lived his
life on the rodeo circuit. She chose to break
the engagement. Everyone just assumed he'd left
her after he got what he wanted at the top of
this wheel. If the town gossips knew he wanted
to make an honest woman of her, but she turned
him down…well, my grandfather knew it was better
that people thought
he was a cad."
"How do you know all this?" Molly desperately
wanted to believe him.
"Because I've got a stack of letters and
postcards at home that my grandpa wrote to her,
begging her to reconsider. Telling her that the
only woman he'd ever love was her."
Molly's heart began a frantic tattoo inside
her. All the years that had gone by, and yet —
Her grandmother hadn't been used by her rodeo
beau. She could have married him to save her
reputation, but she had chosen not to. "Why
can't I tell Dob this?" she demanded.
"Because he's having way too much fun
believing in this feud," Kyle said. "If we took
that away from him, what would he have? Now come
here, sexy lady. I know you're cold in that
dress, and this tux may not be the warmest, but
friends should share their body heat."
Molly crossed to his seat and slowly went
into his lap. "Friends?"
"And maybe more," he qualified, running his
hand down her hair. "If you want, Molly
Dewberry."
Chapter
Sixteen
"I think...I think I do want," she murmured,
in a surrender that sounded heavenly to
Kyle's ears. But maybe he should
double-check. The clock was about to turn
forward, and he needed to make certain
Molly wanted to time travel on this old
Ferris wheel. Because if she let him, he was
going to give her a ride she'd never forget.
Holding her in his lap, stroking her cheek
with one hand and cradling her back with the
other, he said, "Want what, sweetheart?"
"More," she said softly, snuggling against
him. "More, more, more."
So he kissed her, long enough, deep enough to
make her moan. Her hands clutched his shoulders
and he told himself to remember that feeling. He
liked her holding him with that much need and
womanly want.
One day I'm going to feel her
do that when we're both naked. Hands on my
shoulders, begging me to get inside her.
Tonight, he wasn't about to make her cold.
"Let me turn you around, Molly." He slid her
forward into his lap. Kissing her neck, he
stroked the outside of the bodice of her red
dress, with the skirt flaring ever so femininely
over her knees. She put her hands on his so they
could explore her body together. Right then and
there, Kyle knew he was a goner. "You're so
sexy, Molly," he said on a groan. "I don't care
if Pete ever gets us out of this damn cage."
"I don't, either."
With a sigh of complete contentment he
adored, she leaned back against him, her head on
his shoulder. Together, they traced her breasts,
down her curves, and down to the flared red
skirt. Moving underneath it, he stroked the
inside of her legs, enjoying the silky sensation
of her skin against his callused palms, and the
softness of her touch on top of his hands.
"I've dreamed of this night," he said
huskily.
"You have not," she said with a giggle that
sounded decidedly nervous and deliciously,
wickedly convince-me-otherwise.
"I did. I always admired you from afar," he
said, tapering his finger right down the center
of her panties with just enough pressure to let
her know the magic that was to come. She was
wearing a thong, he suddenly realized as he
continued his quest downward, and it was all he
could do not to growl like a bull and take her
in hungry, crazed lust. "I know what you've got
on under your dress now," he told her, nipping
at her shoulder.
"You discovered my secret," Molly said
breathless.
"No. I'm about to know your secret," Kyle
said, lifting Molly up just the slightest so
that he could stroke her bare bottom. Thank
heavens for wallets, and flat condoms that fit
inside them, and easy-tear foil, and —
"Let me do it," she said, turning to help him
put it on, and he did, loving the fact that she
stroked him way more than necessary for a
typical fast slip-it-on. So he kissed her lips,
holding her captive, before turning her fully
around and moving the thong out of the way. She
still had him in her firm little grip, guiding
him.
He ran a finger along her wetness, groaning
inside himself, before she placed him at the
edge of pleasure.
"It's now or never," he said. "No going back
once —"
"Kyle," she said, "I'm not about to change my
mind." And then she slid down him, taking him
completely inside her, and Kyle saw stars that
had nothing to do with the beautiful night sky.
Chapter
Seventeen
Molly never dreamed she could feel so
heavenly. She never knew that making love could
feel so wonderful. Maybe it was the fact that
they'd always thought they were enemies; perhaps
it was the edge of danger of making love to
someone a little bit forbidden. If she was
caught in the grip of a fantasy, she didn't want
to get over it, Molly thought wildly, feeling
Kyle thrust inside her. His hands held her
hips tightly against him, his fingers spreading
her and teasing her. She had colors in her mind
not unlike neon fair lights, and a sound
building in her throat that felt like it would
equal a roller-coaster scream, and all she could
do was hang on, hang on, hang on —
When she screamed her pleasure, all Molly
knew was how glad she was that the fairgrounds
were empty and they were far away from
residential addresses.
"Oh, Kyle," she started to moan, when his
tempo changed, and she realized that she was
about to climax again. Desperate and lost in the
feelings sweeping over her, she begged, "Don't
stop, don't stop!"
"I won't," he promised. "Let me take you
there."
And he did. Her knees went limp. He helped
her relax against him and then held her tightly,
his face pressed against her neck, as he found
his own pleasure. She knew when he did, because
he groaned, "Oh, Mol...ly," so sweetly that she
told herself she was going to hear him say her
name that way many more times in her life.
They stayed that way, her safe in his lap,
for what seemed like a long, pleasured time. But
it wouldn't last, Molly knew. Sooner or later
they had to face life on earth. "I know the
perfect way to finish this."
"I don't want to finish anything," he said
stubbornly, holding her in his arms more
tightly.
"That's not what I meant, exactly. I've been
thinking about what you told me about my
grandmother."
"Every word of it is true."
"I know." He wouldn't lie to her. She'd
always known the man he was didn't square with
the man Dob said he was. And the lost, empty
feeling she'd always had in her life seemed
filled now. Somehow she felt whole, and not so
aimless, with Kyle holding her. It was as if a
circle had been completed, arc matching arc
seamlessly. "You said my grandmother turned your
grandfather down."
"She did. She broke his heart. He was never
the same after that."
"I'll never tell anyone that," Molly said.
"Because clearly my grandmother still loved your
grandfather, and didn't want him to give up his
dreams and settle down to an ordinary life, just
because people knew about their passion. I do
want to read their letters, but...I think we've
avoided the past all our lives. Now I think we
should learn from it."
"What exactly did you have in mind?"
Very softly, yet with all her heart, Molly
told him.
Chapter
Eighteen
"Now hold on a damn minute," Dob's rough
voice growled into Pete's drowsy ear. "What the
hell do you mean you don't know where
my sister is?"
Pete's eyes snapped open. He’d drifted to
sleep with words of praise in his ears, only to
be rudely awakened by the phone, and an angry
voice on the line. "Dob?"
"Who the hell else do you think would be
calling you at 4:30 in the morning? I'm outside,
and I see your truck, and I know my sister's in
there with
your brother, and if you don't get her out
here fast, I'm coming in with my shotgun! Fair
warning!"
Beside him, Penny stirred. Jeez! How had they
fallen asleep?
Covering the mouthpiece with his fingers, he
said, "Sweetheart, wake up."
She moaned, and Dob erupted. "Damnation, I
heard that loud and clear!
You'd best not
be in there with my sister! I'm taking the
safety off my gun right now and coming in."
"Get dressed, sweetheart. Things are about to
get rough." Jumping out of the bed, Pete began
pulling on his own clothes. He had to get back
to the fairgrounds and let Kyle and Molly off
the ride. But first of all, he had to lose Dob.
"She's not here, Dob. Calm down. And I've got
a lady friend in here, so if you don't mind
scurrying off, she and I would like to go back
to sleep. It is 4:30, you know."
Dob hesitated. "That's not Molly in there
with you? I distinctly heard a woman's voice,
and I haven’t seen my sister since you drove off
with her."
"Nope. Molly's not my type. Dewberries in
general are not my type," he said, just for good
measure, knowing Dob was about as much on the
edge as a man could be.
The phone snapped off in his ear. "Good night
to you, too," Pete said.
"We better go get your brother down. He's
going kill us both," Penny said. "And if he
doesn’t, he’ll have me fired for sure."
"Let's go," he said. "My brother might kill
me, but it will have been worth it," he said,
grinning at her.
They hurried to the truck and returned to the
fairgrounds. Racing to the Ferris wheel, Pete
glanced up at the topmost cage. "It's very still
up there. God, Kyle's going to jump on me like a
wild bull —"
"I can't get this lever to move," Penny said,
between gritted teeth. A noisy bump and a
grinding noise, and slowly the wheel began to
turn, inch by torturous inch.
"I oughta have known," Dob said behind them.
Pete turned and just barely ducked the punch Dob
threw. "I oughta have known you damn Masters
would just really enjoy having history repeat
itself, especially in front of an audience."
"No, that was a bonus," Pete said, ducking
the headlock Dob tried to surround him with. But
Pete wasn't telling the truth, because the last
thing he wanted to do was embarrass Molly. But
the other fair workers gathered around, which
guaranteed the night ride wouldn’t remain a
secret.
Penny stopped the ride and went to unlock the
cage. Dob stopped swinging, and Pete held his
breath, praying for a miracle.
Chapter
Nineteen
"I'm warning you," Penny said to
Molly and
Kyle. "Your brother's spitting mad, Molly."
Molly stood, straightening her hair. She and
Kyle had shared a night of intense passion, and
nothing Dob could say would ever change her
feelings about that.
Only Kyle could change her feelings…and he
hadn't had a chance to answer her — her totally
selfish proposition, as he'd called the one he'd
given her at the dance. They'd known what they
would face when the Wheel of Romance ride was
over and the cage was opened. Molly glanced back
at Kyle but he was staring through the bars
toward the admission area, so taking a deep
breath, she stepped out onto the walk area.
Before she could go down the steps, Kyle
tugged her skirt firmly into place. "No sense in
that part of history repeating itself," he said.
"But you can have a smile on your face if you
want."
With Dob glowering over there? With not
knowing what Kyle's answer was? And yet, in
spite of all that, Molly did smile. "That was
the most fun I've ever had, Kyle."
He winked at her, and took her hand.
Together, they walked down the steps. Pete held
Dob back. "Sorry about that, bro," Pete said.
"I'm not — though I should let Dob whup your
hide, just for generic reasons," Kyle said. And
then, right in front of everyone, Kyle kissed
Molly full on the mouth.
Fully insulted and at full tilt now, Dob got
free of Pete. He barreled over to Kyle and
Molly, but she put up a hand. "Stop," she said.
"Take a deep breath, and hear what I have to
say."
For some reason, Dob stopped, though he
stared at her. "Give me one good reason why I
shouldn't defend my sister's honor."
"Because I love him," she said. "And that's
my business."
Instantly, Dob's face turned from angry to
heartbroken. "Molly, honey, I warned you about
him."
"I know you did. I made my own decision, Dob.
You don't have to protect me. No matter what
happens, I had more fun all night with this
cowboy than I've ever had."
She felt Kyle standing at her back. "I can
speak for myself," he said. "Dob, you don't know
half as much as you think you do. But I would
never hurt your sister."
"You've ruined her," Dob complained. "And I'm
thinking you enjoyed walking in your
granddaddy's footsteps."
Molly was about to protest angrily to being
described as "ruined" — what year did Dob think
it was? But Kyle stopped her.
"If I can walk in my granddaddy's footsteps,
I'll die happy, knowing I was all the man I
should have been. No matter what happens between
Molly and me, I think you and I should move
forward. Bury the hatchet. What do you say to
that?"
Surprised, Molly watched as Kyle extended his
hand to her brother.
Chapter
Twenty
Dob scratched his head and shuffled his feet.
"Please, Dob,"
Molly said. "It would mean a lot to me if
you could put your bad feelings aside."
A child getting an inoculation couldn't look
more reluctant. He loved his sister, and had
always tried to protect her from pain. To force
her to choose between the two men she loved
would be too much for her to bear. And he was
afraid he would be the one to lose out.
Silently, he stuck his hand in
Kyle's for the world's fastest handshake.
"There," he said sulkily. He wouldn't have done
it for anyone but Molly.
Kyle nodded, and put his arm around Molly's
shoulders. "Molly and I have an announcement to
make, and there's no better time than the
present to do it," he said. "She's asked me to
marry her, and I'm accepting here and now as
fast as I can in order to get her to the altar
before she changes her mind."
Squealing, Molly threw her arms around Kyle's
neck. "You made me wait! You could have told me
up there!"
"Just remember," he said in her ear, "it's
the only thing I made you wait for."
She giggled, her heart full inside her.
"I had to make sure you weren't just using me
to try to break away from Dob," he told her.
"You know, you might have lured me into that
cage on purpose."
"And seduced you against your will."
"Exactly," he said, playing along. "You know,
your grandmother was something of a wild woman,
too."
Laughing, she wrapped her foot around the
back of his leg, lightly pushing him against
her. "It's rumored you Masters can't be
settled."
"Except by a wild Dewberry."
Dob was telling anyone who would listen how
he'd brought about the end of Ike, Idaho's most
famous family feud. He declared that he'd never
had any hard feelings against Kyle or Pete, that
he'd always said he'd be happy to see a sister
of his married to one of the Masters boys. Dob
predicted that the Masters-Dewberry alliance
would mean the biggest and the best ranch in the
state; in fact, he was willing to take bets on
it.
Pete was trying to convince Penny to hit the
rodeo circuit with him so he could get out of
Kyle's way — after all, even a ranch house is
only big enough for one honeymooning couple.
And the fabled Wheel of Romance somehow
blinked on, neon and multicolored and beautiful,
almost as if by magic.
The End
Cowboy All Night
by
Tina Leonard
Chapter One
"And the last lucky male who will grace the
floor tonight in the All-Night
Scoot-Til-Your-Boots-Stick Charity Dance is none
other than...Kyle
Masters of the Double Masters Ranch!"
His heart sinking, Kyle forced a smile for
the sparse crowd clapping its approval. Across
the room, his brother, Pete, grinned devilishly.
Since Pete was in charge of drawing the men's
names, and had insisted that both of them should
attend the annual fund-raiser, Kyle should have
known this would happen. While he was always
ready to contribute to a good cause, it had
never occurred to him that he'd be chosen to
dance.
But Pete was an ornery brother, always ready
to incur his older brother's wrath. Pete would
say "It's for charity, Kyle," and Kyle wouldn't
be able to argue with him. He could, however,
give Pete extra chores to do back at the ranch —
and he'd be within his rights to do so since his
own presence was now required at the charity
dance. All night.
"The oh-so-lucky lady who will be Kyle's
partner is none other than..." The gray-haired
older woman in charge of calling ladies' names
looked at the paper as if she couldn't read it.
She handed it to Pete, who glanced at Kyle, his
grin even wider.
Kyle's heart sank to unfathomable depths.
Pete wouldn't. Pete knew how Kyle felt about —
"Molly
Dewberry, Ike, Idaho's favorite daughter!"
The small crowd in the ballroom applauded and
hands pushed at Kyle's back, urging him to go
claim his partner for the evening. Out of the
corner of his eye, he could see Pete smirking.
Of all the single women in Ike, he had to be
partnered with the one woman he was least likely
to share a comfortable evening with. Dancing for
charity was sufferance enough — why Molly?
Molly Dewberry wasn't smiling, either. She
stared at him as he approached her, a vision in
a microscopic red velvet dress, a hot
firecracker of a girl with a notoriously aloof
manner with men. Her history he knew by heart —
it was the one thing they had in common: Molly's
grandmother had fallen in love with his
grandfather, who was too in love with rodeo to
settle down and marry her, even after they'd
been caught in a compromising position. Her
reputation ruined, Molly's brokenhearted
grandmother married another man to save face in
the town, never speaking another word to her
rodeo-loving beau.
As a result, Molly and Kyle had never spoken
five words to each other in their lives.
Equatorial poles could not be further apart, as
the wounded pride of one woman spilled into
descending generations. But the greatest curse
of his life was thinking the notoriously cold
Molly Dewberry, the sister of his childhood foe,
Dob, was the sexiest woman alive.
The next 12 hours promised to be the longest
of his life. Holding her would be sheer red-hot
hell. If he could simply keep from getting an
erection, maybe he wouldn't die a fool's
embarrassment in front of the assembly of
charitable-minded people he'd known all his
life.
"I believe we are partnered for the evening,"
Kyle said, holding out his hand to Molly. The
ballroom grew quiet, waiting with held breath to
see if Idaho's version of the Hatfields and the
McCoys could share dance space.
Without a word — had he expected her to kick
his shin with her red high heel? — she took his
hand. She was too short for him, too petite and
fine-boned, and after dancing 12 hours with her
he'd probably be hump-shouldered and stooped,
but if she was going to be a good sport about
this evening, he could be, too. After all, it
was a charity event — and he didn't have to wear
those outrageous red shoes
she had on.
"Hello, Kyle," she said, gazing up at him
with clear, blue eyes, tranquil as the sky on a
perfect spring day.
"Molly." Swallowing hard, he closed one hand
around her tiny waist and took her other hand —
also tiny — in his. He felt like a bear holding
a bee in his paw. Of course, she was small all
over — too short to be a model, which he'd heard
had caused her disappointment. And she wasn't
what any man would call stacked, unless it was a
short stack. But then, he figured in her case
less was more, because if she were any bigger on
top, she'd tip over.
"I thought this was supposed to be a
boot-scooting dance-a-thon," she said wryly.
He wondered about that himself, glancing over
at Pete, who was now assisting the disc jockey
with music selections, the first of which didn't
make for much boot scooting.
Five slow dances and no conversation later,
he was ready to rethink his policy on not using
his physical superiority against his younger
brother. Then Molly shifted, almost leaning
against him as if she needed his support, and
the feel of warm, supple velvet beneath his
fingertips took all the heat out of his temper.
For a short, slight, and stubborn girl with a
notoriously reserved manner with men, she was
managing to put that dreaded itch in his lower
region.
Her brother, Dob, glowered at them, waiting
for a chance to take offense.
She laid her head against Kyle's shoulder,
and he stiffened, realizing his unwanted
attraction was obvious to her.
"Take it easy, cowboy," she said. "I just
need a leaning post for a sec."
Chapter Two
Molly looked into his eyes — strangely blue
eyes on an auburn-haired woman — and said,
"Surviving?"
He nodded.
"I thought so." Smiling at him with a
mischievous wink, she moved against him,
dangerously close to that itch, which had
somehow worked into a long, hard prickle that
wanted foolishly to be scratched. He tried to
shift away, furtive with awkward, hot male
pride.
"It's okay," he heard her say as she lowered
her head to rest against his chest again. "I'd
be disappointed if you weren't attracted to me."
"I didn't say I was."
"You didn't have to." She looked up and
smiled, 30 years of confidence in her gaze. "I
can feel it."
He wasn't about to reply.
"It's the one disadvantage of being a man.
You give away your thoughts. Whereas you can't
tell if I'm attracted to you or not."
They were talking softly enough that no one
in the growing crowd could hear them, so
Kyle decided to see where this conversation
would lead them. It was certainly more
interesting than worrying about her brother
staring at them all night.
"
Are you attracted to me?" he asked,
more out of masculine pride than need to know.
She shook her head. "No."
He narrowed his gaze on her. "Are you telling
the truth?"
"Do you think I am?"
"I don't know."
She laughed, her smile teasing. "I will tell
you one thing: We've made it through the first
15 minutes, and with any luck, I might be able
to stand 12 hours with the one man I've never
expected to dance with."
Oh. That didn't sound like a woman who wanted
him. Damn. For a moment, he'd had fairy-tale
aspirations of finding out what was under that
flirty red skirt. "I never wanted to dance with
you, either."
"Well, you're stuck with me now," she said.
"I came here tonight to help out a good cause,
and to have a good time while I'm at it. I've
always wanted to dance all night, and this is
the first chance I've had. I' m not going to let
anything or anyone spoil it for me." It was
almost as if she was daring him to back out.
Then she gazed up at him. "Would you like to
kiss me?"
Chapter
Three
"Kiss you?"
Kyle asked, tempted. "No," he replied. He
was into saving pride at this moment.
"Are
you telling the truth?" she said,
teasing.
Molly smiled as if answering her own
question. "So, Dob tells me you're going back on
the circuit."
"As a guest judge to fill in for a friend of
mine who's having surgery. I'm looking forward
to it."
"How long will you be gone?" she asked.
He shifted his weight so that he could
maneuver her closer to him. "A couple of weeks.
I leave after the charity dance."
"Pete can look after the famous Double
Masters Ranch?"
"About as well as anybody. How's your ranch?"
She shrugged. "I don't know. I stay away as
much as possible now that Mom and Dad are gone.
This past summer I took my sisters to visit our
cousin, Mimi, in Union Junction, Texas. They've
got a small ranch, too, but at least it's a
manageable drive into Dallas."
"Get into any trouble?"
Her nose wrinkled. "Only when we went
picnicking with Mimi and some of the brothers
next door. There are 12 men on the ranch and
they're all pretty rowdy."
He stiffened, not liking the idea that she
might have been offended by a man. "Did they
bother you?"
Molly laughed at the idea. "It's never a
bother when men get into a brawl for your
attention." Molly laughed up at him. "Although
my youngest sister does tend to get weak at the
sight of blood."
"A fistfight over women?"
She laughed. "Mimi says the Jefferson boys
are generally well behaved but that the
occasional argument does break out."
"So, did you go out with any of the
brothers?"
"Oh, no. I don't date..."
"Cowboys," he said, finishing her sentence.
Her gaze caught on his. "Is that what you've
heard?"
"Yeah. I've heard you can be…picky."
Her eyes moved from his, which caused her
nose to tilt into the air. "My mother used to
say it was just as easy to love a dentist."
"Do you have bad teeth?" he asked, joshing
around in a brotherly manner he thought she
might be comfortable with, but she shook her
head, in all seriousness.
"No, but neither do I eat meat. Nor do I care
to live in the country all my life. As soon as
my sisters are more settled, I'm moving to New
York."
"To do what?" he asked, honestly curious as
to why she'd want to leave Ike.
"I want to go to law school," she said.
He nearly laughed, but stopped himself. Her
eyes told him she was serious. "Why?"
"I finished college but tried modeling
instead of going for a higher degree. I never
really had a future as a model, but even if I
was a foot taller, I wouldn't have wanted to do
it for very long. I've always wanted to do
something important, and now I'm ready.
"I like to debate, I like to argue, and I'd
like to help people who have no other voice out
there," she said firmly. "And because there's
only room for one lawyer in all of Ike, I'm
going somewhere I can really make a difference."
Tough as it was, he felt an inkling of
admiration for Dob's little sister. Maybe the
family tree wasn't totally blighted. The only
person Dob ever helped was himself.
Then again, this was a woman who didn't mind
men fighting over her. Was that a character
flaw? He wasn't certain. He'd probably consider
women fighting over him a plus.
"What will Dob do without you?" he asked.
"Continue annoying you and everyone else in
Ike." She shrugged. "It's your own fault, you
know."
Chapter
Four
"My fault? How so?"
Kyle frowned at
Molly, not wanting any blame where Dob was
concerned. From the playground to the barroom,
it had always been Dob picking fights with him.
"You let him get to you," Molly said. "If
there's a mosquito on your arm, you slap it off,
don't you?"
"Yeah."
"Think of him as a mosquito. You're too big
to be bothered by him. You're not boys anymore."
"Could be you're right." He didn't want to
talk about Dob. It was true that the family feud
had made them enemies while they were kids, and
the bad blood between them had only gotten
personal when they became grown men.
Kyle's fingertips walked the curve of Molly's
waist and his mind was on how fragile she was.
Unfortunately, Dob crossed his line of vision,
in the midst of eager men. "What is he doing?"
She looked up for a moment. "Taking bets, I
think."
"On what?"
"Whether we make it from moonshadow till
daylight," she said matter-of-factly.
Kyle had never heard anything so outrageous.
It was a charity ball, for heaven's sake!
Everyone besides the dancers was busy eating,
talking, or putting money into a large jar by
the doorway.
"You're letting him get to you now," she
said, noticing the change in his expression.
"How do you know?"
"I can tell."
She shifted close to where he'd been itching
before, but the sensation no longer alarmed
him — mainly because she was right. Dob's
machinations had a peculiar effect on his ardor.
"Let's play a game to pass the time, Kyle."
"All right," he said hesitantly. He wasn't
usually a man for playing games.
"Close your eyes. We both will." She did, but
he didn't, instead using the moment to drink in
the sight of her beauty. With her eyes closed,
she looked peaceful, as if she were asleep. It
was a very tempting picture.
Her eyes snapped back open. "Did you do it?"
"Do what?"
"Imagine anything?" she demanded.
Not wanting to appear unobliging, he nodded.
"Uh-huh."
"Good." She smiled. "Ladies first. I imagined
that we were having a wonderful evening
together."
Oh. He'd imagined seeing her lying in bed.
"Uh —"
She frowned teasingly. "You didn't play, did
you?"
He decided to forego the whole game. "Maybe
I'm not too good at imagination."
A light, fine brow cocked at him. "Then you
have to think up the next conversation. Time
will pass more quickly if we're having fun."
Clearing his throat, he said, "I imagined
that Dob disappeared. For tonight only," he
amended hastily. After all, he wouldn't like it
if someone insulted his brother, not matter how
ornery Pete was.
Now her frown wasn't teasing.
"Okay," he said, not wanting to appear too
mean-spirited. "I imagined what you looked like
asleep."
"Why?"
She
would have to delve deeper into
this matter, he realized with an inward sigh.
"Because when you closed your eyes, I couldn't
help myself. I just saw it. And that's the
truth," he stressed, going back to their
original cross-purpose.
She smiled. "Do you want to play 'fact or
fantasy' now?"
Chapter
Five
"No."
Kyle looked down at
Molly with something akin to extreme
discomfort. "Why would I?"
"So that we can spend the next 11 hours
getting to know each other. Can you think of
something better to do?"
Besides bribing the DJ to play faster music,
no. But then he'd be stuck jumping around in a
formal suit, and though it was February, it was
warm inside from the heating. Hers was a
harmless, social, conversational game, he
supposed. He could get through it.
"All right," he said, surrendering his
sanity.
She smiled at him approvingly and moved
closer against him. The sensation was like
liquid drowning all his senses, and he wanted
nothing more than to pick her up and slide her
down the length of his body.
Dob would kill him, she'd justifiably slap
him, all of Ike in attendance would laugh, and
he'd have to miss judging on the circuit if Dob
hit him because he didn't dare retaliate. Dob
was, after all, Molly's brother, and for some
reason, Kyle didn't want to look bad in her eyes
for beating her brother senseless.
Best to put the sliding-down-the-body fantasy
away
quick.
"Truth or dare?" she asked.
"I thought you called it something else.
Something with facts in it. I know lots of
trivia about sports," he said hopefully.
"Okay. If I was a ball, what kind would you
want me to be?"
His jaw sagged. His mind repeated her
question. Yes, it was sports-related, but with a
definite catch. Answer:
A handball, because
then I could hold you all I wanted.
Bzzz! Buzzer disallows answer.
Handball was a fast, rough sport.
A basketball. No good. He'd be
throwing her away all the time.
Bzzz!
Football. No, best to avoid that on
every level. He'd never thought so hard about
such a silly question, he was certain. There was
just no way he could answer this with dignity.
"A ball of cookie dough — preferably
chocolate chip," he said finally.
She shook her head. "I think you censored
your imagination."
She perplexed him. "How did you know?"
"Because you took forever to answer, and your
face was kind of stressed while you thought
through your choices." She gave him a mock
shame-on-you gaze. "So why a cookie-dough ball?"
"Because chocolate chip is my favorite
cookie." He was thinking a ball of cookie dough
was soft and sweet, just like Molly. But he
didn't dare tell her that.
Her look was questioning, then somewhat sad
as she put her face against his chest, hiding
her eyes and her thoughts from him.
"You didn't like my answer?" he asked.
Chapter Six
Molly knew
Kyle hadn't meant to be funny, but she had
to laugh at his answer just the same. She hid
her face so she wouldn't hurt his feelings.
She was attracted to him and that was a bad
sign. He was tall, chiseled, good-looking, and
humorless. He was trying to go along with the
moment, but it was like asking a mountain to
suddenly leap sideways. Kyle simply wasn't going
to be able to partner her in a lighthearted
manner and just say what was on his mind.
They'd never last through the night if he
didn't unbend. And she really wanted to win the
charity dance so the children's wing at the
hospital would receive the night's proceeds. For
those children alone, she was willing to dance
into next week with her brother's arch-rival.
Besides, the family feud had never made much
sense to her.
"I can make you laugh, cowboy," she said.
"Take a little starch out of that spine of
yours."
He grimaced, which probably served as his
smile since he was holding her. Definitely she'd
felt his attraction to her, but he wasn't about
to go further than a mechanical masculine sexual
response. Still, she had to get him to climb out
of his formal demeanor or he might back out on
her after a couple of hours.
"I don't have a very good sense of humor."
"All right, tough case. What's the difference
between snowmen and snowwomen?"
"I don't know."
She smiled at him. "Snowballs!"
He didn't laugh, but he did perk up at her
corny joke. He had to admire the way she was
trying to lighten up an awkward situation. Her
warmth was unexpected, given what he'd heard
about her, and considering their family history.
"Can I change my answer from
chocolate-chip-cookie-dough ball to snowball?"
"Why a snowball?" she asked, pleased he was
still trying to play along.
"Because…I think it sounds better, that's
all. It's the kind of answer I wish I would
think of off-the-cuff."
"I have trouble with spontaneous humor, too.
I always think of something better to say
later."
He nodded.
"But if I'm a snowball, I might hit you in
the face," she said.
"I'll catch you first and melt you in my
hands." This type of conversation was new to
him; most people in Ike stuck to cattle and the
weather.
Her eyes widened in spite of herself.
Creative progress points for him! And she'd love
to be his snowball for a night — she was already
feeling pretty melted in places she hadn't
expected to.
"So I'm a snowball. Hey, cowboy, do you know
why you can't hear bunnies making love?"
"No. Why?"
"Because they have cotton balls!" She only
knew two really corny jokes, and she wondered
briefly what she would do if this one didn't
make him laugh, if only out of embarrassment.
But he laughed, a real chuckle, his smile
almost…almost getting comfortable.
Dob appeared at their elbow suddenly, and
Kyle went stiff under her hand.
"They called break time but I don't think you
heard," Dob said, his words directed to Kyle.
"Fifteen minutes."
Kyle dropped his hand from her waist as if
he'd been burned.
"I'll see you in 15," he said courteously.
Then he nodded to her brother. "Dob."
Her brother barely nodded back.
The two men stared each other down before
Kyle looked at Molly once more, then walked
away.
"I don't like this," Dob complained. "He
holds you too close. People are staring."
"I like the way he holds me. He's been a
perfect gentleman. Far more perfect than I'd
like him to be, in fact." She enjoyed pushing
Dob's buttons.
"Just so long as it stays that way. I'm
watching every move he makes."
"I can take care of myself."
"Not where the Masters men are concerned. If
a woman could catch them, don't you think they'd
be caught by now?"
"You're not," she shot back. "And you're
Kyle's age."
"Yeah, but I appreciate solitude. Kyle
Masters chases all women, just like the rest of
them. And don't think I'll stand here and watch
you be ogled in front of all of Ike, Idaho."
"It's none of your business, Dob."
"Would you care for a drink?" Kyle asked,
coming back to stand beside them. He held out a
drink to her, and Molly realized he'd known she
wasn't going to get her break if her brother had
anything to do with it. Dob didn't mean to be
selfish, but he was totally overprotective, and
this made him oblivious to a lot of things.
"Thank you. I need to freshen up. Excuse me."
She left the floor but Kyle caught up with her
and took her elbow.
"Hang on," he said. "I have something to say
to you in private."
Chapter
Seven
Private sounded promising. Maybe
Kyle didn't mind her overprotective brother.
Perhaps he found her fun, intriguing company.
Or was he going to back out on her? Claim
tired feet? Early rise tomorrow to hit the rodeo
circuit?
Obviously he hadn't expected to hear his name
called for dancing tonight since he'd planned to
hit the road early. His chivalry in not begging
off for that reason spurred some begrudging
admiration. Dob, of course, wouldn't see it that
way.
Pooh on Dob, anyway.
Molly allowed Kyle to lead her into a
courtyard.
"Is it too cold out here for you?" Kyle
asked.
Shaking her head, she said, "I'm too heated
up at Dob to get cold."
"Is he always that way?"
"Short answer? Yes."
Kyle took her drink and placed it on a stone
fence on the clubhouse patio. "I have a
confession to make."
"Confessions will make the evening go
faster," she teased.
"I do think you're beautiful."
She was touched. "Thank you, Kyle."
"I thought you were beautiful even before we
danced."
"Is there a reason you're telling me all this
now?" She was terribly afraid he was making this
confession because he was going to leave her.
Find her a substitute. Abandon her to her games
and her silly conversation. Make her disappoint
the children at the hospital. And, just as bad,
get the town's people gossiping about history
repeating itself.
"Because I figure I'm no better than Dob. All
I've done tonight is dance around what I should
be saying." He sighed. "Conversation is not my
strong suit, and it caught me off-guard to find
myself wondering what you had on under your
dress. And I'd want you to be a
chocolate-chip-cookie-dough ball because I'd eat
you all up from toe to top. And if you were a
snowball that melted in my hands, I'd drink
every drop."
She felt herself blink with surprise.
"Surprised?"
"Did you really think all that?" she asked,
skeptical.
"Well, I don't really need to know what
you're wearing under your dress, but I did
wonder, yes. I mean, I'm not asking. But I did
think about it. And some other less-gentlemanly
things, obviously."
He was really cute when the tips of his ears
went pink. "That's kind of sweet," she murmured.
He didn't reply.
"Kyle, tonight we're just dancing. Nothing
more than that. The dance will end at eight in
the morning, and you'll hit the road. I'll make
plans to move to New York after my sisters are
back in school. Tonight's my night to be
Cinderella. And you can be my prince," she
finished softly.
Standing over her in the cold moonlit night,
she could barely see his face in the romantic
light from the swaying Japanese lanterns and
white mini-lights. But he was obviously watching
her, listening to every word she'd said,
digesting it. Inside the ballroom she could hear
people having a good time.
The truth was, she wanted to keep him with
her for the rest of the dance. And it wasn't
just about winning anymore. Or kicking up her
heels all night. If she was honest with herself,
she wanted this night with him.
"I've got a confession, too," she said. "I
want you to kiss me. And if you kiss me for
real, not like Dob's little sister, I'll tell
you what I've got on under my dress."
Chapter
Eight
"I thought you didn't like cowboys,"
Kyle said.
"Maybe I like
you," she replied.
"I'm mighty tempted, but to be honest, I
think you're just trying to make Dob mad."
"Why would I do that?"
He shrugged. "I don't know. He's got a
hair-trigger temper, though, and I don't aim to
stoke it. Not tonight."
He had many admirable qualities, but the
ability to forget who
Molly was for the night wasn't one of them.
She was nothing like he had expected, but it
seemed the past still stood between them. Or at
least Dob did.
"I'm sorry," she said, disappointed. So much
for Cinderella.
"For what?"
"For asking you to kiss me. And that you have
to partner me. I know you're only being a
gentleman."
Inside the ballroom, the announcer called the
couples back to the floor. Her pride hurt. She
didn't look at Kyle. She couldn't change the
past, and she couldn't be anyone except who she
was. And she wasn't going to keep trying to
pretend that this night could be fun for either
of them. She had hoped he saw the "feud" as she
did, but apparently it had meaning as far as he
was concerned.
He took her hand and silently they returned
to the floor.
Molly didn't offer any conversation. Neither
did Kyle. They slow-danced, holding each other
awkwardly. When a fast dance played, they didn't
change positions. This way, their eyes never
met.
But as much as they ignored each other,
staying lost in their own thoughts, Molly felt
the heat growing between them. A mutual
attraction simmered; it teased and tormented
with their every move. They'd shift to a
different, less ill-at-ease position, only to
find a different kind of tension building.
Everywhere he rested his hand, her skin burned.
She knew Kyle felt it, too, because he kept
clearing his throat. Once or twice she thought
he might say something, but he never did.
And then, to her very great surprise, exactly
44 minutes into the hour — one minute before the
break would be announced — Kyle moved his hands
to cup her face. Her gaze jumped to his. He
stroked her cheeks for a moment as he stared
down into her eyes, and then he bent down to
touch his lips to hers.
The entire ballroom went silent. No one could
miss a six-foot-four man bending down to kiss a
woman who barely reached his chest. Besides,
everyone had already been watching them out of
the corners of their eyes, expecting an argument
to break out at any moment.
She didn't care who was watching. Winding her
arms around his neck, she kissed Kyle back for
all she was worth. He smelled sexy, he felt
heavenly, and he knew what to do with his mouth.
"Break!" the DJ called.
Neither she nor Kyle took a break from the
smooching. If anything, she felt him put more
body into it. She moved closer between his legs,
tilting her head back for him to more easily and
deeply plunder her mouth.
"Break!" the DJ repeated loudly, sounding
desperate.
"Damn it! Break!" Dob hollered into the
microphone. "Can't you
hear?"
Kyle broke away to glance at Dob, who was
posed like a bantam rooster at the DJ stand.
Kyle also noted that the floor was empty. They
had a small audience of astonished and amused
people.
"I hear, but I'm not listening," Kyle said.
Chapter
Nine
"They have to take a break from the floor,
don't they?" Dob asked the DJ.
"The rules do state that everyone has to be
off the floor for a 15 minute break each hour,"
the DJ confirmed, almost apologetically.
Kyle turned back to her. "Hate to break when
it was getting good, but we must play by the
rules."
For once, she was glad for the rules. Her
face on fire from the whispering of spectators
and her brother's stormy expression,
Molly stepped from his arms. "I think it's
just as well."
Dob gained her side the instant she walked
from the floor. Taking her by the arm, he pulled
her outside. "Molly, what were you
thinking?"
"That it was the best kiss I'd ever had. Dob,
cool off. It didn't hurt anything."
He took a deep breath. "Molly, for years
you've been the mother figure to our two younger
sisters. I know you're ripe for striking out on
your own, maybe even for falling in love. But
what you don't know is what I haven't told you.
And I'm telling you now, Kyle Masters is not the
man for you."
"I wasn't looking for the man for me."
Truthfully, she'd wanted one night — this
night — with him. She did a lot for other
people; she'd come to the dance this night for
herself alone.
"If you want to throw away your good name, do
it," Dob continued. "But remember that his
grandfather played fast and loose with our
grandmother, and she was never the same after he
shamed her. Never."
"I don't know that I've heard the story that
way," Kyle said, coming to stand beside Molly.
Though Dob was tall and rangy, Kyle had him beat
by four inches he used to his advantage. "It
seems to me that our grandfather wanted to get
married, and your grandmother did not."
"Same thing! What's the difference?" Dob
looked at Molly triumphantly. "The Masters are
not known to settle easily."
"I don't want to settle him! I want one night
for myself. I didn't know Kyle would be my
partner; it was all about participating for the
charity and having a good time. But I can make
my own decisions, Dob. And if I want this one
night for myself, I'll pick up my own pieces if
I get broken." Molly was angry now.
"So be it." Storming off, Dob left the
ballroom altogether.
"Thank you for sticking up for me," Kyle
said.
"I didn't. I stuck up for myself." She looked
up at Kyle, Dob's warning ringing in her ears.
But I don't want to tie him down.
Yet, I sure as heck don't want to fall for
him, either. And whether I want to admit it or
not, he's a mighty tantalizing hunk.
"What are you thinking about?"
She shook her head. "I'm thinking that I'm
tired. Would you believe it? Only two hours into
it and I'm pretty sure I'm exhausted."
"Didn't you say to just 'slap him off like a
mosquito'?" Kyle asked softly.
True. But Dob's bite stayed with her. At the
beginning of this evening, she'd been
comfortable with Kyle, almost innocently so,
believing their story was a book with one
chapter, a chapter that read "The End" once the
dance was over.
She hadn't expected attraction. Or a kiss
that made her pulse race. And she certainly
hadn't expected the book "to be continued."
"Let me make you a totally unchivalrous,
selfish proposition," Kyle said.
Chapter Ten
"Unchivalrous and selfish? That might
actually be refreshing,"
Molly replied.
Kyle quirked a brow at her. "My suggestion
is that we forfeit the dance-a-thon."
She stared at him, disappointed. "That pretty
much hits unchivalrous and selfish in the same
bold stroke."
"Yeah, but here's the sweetener. I'm willing
to match the money won tonight for your
particular charity."
"That's quite a sweetener. It could be a few
thousand dollars, Kyle."
He nodded. "Worth it, though, since it's a
charity event. I'm not all dressed up in this
tux because I thought I was getting out of here
for free. I just never expected to be a
full-fledged participant."
"So we forfeit, you match the winning dollar
amount, and both of us go home happy?" Surely it
couldn't be that easy. That meant there would be
two big winners tonight: whoever won the
dance-a-thon, and her charity. Also, it was a
guaranteed donation, when she might not have
been the winner tonight, anyway. Not to mention
her fantasy of dancing all night had turned out
to be less fun than she'd imagined.
"Both of us go home right now to pack," he
said, "Because the catch to my offer is: since
I've spent a few hours dancing with you, in
front of too many interested busybodies, I'd
like you to spend a few hours alone with you."
"What?"
He grinned at her, sexy confidence all over
his face. "I guess I'm asking you on a date.
Fair is fair, right? That kiss…that kiss blew me
away. I'm even going to let you off the hook
about telling me what's under your dress, but I
want to spend more time with you, preferably
away from your brother and this crowd."
"So you can find out first-hand?"
Shaking his head, he touched the side of her
cheek with one finger, a stroke that sent her
pulse fluttering. "So, what do you say to
running away with me for one night?"
"It hardly seems like a fair exchange. I get
my charity donation, which means more to me than
you can know...what's the catch? Exactly how
alone are we talking?"
He smiled at her, but his dark eyes simmered
with heat. "The fair is in town. We could go get
stuck at the top of the Ferris wheel together.
It takes 45 minutes just to load the ride.
Forty-five minutes is a bunch of guaranteed
privacy."
From the top of the Ferris wheel, one could
see practically all of Ike, and the lights in
the nearby city. But that wasn't close to the
reason that she was tempted to accept his offer.
She liked him. He knew it. Dob knew it. Her kiss
had given her away.
She was the one who'd said she didn't want to
settle him. That was true. They were worlds
apart...but what could going with him for one
night hurt?
"I don't know if being stuck at the top of a
Ferris wheel with you is a good thing," she said
sternly.
He raised his hands in surrender. "You're
safe. Honest."
Then he laughed. Maybe at her.
Drat him! He knows he's irresistible. What
exactly could I do to keep myself from making
the monumental mistake of wanting him? If the
way he kisses is any indication of what would
follow, I'd be one happy lady….
"I have just one qualifier to this scenario,"
Molly said.
He grinned. "Why are you so worried about
being alone with me?"
"Because...because strange things have been
known to happen between Masters and Dewberrys."
"You might decide you like us."
She stared at him, trying to decide what his
words meant. Did he want her to like him, or was
he just like his footloose, rodeo-loving
grandfather? Would she be walking in her
grandmother's shoes, right down the path to a
broken heart?
Kyle gently touched her cheek. "C'mon," he
said. "I'm known for being a gentleman."
She cocked a brow at him doubtfully.
Gentleman? Actually, she had to admit she'd
never heard anything bad about Kyle, except from
Dob. Over the years, she had even admired many
things about him.
But right now it was annoying the way he was
smiling at her as if he knew a secret she
didn't!
As if he knows me better than I know
myself.
Well, she hadn't grown up with Dob trying
that same smirking attitude on her and learned
nothing. She knew how to wipe that
I-know-you
grin off a man's face.
"Kyle Masters, I'm more than willing to go
with you and be as much of a good sport as
you've been about this charity dance, but should
you and I end up sharing anything more than a
kiss, you have to marry me.
Pronto. I'm
not going to be the second Dewberry to be shamed
by a Masters in front of all of Ike, Idaho."
Chapter
Eleven
Kyle raised a brow at
Molly. "Folks are already talking, Molly.
Just us being on the dance floor together was
enough to keep folks hanging around to watch.
The donations tonight should be phenomenal." He
paused for a moment, studying the apprehension
in her face. "As I mentioned, it was an
unchivalrous proposition. You have more to lose
than me."
Her eyelashes lowered for an instant. With
Dob looking ready to start a fight any instant,
and with everyone who'd ever known them looking
on, Molly had no reason to leave with him. But
he figured they'd be better off going where
there were a lot fewer prying eyes — and
selfishly, now that he'd been able to get close
to Molly, he wasn't anxious to give up the
magic.
He had liked her for so long. He'd never
approached her, thinking that she despised him.
For good reason, sure.
But that didn't mean he had to give up the
one night he had to change her mind.
"You're a lovely lady, Molly. I'd never do
anything to hurt you," he said softly. "Stay or
go, the choice is yours."
Her eyes widened. She glanced toward her
brother. "I'll go," she said, her voice barely
above a whisper.
"Come on." He took her hand, pulling her
toward the DJ stand. "We're forfeiting," he told
Pete.
Since the microphone was on, the whole room
heard. A gasp went up from the audience, and
murmuring began. He could almost feel the relief
from the other dancers. He could feel Molly's
tension, too, as her hand clutched his.
"We wish all the remaining couples the best
of luck," he said into the microphone. Then he
put his hand over the mike. "Can I see you?" he
said to his smirking younger brother.
"Sure." Pete got down from the DJ stand and
followed them outside.
Dob barreled out, angrily standing between
Molly and Kyle as best he could despite their
clasped hands. "Just a minute, Kyle. Where the
hell do you think you're going?"
"We're going to the fair. We might get there
before it closes. Molly and I are going to ride
the Ferris wheel."
Dob's brows nearly jumped into his hair. "Oh,
no. I see plainly what you're up to, and I won't
allow it. You're not getting my sister alone on
a ride where no one can see what's happening.
And if you think I don't know that that's
exactly how your grandfather wooed our
grandmother, you've got another think coming."
It was true. The Ferris wheel — largest in
the country — was known for its size and the
supposed promise one man made to his woman while
at the top. The enclosed cage-like seats were
perfect for romance, and when Molly's
grandmother got off the ride, her face had been
glowing, her skirt just enough awry for people
to talk. Her reputation was ruined when her
Masters man didn't return from the rodeo circuit
to make it legal.
The Wheel of Romance, it was called now. No
one had ever really known if Kyle's grandfather
made love to Molly's grandmother while on it,
but the myth really alarmed Dob.
"Hold on, Dob," Pete said. "They're just
going for an innocent carnival ride. Forty-five
minutes. No different from a taking a ride into
town. Settle down."
"No! Molly, you are not going," Dob insisted.
"I am," she replied. "Dob, I love you, even
though you're bull-headed. But I am going with
Kyle, because I don't believe in family feuds.
And I'm not about to let any romantic fantasy
spoil my evening. It's one night at the fair —
and nothing more."
"He's already kissed you!" Dob shouted, his
tone desperate. "Don't you think more could
happen...up there?" he demanded.
"Tell you what." Pete shouldered his way
between Dob and Kyle, pushing them apart so that
Kyle and Molly were standing close again. "I'll
go with them and chaperon them. All right?"
Kyle didn't like that idea at all. They were
both adults, not a couple of teenagers. "We
don't —"
"Yes, you do," Pete insisted. "I'll be the
third wheel tonight, just to keep Dob from
having a seizure. Molly's got a right to a
chaperon, and it's either me or Dob, Kyle.
Choose."
Kyle sighed. Truth was, he'd walk through a
brick wall to have the chance to spend time with
Molly. "Come on, Pete," he said reluctantly. "If
you don't mind, Molly."
She looked at her brother, who still didn't
appear happy. "Good night, Dob," she said. "I'll
see you later."
The three of them walked off, heading toward
Kyle's truck. "Now I want you to get lost as
soon as we're out of Dob's eyesight," Kyle said.
"Uh-uh," Pete said, with a wink at Molly. "No
way. You need a bodyguard, Kyle, more than Molly
needs a chaperone. Consider me hired. 'Course,
you have to pay for my ride ticket."
How was he going to change Molly's mind about
him with Pete hanging around?
Chapter
Twelve
Even though
Kyle skipped right over her threat of having
to marry her if anything more than a kiss was
shared between them on the Ferris wheel, she'd
still decided to go with him. Why?
In one word: Dob.
Somehow, it felt very good to let go of the
past. After all, it had felt awkward over the
years not talking to Kyle and Pete, not
acknowledging them beyond a nod because of
something that had nothing to do with any of
them. And the kiss had done a lot to change her
mind. She had never been kissed like that in her
whole life.
Maybe she shared more in common with her
grandmother than a small stature.
The three of them got in the truck silently,
Molly sitting between the two men. Kyle
switched on the engine.
"You know, Molly, we don't have to do this,"
he said. "Maybe the Ferris wheel is a bad idea.
All that fresh air, all that wonderful
atmosphere — maybe we should go fishing instead.
You ever midnight-fished? Or maybe we could
drive into town and see a movie."
She stared at him. "Having second thoughts?
Or did you develop a latent fear of heights,
brought on by my brother?"
He rubbed at his jaw, not looking at her.
"Maybe both."
Pete sighed in disgust. "It's going to be
horrible listening to you fail at romance, Kyle.
There are some things that shouldn't be handed
down from brother to brother, and bad technique
is one."
"You just stare out the window and pretend
you're interested in the countryside," Kyle
instructed.
Molly leaned her head on Kyle's shoulder and
didn't say a word. What was she going to say?
There was nothing easy about either of their
situations.
"Or I could just take you home," he said
quietly. "We don't have to go out, Molly."
She looked up at him. "I know you're not
afraid of what people say about you, and I know
you're not really afraid of my brother. You only
acted like you cared about his opinion so he
wouldn't feel like a peon. So what are you
really worried about?"
He cleared his throat. "You, I guess."
"Why?"
"I don't want to hurt you."
Instantly, a spear seemed to fly right into
her heart. Did he mean that he knew he would —
eventually?
"I said I wouldn't, and I won't."
She thought she understood. "When you said
that at the dance, you meant physically. Now
you're having second thoughts because you mean
emotionally. Am I right?"
He glanced at her, their eyes meeting in the
dimness of streetlights. "Yeah."
"It's okay," she said. "Believe it or not, I
can fend for myself."
Kyle stopped the truck. "Pete, get out."
"What?"
"Go ride in the truck bed," Kyle told him. "I
want to talk to Molly without your big ears
hearing everything. What I've got to say is
between one man and one woman."
Chapter
Thirteen
Kyle's gaze seemed to glow at her in the
dark. Molly repressed a small shiver of
excitement as Pete got out, closed the truck
door — almost too eagerly, it seemed — and
hopped in the back. He banged on the roof, and
Kyle turned his attention back to the road.
Molly held her breath, her posture stiffer,
her head no longer resting on his shoulder.
"So...you had something to say?"
"I do." He seemed to choose his words
carefully before staring down at her. Then he
cupped her chin with one hand, guiding her head
back down to his shoulder. "I sure do like the
way you feel, Molly Dewberry. You just seem to
fit me right."
Her eyes went wide. She wanted to hear him
say it again, just so she'd know she hadn't
dreamed the words — or the emotion she'd heard
behind them. But she didn't say anything, her
feelings too carefully guarded as she tried to
keep herself from falling head over heels.
Ten minutes later, Kyle pulled up to the
county fair. "There's the Ferris wheel. Lots of
light, lot of people for safety. I think there's
safety in numbers, don't you?"
"I like to get lost in a crowd. Especially a
crowd of strangers." She got out of the truck
when Kyle came around to open her door. Pete
jumped to the ground as well.
"I hope he told you something really
important," Pete said. "'Cause my ears are
frozen from the wind."
She smiled at him. "He didn't."
Pete punched his older brother in the arm.
"It was cruel to kick me out if you weren't
going to go through with it."
"Shut up, Pete," Kyle growled.
Once inside the gate, Kyle threaded through
the crowd until they got to the Ferris wheel.
The neon lights on the huge wheel lit up the
darkness, and Molly thought she'd never seen
anything so romantic in her life.
"Hey, Penny," Pete said to the operator of
the Ferris wheel.
The petite brunette squealed and threw her
arms around his neck. "Now this is the way it's
done," he said to his brother, giving Penny a
big hug that mashed her whole body up against
his. "Since when did you learn to handle such a
big ride, honey?"
"Never you mind, Pete Masters. The ride is
now officially closed. That's the last time I'm
loading it tonight. And I'm free if you are,"
she hinted.
"I might be," he said smoothly, "if you'll
allow these two to have their own private ride
after everyone leaves."
Molly started to say that they didn't need a
ride on the Ferris wheel when she felt Kyle's
hand take hers in his. He really wanted to go on
the ride with her, she realized. And she really
wanted to go for a romantic nighttime ride with
him....
"There'll be nobody at the whole fair except
you and me. No one will even know we were here,"
he said. "Can't get any safer for your
reputation than that, huh?"
He was referring to the time her grandmother
and his grandfather had gotten off the ride
together, her skirt slightly askew. "I guess
not," she said, knowing full well that her
reputation might be safe, but not necessarily
her heart. But without the whole ride needing to
be loaded — a 45 minute process — they'd only be
up there for five minutes, max. "It'll be fun."
After the ride had emptied and the riders
departed, the carney workers began clearing
debris away. Penny motioned them toward the now
empty ride. "Help yourself," she said.
Feeling like she was embarking on a daring
adventure, Molly entered the steel cage and sat
down on the red vinyl seat. Kyle followed her.
Penny and Pete stared in at them, smiling, as
Penny locked the cage. "Have fun!" she told
them.
* * *
Up on the ride, Molly relaxed against Kyle,
his arm along her shoulders, as their car rose
higher and higher. Just as she could see the
whole city from the top of the wheel, the ride
came to a complete stop.
"Uh-oh," said Molly.
They sat up and looked down, but in the
darkness, they couldn't see much except some
carney workers scurrying to clean up and get
home. Lights were being shut off at various
tents. The other rides were dark.
"It's all right," Kyle said. "I'm sure that
this is my brother's way of getting back at me
for making him ride in the back of the truck."
Oh. A prank. She should have known.
"Or maybe," Kyle said, turning her toward
him, "maybe this is my brother's idea of giving
us some time alone together. In which case, I
don't want to let his efforts go unrewarded."
And then he kissed her, softly and sweetly,
and Molly heard herself moan, and suddenly she
knew why her grandmother's face had been glowing
and her skirt had been awry.
Chapter
Fourteen
"And then, maybe some things are better left
undone,"
Kyle said, his voice sounding a little shaky
to
Molly's ears after they finally pulled apart
from the kiss. She could feel her heart
hammering so hard she was certain he must either
hear, or feel it.
"I shouldn't take advantage of this
situation, now that I think about it," he
continued. He wanted her more than he'd ever
wanted a woman, but he also respected her
condition for coming with him tonight.
She felt like she'd been hit with icy water.
Had he not felt the earth move the way she had?
Or maybe it was only the Ferris wheel,
swaying slightly, or the cage itself moving from
their bodies coming together, then pulling
apart. Still, she had wanted him to feel the way
she had. This kiss felt just as earth-rocking as
the one at the dance had — or was she imagining
his heated response to her?
But all she said was, "Pete's a good brother.
And Penny seemed to like him."
"Penny likes anyone who pays attention to
her. Pete's always had a soft spot for her, but
she's not the type to commit to a relationship,"
he said.
Molly straightened. "I thought it was the
Masters men who were unable to commit."
Kyle shook his head. "Myth. Or what did you
call it? Fact or fantasy? That one's truly
fantasy. Come here. I don't want you to get
cold."
And he bundled her up next to him. She put
her feet up on the seat and leaned into his
chest, loving the feel of his arms around her.
"I wonder how long Pete intends to hold us
hostage?" he grumbled.
"I'm sorry you are having such a terrible
time. There are two seats in here, you know,"
she said, struggling to sit up. "And I'm not
that cold."
"Hey, wait a minute. All I meant was that my
brother isn't showing a lady a very nice time,
and I fully intend to remind him of that later.
I didn't mean I don't enjoy being up here with
you."
She looked at him. "Yell down at him to get
us out of here."
"No way." Kyle looked alarmed at her request.
"Look around at the city lights, Molly." He held
her closer, not allowing her to get into the
other seat. "I've always liked you, Miss
Dewberry," he said huskily, pressing kisses to
her neck. "I just want to be sure you like me as
much as I like you."
"I'm up here with you, aren't I?" She loved
what he was doing to her senses, as much as her
frightened heart tried to deny it.
"Yes, but I promised you a good time. It
doesn't seem fair to romance you when you're not
getting the ride I promised you," he said.
She pulled away and gave him an arch look.
"Are you saying if the ride were moving you'd
have a better shot?"
"That would be overconfident, wouldn't it?"
"Yes."
He laughed, and tugged her to him again so he
could wrap her in his arms. "I'll tell you a
secret if you don't tell Dob."
"I'd love to hear a secret that my brother
will never know."
"Your grandmother dumped my grandfather, not
the other way around."
She jerked away from him, her mouth dropping
open.
"What?"
Chapter
Fifteen
There was no better time to tell her, Kyle
figured. His heart was in such a terrified place
right now. Dob had filled her head with all
these horror stories about him over the years —
the Unsettled Masters Men theory — but that was
the biggest fantasy of all. "My grandfather
loved your grandmother," he told her.
"Why do I not know this?"
"Because Dob doesn't know it. Or maybe he
does and he choses to tell the story in a light
that gives him a reason to gripe about us. Maybe
he just sees himself in an underdog role. I've
always thought he just likes to fight about
everything, but that's just my opinion."
Molly pulled away from him. "My brother only
gets upset about your ranch. And it does have to
do with your grandfather." She stared at him.
"Is there a reason you're telling me this now?
Other than the fact that...you'd probably like
to...you know."
"Make love to you? I won't even try to deny
it. But I won't." He stared back at her
stubbornly.
"And why not?" she demanded, sounding
suddenly like a woman scorned.
"Because you think I'm telling you whatever I
have to just to get you into bed. It tells me
that we might never be able to put the past
behind us. We have to trust each other. Or
should I say, you have to trust me, Molly."
* * *
Molly stared out at the brilliant lights of
the city. The fair was now totally dark. If Pete
and Penny were down there, they sure weren't
giving any hint of it. "I think your brother
forgot about us," she said miserably, from her
place on the other seat.
"I think he did, too. His life is now
forfeit," Kyle said, sounding as if his teeth
were grinding together.
"Maybe you could explain to me one more time
what I'm not understanding," Molly said. "I've
heard the same story for a lifetime. It's going
to take more than a few minutes for me to
understand that it might have happened another
way."
Kyle sighed. "Your grandmother decided she
didn't want to be married to a man who lived his
life on the rodeo circuit. She chose to break
the engagement. Everyone just assumed he'd left
her after he got what he wanted at the top of
this wheel. If the town gossips knew he wanted
to make an honest woman of her, but she turned
him down…well, my grandfather knew it was better
that people thought
he was a cad."
"How do you know all this?" Molly desperately
wanted to believe him.
"Because I've got a stack of letters and
postcards at home that my grandpa wrote to her,
begging her to reconsider. Telling her that the
only woman he'd ever love was her."
Molly's heart began a frantic tattoo inside
her. All the years that had gone by, and yet —
Her grandmother hadn't been used by her rodeo
beau. She could have married him to save her
reputation, but she had chosen not to. "Why
can't I tell Dob this?" she demanded.
"Because he's having way too much fun
believing in this feud," Kyle said. "If we took
that away from him, what would he have? Now come
here, sexy lady. I know you're cold in that
dress, and this tux may not be the warmest, but
friends should share their body heat."
Molly crossed to his seat and slowly went
into his lap. "Friends?"
"And maybe more," he qualified, running his
hand down her hair. "If you want, Molly
Dewberry."
Chapter
Sixteen
"I think...I think I do want," she murmured,
in a surrender that sounded heavenly to
Kyle's ears. But maybe he should
double-check. The clock was about to turn
forward, and he needed to make certain
Molly wanted to time travel on this old
Ferris wheel. Because if she let him, he was
going to give her a ride she'd never forget.
Holding her in his lap, stroking her cheek
with one hand and cradling her back with the
other, he said, "Want what, sweetheart?"
"More," she said softly, snuggling against
him. "More, more, more."
So he kissed her, long enough, deep enough to
make her moan. Her hands clutched his shoulders
and he told himself to remember that feeling. He
liked her holding him with that much need and
womanly want.
One day I'm going to feel her
do that when we're both naked. Hands on my
shoulders, begging me to get inside her.
Tonight, he wasn't about to make her cold.
"Let me turn you around, Molly." He slid her
forward into his lap. Kissing her neck, he
stroked the outside of the bodice of her red
dress, with the skirt flaring ever so femininely
over her knees. She put her hands on his so they
could explore her body together. Right then and
there, Kyle knew he was a goner. "You're so
sexy, Molly," he said on a groan. "I don't care
if Pete ever gets us out of this damn cage."
"I don't, either."
With a sigh of complete contentment he
adored, she leaned back against him, her head on
his shoulder. Together, they traced her breasts,
down her curves, and down to the flared red
skirt. Moving underneath it, he stroked the
inside of her legs, enjoying the silky sensation
of her skin against his callused palms, and the
softness of her touch on top of his hands.
"I've dreamed of this night," he said
huskily.
"You have not," she said with a giggle that
sounded decidedly nervous and deliciously,
wickedly convince-me-otherwise.
"I did. I always admired you from afar," he
said, tapering his finger right down the center
of her panties with just enough pressure to let
her know the magic that was to come. She was
wearing a thong, he suddenly realized as he
continued his quest downward, and it was all he
could do not to growl like a bull and take her
in hungry, crazed lust. "I know what you've got
on under your dress now," he told her, nipping
at her shoulder.
"You discovered my secret," Molly said
breathless.
"No. I'm about to know your secret," Kyle
said, lifting Molly up just the slightest so
that he could stroke her bare bottom. Thank
heavens for wallets, and flat condoms that fit
inside them, and easy-tear foil, and —
"Let me do it," she said, turning to help him
put it on, and he did, loving the fact that she
stroked him way more than necessary for a
typical fast slip-it-on. So he kissed her lips,
holding her captive, before turning her fully
around and moving the thong out of the way. She
still had him in her firm little grip, guiding
him.
He ran a finger along her wetness, groaning
inside himself, before she placed him at the
edge of pleasure.
"It's now or never," he said. "No going back
once —"
"Kyle," she said, "I'm not about to change my
mind." And then she slid down him, taking him
completely inside her, and Kyle saw stars that
had nothing to do with the beautiful night sky.
Chapter
Seventeen
Molly never dreamed she could feel so
heavenly. She never knew that making love could
feel so wonderful. Maybe it was the fact that
they'd always thought they were enemies; perhaps
it was the edge of danger of making love to
someone a little bit forbidden. If she was
caught in the grip of a fantasy, she didn't want
to get over it, Molly thought wildly, feeling
Kyle thrust inside her. His hands held her
hips tightly against him, his fingers spreading
her and teasing her. She had colors in her mind
not unlike neon fair lights, and a sound
building in her throat that felt like it would
equal a roller-coaster scream, and all she could
do was hang on, hang on, hang on —
When she screamed her pleasure, all Molly
knew was how glad she was that the fairgrounds
were empty and they were far away from
residential addresses.
"Oh, Kyle," she started to moan, when his
tempo changed, and she realized that she was
about to climax again. Desperate and lost in the
feelings sweeping over her, she begged, "Don't
stop, don't stop!"
"I won't," he promised. "Let me take you
there."
And he did. Her knees went limp. He helped
her relax against him and then held her tightly,
his face pressed against her neck, as he found
his own pleasure. She knew when he did, because
he groaned, "Oh, Mol...ly," so sweetly that she
told herself she was going to hear him say her
name that way many more times in her life.
They stayed that way, her safe in his lap,
for what seemed like a long, pleasured time. But
it wouldn't last, Molly knew. Sooner or later
they had to face life on earth. "I know the
perfect way to finish this."
"I don't want to finish anything," he said
stubbornly, holding her in his arms more
tightly.
"That's not what I meant, exactly. I've been
thinking about what you told me about my
grandmother."
"Every word of it is true."
"I know." He wouldn't lie to her. She'd
always known the man he was didn't square with
the man Dob said he was. And the lost, empty
feeling she'd always had in her life seemed
filled now. Somehow she felt whole, and not so
aimless, with Kyle holding her. It was as if a
circle had been completed, arc matching arc
seamlessly. "You said my grandmother turned your
grandfather down."
"She did. She broke his heart. He was never
the same after that."
"I'll never tell anyone that," Molly said.
"Because clearly my grandmother still loved your
grandfather, and didn't want him to give up his
dreams and settle down to an ordinary life, just
because people knew about their passion. I do
want to read their letters, but...I think we've
avoided the past all our lives. Now I think we
should learn from it."
"What exactly did you have in mind?"
Very softly, yet with all her heart, Molly
told him.
Chapter
Eighteen
"Now hold on a damn minute," Dob's rough
voice growled into Pete's drowsy ear. "What the
hell do you mean you don't know where
my sister is?"
Pete's eyes snapped open. He’d drifted to
sleep with words of praise in his ears, only to
be rudely awakened by the phone, and an angry
voice on the line. "Dob?"
"Who the hell else do you think would be
calling you at 4:30 in the morning? I'm outside,
and I see your truck, and I know my sister's in
there with
your brother, and if you don't get her out
here fast, I'm coming in with my shotgun! Fair
warning!"
Beside him, Penny stirred. Jeez! How had they
fallen asleep?
Covering the mouthpiece with his fingers, he
said, "Sweetheart, wake up."
She moaned, and Dob erupted. "Damnation, I
heard that loud and clear!
You'd best not
be in there with my sister! I'm taking the
safety off my gun right now and coming in."
"Get dressed, sweetheart. Things are about to
get rough." Jumping out of the bed, Pete began
pulling on his own clothes. He had to get back
to the fairgrounds and let Kyle and Molly off
the ride. But first of all, he had to lose Dob.
"She's not here, Dob. Calm down. And I've got
a lady friend in here, so if you don't mind
scurrying off, she and I would like to go back
to sleep. It is 4:30, you know."
Dob hesitated. "That's not Molly in there
with you? I distinctly heard a woman's voice,
and I haven’t seen my sister since you drove off
with her."
"Nope. Molly's not my type. Dewberries in
general are not my type," he said, just for good
measure, knowing Dob was about as much on the
edge as a man could be.
The phone snapped off in his ear. "Good night
to you, too," Pete said.
"We better go get your brother down. He's
going kill us both," Penny said. "And if he
doesn’t, he’ll have me fired for sure."
"Let's go," he said. "My brother might kill
me, but it will have been worth it," he said,
grinning at her.
They hurried to the truck and returned to the
fairgrounds. Racing to the Ferris wheel, Pete
glanced up at the topmost cage. "It's very still
up there. God, Kyle's going to jump on me like a
wild bull —"
"I can't get this lever to move," Penny said,
between gritted teeth. A noisy bump and a
grinding noise, and slowly the wheel began to
turn, inch by torturous inch.
"I oughta have known," Dob said behind them.
Pete turned and just barely ducked the punch Dob
threw. "I oughta have known you damn Masters
would just really enjoy having history repeat
itself, especially in front of an audience."
"No, that was a bonus," Pete said, ducking
the headlock Dob tried to surround him with. But
Pete wasn't telling the truth, because the last
thing he wanted to do was embarrass Molly. But
the other fair workers gathered around, which
guaranteed the night ride wouldn’t remain a
secret.
Penny stopped the ride and went to unlock the
cage. Dob stopped swinging, and Pete held his
breath, praying for a miracle.
Chapter
Nineteen
"I'm warning you," Penny said to
Molly and
Kyle. "Your brother's spitting mad, Molly."
Molly stood, straightening her hair. She and
Kyle had shared a night of intense passion, and
nothing Dob could say would ever change her
feelings about that.
Only Kyle could change her feelings…and he
hadn't had a chance to answer her — her totally
selfish proposition, as he'd called the one he'd
given her at the dance. They'd known what they
would face when the Wheel of Romance ride was
over and the cage was opened. Molly glanced back
at Kyle but he was staring through the bars
toward the admission area, so taking a deep
breath, she stepped out onto the walk area.
Before she could go down the steps, Kyle
tugged her skirt firmly into place. "No sense in
that part of history repeating itself," he said.
"But you can have a smile on your face if you
want."
With Dob glowering over there? With not
knowing what Kyle's answer was? And yet, in
spite of all that, Molly did smile. "That was
the most fun I've ever had, Kyle."
He winked at her, and took her hand.
Together, they walked down the steps. Pete held
Dob back. "Sorry about that, bro," Pete said.
"I'm not — though I should let Dob whup your
hide, just for generic reasons," Kyle said. And
then, right in front of everyone, Kyle kissed
Molly full on the mouth.
Fully insulted and at full tilt now, Dob got
free of Pete. He barreled over to Kyle and
Molly, but she put up a hand. "Stop," she said.
"Take a deep breath, and hear what I have to
say."
For some reason, Dob stopped, though he
stared at her. "Give me one good reason why I
shouldn't defend my sister's honor."
"Because I love him," she said. "And that's
my business."
Instantly, Dob's face turned from angry to
heartbroken. "Molly, honey, I warned you about
him."
"I know you did. I made my own decision, Dob.
You don't have to protect me. No matter what
happens, I had more fun all night with this
cowboy than I've ever had."
She felt Kyle standing at her back. "I can
speak for myself," he said. "Dob, you don't know
half as much as you think you do. But I would
never hurt your sister."
"You've ruined her," Dob complained. "And I'm
thinking you enjoyed walking in your
granddaddy's footsteps."
Molly was about to protest angrily to being
described as "ruined" — what year did Dob think
it was? But Kyle stopped her.
"If I can walk in my granddaddy's footsteps,
I'll die happy, knowing I was all the man I
should have been. No matter what happens between
Molly and me, I think you and I should move
forward. Bury the hatchet. What do you say to
that?"
Surprised, Molly watched as Kyle extended his
hand to her brother.
Chapter
Twenty
Dob scratched his head and shuffled his feet.
"Please, Dob,"
Molly said. "It would mean a lot to me if
you could put your bad feelings aside."
A child getting an inoculation couldn't look
more reluctant. He loved his sister, and had
always tried to protect her from pain. To force
her to choose between the two men she loved
would be too much for her to bear. And he was
afraid he would be the one to lose out.
Silently, he stuck his hand in
Kyle's for the world's fastest handshake.
"There," he said sulkily. He wouldn't have done
it for anyone but Molly.
Kyle nodded, and put his arm around Molly's
shoulders. "Molly and I have an announcement to
make, and there's no better time than the
present to do it," he said. "She's asked me to
marry her, and I'm accepting here and now as
fast as I can in order to get her to the altar
before she changes her mind."
Squealing, Molly threw her arms around Kyle's
neck. "You made me wait! You could have told me
up there!"
"Just remember," he said in her ear, "it's
the only thing I made you wait for."
She giggled, her heart full inside her.
"I had to make sure you weren't just using me
to try to break away from Dob," he told her.
"You know, you might have lured me into that
cage on purpose."
"And seduced you against your will."
"Exactly," he said, playing along. "You know,
your grandmother was something of a wild woman,
too."
Laughing, she wrapped her foot around the
back of his leg, lightly pushing him against
her. "It's rumored you Masters can't be
settled."
"Except by a wild Dewberry."
Dob was telling anyone who would listen how
he'd brought about the end of Ike, Idaho's most
famous family feud. He declared that he'd never
had any hard feelings against Kyle or Pete, that
he'd always said he'd be happy to see a sister
of his married to one of the Masters boys. Dob
predicted that the Masters-Dewberry alliance
would mean the biggest and the best ranch in the
state; in fact, he was willing to take bets on
it.
Pete was trying to convince Penny to hit the
rodeo circuit with him so he could get out of
Kyle's way — after all, even a ranch house is
only big enough for one honeymooning couple.
And the fabled Wheel of Romance somehow
blinked on, neon and multicolored and beautiful,
almost as if by magic.
The End