Cowboy Lover
by
Tina Leonard
Chapter One
"Come in!"
Darling Montgomery called. "That will be
Mason," she muttered, leaning further under the
sink so that she could connect the sink's U-pipe
more tightly. "The Jefferson cowboy with the
plan to change all these dratted old pipes to
efficient PVC. Won't that be a nice change!"
She was certainly tired of banging on old,
leaky, easily clogged metal drainpipes. With a
steady stream of customers at Darling's Bed &
Breakfast in Union Junction, Texas, she needed
pipes that didn't back up, toilets that flushed
and lights that stayed on. Most fix-its she
could do herself — no hard chore since she loved
this charming B and B she'd inherited from her
beloved grandmother ten years ago.
With no husband and no children, she enjoyed
nurturing her guests. Darling's B and B had a
farther-than-local reputation for excellence and
caring.
"It's my desserts that are the real problem,"
Darling murmured, standing to wipe her hands.
"Fix those,
Mr. Anything-You-Can-Do-I-Can-Do-Better
Jefferson."
"Excuse me," a strange man's voice said
behind her. "Not to get into a family squabble
or anything, but from where I stand, it sounds
as if you could use some help."
She whirled around. "I'm so sorry! I was
expecting someone else!"
A confident cowboy grinned at her. "So I
gathered. Someone you have competitive issues
with."
Switching to hostess mode, Darling said, "I'm
Darling Montgomery."
"I'd like to say you certainly are darling,
but I'm afraid I'm already pushing my luck."
She looked more closely at the man as she
pushed a lock of short, chocolate-colored hair
behind one ear uneasily. He was a cowboy, yes —
she recognized that from the well-worn Wranglers
to the seen-better-days felt hat to the
devil-may-care grin. A young cowboy, she
guessed. He didn't have enough scars and
bitterness on him to be middle-aged.
She certainly had all the prerequisite scars
and maybe a touch of world-weariness of the
middle-aged. She ignored the flash of regret and
the sting of attraction making her wish she
wasn't so disheveled from banging around under a
sink. "Consider your luck pushed. What can I do
for you, stranger?"
"I hear you rent rooms," he said with a drawl
from a part of the country she didn't recognize.
"And there's a sign out front that says so,"
she said impatiently.
"Yeah. But I also heard you're a wonderful
hostess with a ready smile and a family style,"
he said easily. "My name's
Sam Lightfoot. Can we start over? I didn't
mean to startle you."
He extended his hand. Darling hesitated. She
didn't want to touch him — she was dirty and
sweaty and he was way too cute. A
boy,
she reminded herself. She didn't have to worry
about anything.
Assuming a motherly air, she swiftly shook
his hand, withdrawing from what was really just
a touch. "I have a room available. I'm sure
you're tired. Would you like dinner tonight or
just breakfast in the morning? Breakfast is
served on the antique mahogany sideboard in the
formal dining room."
He grinned at her. She flushed.
"Am I making you nervous?" he teased.
Chapter Two
"No,"
Darling fibbed, wishing she weren't wearing
a tight tank top, the kind that looked so cute
on younger models in the Victoria's Secret
catalog but just looked comfy on her. "You're
not making me nervous at all. Are you trying
to?"
"Absolutely not."
"Excellent. Then we'll get on famously. Now,
shall I show you to your room?"
"Would you like me to help you with that
U-pipe first?"
Sam asked. "I'm assuming that if I take you
up on the dinner offer, I don't get it until the
sink is in working order. And I'm real good at
fixing things, I promise."
He laughed, the sound low and sexy, almost a
growl of a chuckle. Darling's hair practically
stood on end from the sensual fire it sent
through her. "I have a friend coming, thank
you," she said briskly. "I've got it under
control. Are you just driving through Union
Junction?"
"Yeah. Just driving through."
"Rodeo?"
He shifted on one foot, setting down his
denim duffel bag. Dark brown hair fell over one
eye, which he carelessly swiped back. "Maybe."
"Oh, you're the asker, and I'm the askee,"
she said. "You know, Mr. Lightfoot, for all the
questions you've asked of me, I think I deserve
to ask a few of my own. Especially as you'd like
to stay in my home."
The flash of irritation she'd glimpsed on his
face was quickly replaced by studied
nonchalance. "Of course. Here's my credit card
and my driver's license so that you can charge
my room."
She took the items, more out of curiosity
than anything. His driver's license picture
showed the same man who stood before her. How
could anyone look sexy in their license photo?
His address was stated as Billings, Montana.
And then she held back a gasp as the birth
date caught her eye.
He was twenty-nine.
And she'd been fighting some strange sizzle
inside her forty-year-old body. A flush crept up
her neckline — darn it, she could feel the
pinkness rising to the top of her flesh. Slowly,
she raised her gaze as she handed back to Sam
the driver's license and credit card.
He was smiling at her, knowing exactly what
she was thinking!
"You're gonna say I'm jes' a baby," he
drawled deeply to annoy her.
"Yes, I am," she snapped.
"You have those competitive urges, you know.
So you're older than me."
"A lot."
He nodded, and she sensed he was vastly
amused by her attraction to him.
"The only competitive urges I have are in the
rodeo," he said. "I prefer to leave the
competition out of the bedroom."
She stiffened.
"Now, don't get all bent out of shape," he
said easily. "I didn't say
your bedroom."
Her eyes widened. "Do you have personal
references? I really don't think —"
"Hey," Mason said with a hearty laugh as he
walked into the kitchen. "Sam Lightfoot, you old
dawg!"
The two men embraced, pounding each other
liberally on the back. "So, you took me up on my
recommendation, I see," Mason said. "You'll like
it at Darling's. I've known her since we were
practically babies."
Darling flushed crimson. She'd had a crush on
Mason during their teenage years, despite the
age difference. Later in life, that feeling had
minimized to the comfortable friendship between
them. He had his eleven rowdy Malfunction
Junction brothers to raise and a
five-thousand-acre ranch to run, and she'd had
her grandmother to care for. And then a B and B
to make profitable. "You know this man?"
"Yeah. He's the best on the circuit when it
comes to fixing busted bones and rearranged
chops."
"Busted bones? Rearranged chops?" Darling
repeated, her gaze caught by Sam's laughing,
dark one.
"Sure. Didn't he tell you?" Mason said. "This
is Dr. Sam Lightfoot. One of the best men at
fixing things that you'll ever meet."
Chapter
Three
Sam looked at
Darling, grinning. From the moment he'd
heard her call out to "Come in!" and found
himself staring at her dynamite little fanny as
she wrestled under the sink, he'd hoped the rest
of the package was as cute. What a nice surprise
to discover that not only was she adorable, but
she had attitude he liked, too. Yeah, he saw the
protective wall go up; he saw the nervous sweep
of her hand through her dark hair; he saw the
self-conscious glance of her gaze before she
pulled her posture straight and looked him in
the eye.
She dug him as much as he dug her — and she
was going to protect herself.
Fine with him. He knew all about being
gentle. Doctors had to have those skills. Did no
good to have a patient startled or scared of
him. He'd perfected his technique, and there was
no human he couldn't soothe.
"Well, Doctor," she said, "my sink helper is
here, so your kind offer of repair assistance
won't be needed. Which is best, since I don't
make my guests work for their keep. Let me show
you to your room so you can put your stuff
away." She glanced at Mason. "You can get to
work with your theory."
"Theory?" Sam asked.
"That older isn't better and that new is just
what I need." Darling walked from the kitchen so
that Sam would follow her, which he did, but not
without a raised brow at Mason, who shrugged at
him and bent to get under the sink.
"So, you and Mason know each other well?" he
asked as they walked through the B and B, aware
that something more than handyman issues were
going on between Darling and Mason. "Beyond the
diaper stage, that is."
"We've never dated, if that's what you're
asking," she replied briskly.
He hadn't figured. During a few of their rare
meet-ups, he remembered Mason wheezing about his
next-door neighbor, Mimi.
But he was glad to know she wasn't throwing
the ol' hanky down for Mason. "So, you run this
place by yourself?"
"Yes." She turned down another hall.
"It's nice."
"It's wonderful," she replied, opening the
last door along the hall. "Large bedroom,
bathroom, a door that opens to the outside so
you can come and go without coming through the
main part of the house. Mini fridge. Anything
else you think you would like, Doctor?"
He smiled and watched her eyes widen. "I
think you've taken care of just about
everything, Miss Darling."
She paused. "Did you say you'd be staying
only one night?"
"Actually, I was planning on a week."
She stared at him, and he saw a pulse beating
in her pretty neck. Whoa. He was going to have
to be extra-gentle with Darling. "Will that be
all right?" he asked softly.
"I — of course. Any friend of Mason's is
welcome here. There are guest cards on the
bureau. Please fill them out in the mornings and
leave them in the box in the kitchen. That way
I'll know your food preferences and also
anything else you may need to make your stay in
Union Junction more comfortable."
Ah. She was going to use the card trick.
Communication by note card. No chance of
interaction there. And he hadn't missed the hint
about using the door in his room so that he
wouldn't have to go through the house. No chance
of interaction there, either.
She was so soft, so sexy. So feminine. So
well-defended emotionally.
He just couldn't let her get away that
easily. "I could use a tour guide," he said with
no hint of a grin. "If you have an afternoon
free." He kept his voice calm and kind as if he
were tending a patient. "Or an evening."
Chapter
Four
Darling stared at
Sam. Was he hinting at a date with her?
"I imagine you're busy cooking and stuff for
your boarders during the day. I guess evening
would fit your schedule better," he said.
She relaxed slightly, although still keeping
a sharp eye on him. He didn't appear to be
hitting on her, and she doubted he would,
knowing that Mason was a good friend of hers.
Still... "Exactly what would you be
interested in seeing, Mr. Lightfoot?"
"Sam," he said. "I'd like to see what's in
this Union Junction that Mason thinks so highly
of."
"You know, Mason probably has a little time
on his hands. He'd be a better tour guide than
me." Briskly, she turned to leave his room,
finding Mason standing behind her.
"Mason would be a better what?" Mason said.
"Sorry, came in on the backend of that
conversation."
"Be a better tour guide. Sam wants to see the
town. His old friend should do the honors."
Mason glanced at Sam over the top of
Darling's head. "Sure. I've got time now."
The breath Darling had been holding slowly
left her. She wasn't even going to ask if Mason
had fixed her sink. Sam leaving with Mason would
provide her with a gracious way out of this
conversation — and for the rest of the week, she
was communicating only by note cards!
"All right." Sam put his duffel on the bed.
"I'm up for a ride around town. And I'll spring
for dinner."
Darling beamed as the two men walked out the
door. Then Mason popped his head back inside.
"What are you doing?" he demanded.
The smile slipped instantly off her face.
"What do you mean?"
"Lock up and come on. You're going with us."
"No, I'm —"
"Come on," Mason said. "Didn't you hear Sam
say he was buying dinner? It'll seem rude if you
don't join us. And anyway, you've got nothing
better to do than stand there rooted to the
floor. Come be a good hostess."
"My hostessing doesn't extend outside my B
and B." She glared at Mason. "And he didn't
invite me, which is actually not a problem."
Sam stuck his head around the door. "Miss
Darling," he said, "I promise that the only
thing I'll bite tonight is my food. And you
could certainly use a margarita."
"I could?" was all she could manage. Why had
she imagined he'd gone on down the hall and
couldn't hear her conversation with Mason?
"I think so. Don't you think so, Mason? After
wresting with those pipes, she deserves a
margarita."
"Those pipes are fixed," Mason said
cheerfully.
"That took you five seconds!" Darling said,
outraged. "And I worked so hard!"
"Ya gotta know what you're doing," Mason said
smugly. "And ya gotta have the right hands for
the job."
Sam winked at her. "He's bragging. And using
one of my lines."
Oh, right. Physicians had to have the right
hands to treat patients. "I get it," she said.
"Do you find that your patients respond well to
lines?"
"Yeah, and the ladies respond even better,"
he said, getting a grin out of the usually dour
Mason. "You're a tough case to crack, but we'll
help you think up some lines of your own by the
end of the evening if you come with us. Come on,
Miss Darling. It'll be fun, I promise."
Darling hesitated.
"Come on," Mason said. "You deserve some fun.
Margaritas and dart-throwing. Maybe some
dancing. C'mon. Take a load off for a while."
It sounded fun. Actually it sounded
wonderful. But glancing at Sam, Darling had a
million thoughts going through her head. He knew
that she was attracted to him, and that she
didn't like it — none of which seemed to worry
him. Without sexual attraction coloring her
responses, Darling knew she would treat Sam like
any other man many years her junior. Simply like
one of Mason's friends. So what difference could
one night possibly make?
Nothing was
going to happen, especially with Mason there.
Sam waited patiently for her answer, his eyes
gleaming, and suddenly, Darling threw ten years
of pent-up caution to the wind.
"Let me change," she said. "And then I'm
ready to challenge two handsome men to a game of
darts."
Chapter
Five
Mason and
Sam went to the truck to wait while
Darling freshened up.
"So, what's her story?" Sam asked Mason.
"Beyond the B and B reference you gave me."
Mason shrugged. "Not much more. The B and B
became her life once her grandmother passed.
It's her tie to everything she holds dear."
Sam nodded. "A homemaker. Never planning to
leave Union Junction."
"I can't see it. She's comfortable here."
Mason rested his arms on the wheel. "Why? She
catch your eye?"
"Not if she's caught yours."
"Nah. We're just friends. I suppose you
figured out that she's closer to my age than
yours. She's four years older than me,
actually."
"So, about your theory..."
Mason looked at him. "What?"
"That older isn't better."
"Pipes for the house, friend. I'm sticking to
my story on that one."
"Yeah, but would it bother you if I decided
to convince her that older isn't necessarily a
bad thing?"
Mason met Sam's eyes. "She really did catch
your fancy."
Sam gazed out the window, watching Darling
walk across the yard to the truck. She was
dressed in hot-pink cropped pants and
high-heeled white sandals. Her top was a crisp,
white blouse that showed her arms and a little
neckline. Curves bounced and swayed and Sam
wondered why a woman like her didn't have men
lined up on the porch ringing her doorbell.
Location, location, location, of course.
Union Junction was small, and she knew everybody
here too well for them to be on anything but
brotherly terms.
Lucky for him. "I just think I might be in
the right place at the right time," he murmured,
hopping out to open the truck door for Darling.
"You look real nice," he told her.
She looked at him a second too long, as if
he'd surprised her. "Thanks." Stepping under his
arm, she slid along the truck seat next to
Mason. Sam got in next to her, and closed the
door.
"Okay, shall we give Sam the tour of the old
town square?" Mason asked. "Hang on a sec, my
pager's gone off." Checking the screen, he said,
"Bad news, friends. I'm needed back at the
ranch. Unfortunately. I know the evening won't
be the same without me, but you'll have to
manage."
And then he grinned at Sam.
"Uh, okay, that's too bad, Mason. We'll take
my truck," Sam offered, hoping Darling wouldn't
go gun-shy and forego the evening. She did look
as if her protective layer had been stripped
away.
"Go on," Mason told her gently. "Get out of
my truck and go have a good time."
Sam opened the truck door and got out.
Darling slid past him, and he breathed in the
scent of lavender. As she headed toward Sam's
truck, he quickly reached out and snatched the
pager off the seat where Mason had laid it.
"Bring home Chinese food; no groceries. Frisco."
He glanced at his friend, appreciating the
ruse. "Needed back at the ranch, huh?"
"Guess so."
Sam grinned. "Thanks, Mason."
"I'll see you tomorrow. Make good use of your
time."
Sam planned to.
Chapter Six
Slamming the truck door,
Sam hurried after the curvy package he'd
just been gifted with for the evening.
Darling stood by his truck, waiting, and he
hoped that was a good sign. Staring down into
her face to gauge her mood, he opened the door
for her. The smile he gave her was meant to
reassure.
"You know," she said, "you don't need me for
throwing darts and drinking beer."
Oh, yeah, I do. "Don't chicken out on me
now," Sam said. "Darts is a lonely game without
a friend."
She raised her brows. "All right," she said,
her tone reluctant. "You know, I think what
bothers me about going into town with you
is...is..."
"That you're older than me," he finished.
Darling smiled slightly. "Well, yes. I don't
want to offend you. But people might think it's
strange that I'm showing a man eleven years
younger than me around town."
"Oh, is that the bed-and-breakfast syndrome?
You don't go out with your boarders because it
might look like you're a lonely spider with a
web meant to catch prey?"
She gazed up at him. "Something like that. I
do have my reputation to consider, Sam. If I
date my boarders, then people will assume other
things go on in my house. And then they won't
recommend me anymore."
"I see." He grinned at her. "I do see the
problem."
"It is a problem."
Sam nodded. "But there's just one thing I
should point out. I think you're beautiful. And
I've never been worried about spiders.
'Physician, heal thyself' and all that. This
wouldn't really be a date, anyway, as much as
showing the poor lonely fly around town for a
friend, not necessarily rolling me up in your
web."
She stared at him. "Are you daring me,
Doctor?"
He grinned. "I'm saying you're in good
hands."
Darling slid into his truck, deciding that
one night without her reputation wasn't going to
kill her livelihood. Darts wasn't dancing, after
all. Now
that would cause people to talk.
"I have to be home by ten."
"Yes, Cinderella." Sam gunned the engine.
"Not a moment later. Now relax. I promise not to
make you any more nervous than you are."
Her mouth opened. "I'm not nervous."
He headed down the neat driveway. "Good. I'm
not, either. Although I should be. I'm with a
real attractive woman who claims her desserts
suck."
Darling laughed. "Just how long were you
standing there while I was talking to myself?"
Her back end had been sticking out of the
cabinet while she wrestled and made unattractive
grunting sounds. And conducted a soap opera with
herself. "It wasn't my most attractive moment."
Sam shook his head. "From where I was
standing, Darling, it was a very attractive
moment."
Darling took a deep breath, the smile
hitching on her face. "Sam, I get the strangest
feeling that you're coming on to me."
He watched a slow-moving truck roll across
the farm road before he got on the main road
into town. Then he looked directly into her
eyes.
"I'm sure trying to."
Chapter
Seven
Darling took a deep breath, unprepared for
his expected honesty. "Maybe I don't want you to
come on to me."
At the same time,
Sam's attention flattered her. The woman in
her perked up, came to life, assessed his eyes,
his fingers, the curve of his lips, his chest
and the waist that tapered into nice jeans that
hinted at hidden pleasures. The smell of his
truck was pleasant, manly. Evocative of hard
work and maleness. Even the way he held the
steering wheel was confident. Her heartbeat
began beating in a new, different and nervous
way.
She liked it.
"Just say the word and I won't," Sam told
her. "If you don't mind us making this a real
date, we can give it a shot. If you do mind,
it'll be a friendly game of darts and nothing
more."
Well, he certainly was confident about
putting her in the driver's seat. Darling felt
her interest flare, something she hadn't equated
with a man in a long time. The feeling was new
and exciting, and maybe just a little bit
dangerous. And yet, it felt safe, too, since
Mason thought so highly of Sam.
She was being offered the closest thing to a
"safe fling" that could possibly exist, and
Darling was ever so tempted. What would it be
like to be kissed again? Her brow wrinkled. When
was the last time she'd been kissed?
"You know, I could explore my wild side. It's
new territory for me. Any rules to the game?"
"Yeah. Quit acting like you're about to
atrophy, calcify and roll yourself into an old
folks' home. I don't want you to think of me as
a boy in short-pants. Can we make a deal on
that?"
"Yes, if you'll answer one more question on
the age thing. Do you always hit on older
women?" she asked, curious.
"Can't say they've ever been my preference.
You would, in fact, be the first," he said, his
voice even.
"Why me, then?"
He sighed. "I don't know, Darling. You've got
sassy pants when you're bent under a sink.
You're a nice lady. I'm dying to know if you can
throw a dart worth a damn. Does it have to be
more than that?"
"You're explaining the rules of the game to
me. But it doesn't have to be more than that as
far as I'm concerned." Sam liking her figure
forced her to admit to herself that he was a
pretty appealing package as well. To be honest,
it had been a long time since a man looked at
her the way Sam did — more honestly, no man had
ever gazed at her with the obvious
interest his gaze held.
A pleased shiver ran up her spine.
"Well, then." He shoved his hat back and
gazed at her as he stopped at a stop sign. "Are
we calling this a date?"
All of Darling's senses absorbed the tension
of the moment as she looked over the very
handsome, very virile man sitting next to her.
What do I have to lose?
"Definitely a date," she said.
Chapter
Eight
Sam liked how
Darling shored herself up and opted for fun
instead of caution. It showed that she trusted
him.
"Good," he said, smiling at her. "What do I
need to know about Union Junction?"
Darling smiled back at him. "It's old. It's
small. The townspeople are genuine and proud of
their history. Everybody knows everybody, which
has its good and bad points."
"Were you born here?"
She nodded. "What about you?"
"Born in Montana. My folks split up when I
was young, and a neighbor mostly raised me.
Figured I didn't have much chance to see the
rest of the country if I stayed where I was, and
I was ready to move on, so I hit the rodeo
circuit. Was doing fine until I took a spill off
a bronc that put me into the hospital. While I
was getting put back together, I decided
medicine was safer. And more interesting." He
glanced at her. "All those nurses in white
uniforms, you know."
She shot him a slanted brow.
"Teasing." He laughed. "I went to college,
got my degree, and then another, picked a
specialty and decided to hit the rodeo circuit
again, this time to help out my fellow riders.
It's good to me. Travel a lot, make lots of
friends, see the country." Stopping the truck in
front of the building that had once housed the
town's beauty salon before hard times had forced
it closed, he glanced at Darling. "And tonight's
my lucky night."
"Because?"
"I met you." He got out of the truck and came
around to her side, opening the door so he could
help her down. Somehow, she found herself
sliding down the length of his body more than
moving straight to the sidewalk. "Don't suppose
you're much for traveling the U S of A in a
truck."
She held her breath as he set her down. "I
think the town square is far enough for
tonight."
He tweaked her nose gently. "You're so
careful."
"Careful?"
"Guarded."
Darling looked away for a second. "Maybe I
haven't had many younger men try to sweep me off
my feet and into their truck and onto the open
road."
"Maybe I'm the first."
She put her hands on her hips and stared up
at him. "Maybe you are."
"Good," he said, "then I'll also be the first
to do this."
And then he pulled her to him, putting his
lips on hers and kissing her breathless.
"Whoa," Darling said, pulling away after a
moment. "Sam, I —"
"Yes?" His eyes gleamed down at her in the
lamplight. "You...have a boyfriend? Don't like
kissing? Aren't interested?"
Her response to his kiss told him she was
very interested, the rat. But his passion for
her was such a surprise that she needed a moment
to regroup. "I don't have a boyfriend. I like
kissing. I am interested. I thought kisses came
at the end of the evening, though, and you
caught me off guard."
"Oh. I disturbed the natural order of
things."
"Yes, you did."
He winked at her, hoisting her into his arms
and carrying her down the street. "Sam, put me
down!"
"Am I disturbing the natural order of things
again?"
"Yes!"
He set her down gently, pretending to look
around to see if anyone on the deserted street
was watching him play with her. Pretending to
whisper in her ear, he said, "But if you had to
be honest, would you admit you liked it?"
She gave him a playful push on the chest.
"No."
"I'm shocked."
Darling laughed. "No, you're not. You think
you've got me figured out. I'm going to throw
darts now," she said, walking backward ahead of
him, facing him so that she could tease him the
way he was teasing her. "You can stand out here,
or we can get down to the business of the game.
I think you're stalling because you know I'm
going to win."
She pointed to the softly glowing, small
orange neon sign on the otherwise darkened
sidewalk. Nothing else was open. "Beat you to
the dartboard. Loser forfeits a kiss."
He howled, running after her. She shrieked
and leaped through the doorway of Lampy's Bar.
Before Sam could reach her, she'd snatched up a
handful of darts. "I won."
"You had a running start!"
"And the element of surprise. Deal with it,
Doctor."
He stared at her, his eyes intent.
"What's the matter?" Darling asked. "Scared
of the forfeit? Don't like not being in the
driver's seat?"
"You must have liked my kiss, to make sure
the deck was loaded in your favor."
"Doctor," she said, "quit talking and pay
up."
Chapter
Nine
Sam was intrigued. He liked
Darling trying to turn the tables on him.
Still, it wasn't good for her to get too cocky.
"Forfeits come later," he said, turning away.
"Meanie!" she said, laughing and pounding
lightly on his back. "Now I'll have to beat you
at darts."
"You can try. We could put a bet on this to
make it interesting."
"Like what?"
"Winner collects any forfeit they choose. Any
forfeit — not including sex."
Darling looked at him. "That's an interesting
addendum."
"I don't want you to think I'm trying to take
advantage of you. It's not good manners to pick
on the weaker sex." He shot her a playful wink.
"Ladies first."
"You already owe me a kiss," she reminded
him.
"Not if I win. I can opt out."
"I don't think you would." She gave him an
arch look, backed-up, aimed — and hit the wooden
board beside the circular board. "Oops."
Sam blinked. Hmm. Mason had said she was good
at this game, so she had something up her
sleeve. It would be fun seeing what it was. He
threw a dart, hitting a bull's-eye with
authority.
"Would you look at that?" she said. "Dead on
the money. What does the loser get?"
"A slash in the Loser column," he said,
removing his dart from the board. "And no kiss."
"Guess I'd better get to winning."
And for the next hour, Darling proceeded to
beat the pants off of him. No matter how hard he
tried, he couldn't get the best of her. She was
focused, she had purpose, and he liked being the
object of her determination.
"Whew!" he said at the end of the last game.
"You win."
She smiled at him, putting the darts back
where they belonged.
"So, what's your prize, Miss Darling?" he
asked, watching her walk toward him with sweet
intent on her face. He very much liked that she
had a playful side.
"The kiss you already owe me," she said,
"unless you're going to put kisses under the
heading of sex. Which would be a total cop-out."
"No," he said huskily, wrapping his arms
around her when she got close enough and pulling
her tight to him. "You worked hard for your
kisses, Darling. I like you wanting me that
bad."
"Maybe I don't want you that bad. Maybe I
just want to be kissed."
He laughed. "Don't chicken out now. Just for
that, you have to say it. Or no prize for you."
"No." She glared up at him, but he wouldn't
let her out of his arms.
"Honesty is the best policy, Darling. You
were doing so good there for a while."
"Until you made the crack about earning your
kisses." She gave him a look of total disgust
but quit fighting in his arms, he noticed.
"You did, you know," he said softly. "Your
body gives away what you won't say with your
lips."
She glanced away for a minute. "Then may I
suggest you listen to my body? Because I'm going
against everything my mind is telling me by
being on this so-called date at all. Common
sense tells me not to make a fool of myself;
practicality tells me nothing good can come of
this. Remember, I'm not good at disturbing the
natural order of things. I've already used up
all my bravery."
"Say it," he demanded.
"I want you to kiss me," she said without
hesitation.
"Sam," he prompted.
"Sam, I want you to kiss me," Darling said
breathlessly.
Fire flooded Sam's body — and he didn't waste
another moment.
Chapter Ten
Darling wasn't prepared for the storm of
emotions sweeping her as
Sam kissed her. He held her face so gently,
but his lips demanded her complete compliance.
She kissed him back with every ounce of
enthusiasm she'd ever had, trying to get closer
to him.
When they pulled apart, she felt like a
reborn woman. "Gosh," she murmured. What else
could she say? She'd never been kissed like that
in her life. "Some prize."
Sam laughed, pulling her with him to the
door. "C'mon. Show me the town."
They walked along the empty sidewalk streets,
she tucked comfortably under his shoulder, as if
they'd done this many times. The moon shone
overhead, brightening the winter sky.
"Where is everybody?" Sam asked. "Or are we
the only ones with a penchant for darts?"
"Union Junction isn't exactly flush with
business," Darling said. "It was always a small
town, but people have moved away to find work.
The economy's been tough on us."
"So are any of these stores still open?"
"Lampy's is usually busier than it was
tonight." Darling pointed across the street.
"The Peppermint Patty sells wonderful baked
goods and ice cream, and teas of varying types.
It's a family affair, owned by Patty and run by
her crew of kids. No father, so the kids grew up
in the store and branched it out. We hold our
church circle meetings in there. Bored with
history yet?"
He stared down at her, giving her tingles.
"No."
"All right. In the middle of the square, you
see the courthouse."
"Of course. Obligatory to small towns."
Darling smiled. "Pretty much. Then we have
the Dusty Mule."
Sam peered in the window. "Aren't all mules
somewhat dusty?"
Darling stood beside him. "Yes, but this is
actually a consignment store for clothes. If you
see a really pretty dress on someone at church
or at a party, you hustle in here the next day
to see if the owner put it up for sale. Some of
the ladies around here sew like a dream, and
they advertise by wearing their creations. It's
a small but efficient economy, and keeps us from
having to drive into the city." She gave him a
wry look. "Ma Carsons's clothes don't get bought
very quickly. She loves pickled onions too much.
On the other hand, her daughter, Clove, sees
ladies bickering over hers."
"Poor Ma Carsons," Sam said, sympathizing.
Darling's eyes twinkled. "On the bright side,
if you're very understanding about the onions,
and you catch her on a day when her pipe is
full, Ma Carsons can teach you how to make a
vanilla soap that is so wonderful you never want
to leave your house."
His brows rose. "Kudos to Ma."
"That's right." Darling nodded. "Now I've
told you all about Union Junction."
"I fear you've only scratched the surface."
She turned to face him. "What about your
home? Do you miss it?"
"No."
She blinked. "You must. No girlfriend back
home, no family? Friends?"
His eyes darkened. "I wouldn't be here with
you right now if I had a girlfriend. I have a
rodeo family and rodeo friends. And that's it.
There are no Dusty Mules or Ma Carsonses I care
to think about."
She drew in a breath. "Am I being nosy?"
"Are you?"
"No. I'm being interested."
He smiled. "My world's just not like yours,
Darling, full of interesting anecdotes and
storybook framework."
Drawing away, she said, "Home is what you
make it."
"And I think home is where you take it. For
me, that's on the road."
Chapter
Eleven
Darling looked down, and
Sam hoped he hadn't hurt her feelings.
"We're similar and yet so different," she
murmured. "Too different."
"Not that much." He put his arm around her
and they walked aimlessly toward the truck.
"Age, lifestyle, desires. What more is
there?" Darling asked.
"Ah, the desire word. That makes me think of
you." He kissed the top of her head. Of course
his feelings were sharply sexual right now. He
was so attracted to this woman. But he'd also
heard her underlying question: Did they have a
future?
He frowned. Why did he think of future in
relation to Darling? She'd pointed out the very
obvious facts separating them.
"It's nearly ten," Darling said, glancing up
at him. "I really do need to get back. The
morning goes smoother if I have everything
prepared the night before, especially the tea
and bread."
Fun and games were over. "All right. Let's
head that way." She had a business to run, so he
tried not to think about the fact that any other
woman would be trying to get him into her bed.
Somehow it was better this way.
The drive back to the B and B was
companionably quiet, with both of them thinking.
"I had a good time," Darling told him when
they'd gotten out of the truck and walked to the
porch.
"I did, too." Sam gazed down at the lady
looking up at him. He read hope in her eyes,
hope that he'd put there. For an instant, he
felt regret. Darling was extremely attractive to
him — more so than any woman he could remember.
It was her maturity, it was her sense of fun, it
was the total package.
And yet, her tour had told him more than just
fun history of Union Junction.
This was a woman with strong, deep ties to
her community. He was a man with essentially
none.
They had no future, and it wasn't fair to
play with her heart. Not when she had so much
more to lose than he did. He was going to ride
off to the next rodeo. She'd remain here with
her memories, sipping tea at the Peppermint
Patty and trading clothes at the Dusty Mule.
"Good night," he said.
Darling nodded. "Good night."
She went inside, and he stayed on the porch,
waiting until he'd heard her close the kitchen
door. He heard a pot come out of a drawer, water
turning on in the sink Mason had repaired.
Sam shook his head. "I'm going in," he said.
Chapter
Twelve
Sam headed into the kitchen, stopping in his
tracks.
Darling had slipped on a pink apron that
said Sugar and Spice and Everything Nice in
scrolling white letters down the length of her
cute little body. "Whew, I'll say so," he said.
"Say what?"
Darling looked so surprised he'd entered her
private domain that she remained still, wooden
spoon in hand. "Never mind," Sam said. "Can I
help? How many guests do you have on the
premises right now?" He talked fast to overcome
the sudden fantasy that had hit him. High heels,
naked Darling, pretty pink apron —
"Are you all right?" Darling asked him. "You
seem...rattled."
I'm just fine, Suzy Homemaker. Except that
I'm having a helluva sugar craving. "I'm fine,
thanks. How about I stir?"
She glanced down at the round bowl on the
counter in front of her. "There's nothing to
stir yet."
"Oh." He was invading her space, but he hoped
she wouldn't make him leave.
"Here." She handed him a bowl of long green
bean things. "Snap those."
"Snap them?"
"Yes, Sam." Her smile was teasing. "Like
this." Efficiently she snapped the beans, and he
stared, wondering if her fingers looked so
delicate with everything she did. He tried
snapping like she did, but it wasn't as crisp
nor beautiful. Yet he set himself to learning
it. He really, really wanted to watch her move
around her domain.
She was damn sexy for a woman wearing an
apron. There was major movement in his jeans,
and Sam forced himself to think
beans and
not
lust. But the kitchen table was like
a mirage, a sexual playground, shimmering in his
gaze.
"You're awfully quiet," Darling said over her
shoulder.
"Just trying to keep my mind on the ass," he
said helpfully.
"What?" She turned to stare at him.
"The task, the task. Mind on the
task."
He raggedly kept snapping beans, wishing he
wasn't experiencing sexual overload over Darling
in her kitchen. She sprinkled cinnamon into the
bowl, and the aroma of it drifted to him.
Quietly, he edged his chair over so he could sit
closer to her.
"Would you like a bite?" she asked, holding
up a spoonful of whatever it was that she was
fixing, and right this second, he didn't give a
damn what it was. He stood, putting the bowls on
the counter, and grabbed Darling like a man
grabbing at salvation.
He consumed her lips as if they were his last
meal; he practically tore her clothes off. The
thing that heartened him was that she was
totally into him, too, reaching for him, pulling
him toward her.
"Sam," she murmured. "Oh, my, Sam."
That was all he needed to hear. The kitchen
was
his.
Chapter
Thirteen
"Cooking is more fun than I ever thought it
could be,"
Darling said, after she'd recovered from the
acrobatics she and
Sam had just performed. "Let me get some of
the cinnamon off your face."
"My God," Sam said, helping her up, "I may
take up cooking lessons. I may join the Julia
Child fan club. I saw an ad once for the Naked
Chef, and now I think he may have been on to
something."
Darling tried not to feel self-conscious
about her body and the fact that she had a
butter pat stuck to her rear. She tried
surreptitiously to reach it.
"Let me," Sam said gallantly, using the
opportunity to feel her fanny with enthusiasm.
"Sam." Darling laughed a little nervously and
backed away.
"Don't be shy about a little oleo," he said.
"What's a bit of margarine between friends?"
"Oleo?"
"That's what my mom called it. But she never
wore it on her ass." He picked up a raw carrot
and chewed on it thoughtfully. "At least not
while I was around."
While his attention was otherwise engaged,
Darling speedily put her clothes back on. Her
composure would be a little harder to regroup.
He'd made her feel so incredibly sexy and good —
and yet, she'd just let a man eleven years her
junior totally blow her mind.
"It was good, wasn't it?" Sam said, sitting
back down on the chair and snapping beans again.
She felt herself blush. "Yes."
He gave her a stare that gauged her mood. "I
feel you slipping," he said, "and it's not
because of the butter. You wish we hadn't done
that."
"Well, I feel...awkward."
"Why?"
Because he was sitting in her kitchen,
watching her every move, making her feel as
though she were the kitchen queen of sex, and
she wanted him again! "I don't know," Darling
murmured. "Maybe it's the age factor."
He tapped her hand lightly. "Who was it who
said no cop-outs? I believe that commandment
fell from your luscious lips first."
She turned away, washing her hands. Reaching
for a sponge to wipe down the counters and the
kitchen table, where somehow flour had flown
everywhere, she said, "Maybe it's because you're
Mason's friend."
"Forget about that. Mason would be happy for
me."
"Because you had sex in my kitchen?"
"No. Because I like you."
"Okay." She quit wiping and stared him in the
face. "What exactly do you want from me? A
quickie every night while you're here?"
"Are you offering? Because I really don't
think you'll have to twist my arm too hard."
She tossed the sponge at his smiling face and
left the room, heading to her bedroom.
"Hey, where are you going?" he called after
her.
"To shower." She needed desperately to get
away from him and think about what she'd just
done.
"Hey." He caught up with her as she reached
her bedroom, and kicked the door shut behind
her. "Darling, you need to relax. Otherwise,
I'll have to find another place to stay, and I'd
really rather stay here. With you."
She looked at him, realizing she'd never had
a man inside this bedroom and she wasn't sure
how she felt about it. Encroached? No. Happy?
Happy that it was Sam.
"I'm in big trouble," she whispered.
"Why?" he whispered back. "We used a condom.
And I can run to the store and get you some more
flour."
Darling looked at the younger man in front of
her. With cinnamon still smeared across his face
like war paint, he was sexier than she knew how
to handle and greatly in danger of making her
fall for him. "I don't want a teen crush," she
said. "That's what this feels like."
He frowned. "You don't take me seriously —
what we just did seriously — because of my age?"
His whole body stiffened, and instantly,
Darling realized she'd carelessly said words she
couldn't take back.
Chapter
Fourteen
"So I really don't stand an even chance with
you."
Sam couldn't believe he'd misjudged the
situation like that. He'd thought
Darling was mature enough to handle the way
he was feeling about her. If she didn't feel the
same, that was fine. That was life. Sometimes
two people's emotions and needs didn't meet on
the same plane.
But if she was counting him out because of
something stupid like their age difference, then
they really had nothing further to talk about.
It made him sad.
It also made him angry. "Excuse me," he said,
turning to leave. "I'll be going in the
morning."
"Sam, wait," Darling said.
He turned. "For what? Until I grow up by your
definition?"
She blinked, and momentarily he was saddened
that he'd misjudged her insecurity. Then he
realized what a waste of time it would be to
worry about what she was thinking. He certainly
couldn't change it. "I'm going to get back in my
sandbox now."
And then he left.
Darling stared after him, knowing she'd let
her doubts ruin a beautiful evening. He was
right. She hadn't taken him seriously since the
moment she'd met him. At least not serious for a
meaningful relationship. "I'm out of practice,"
she muttered. But could she tell him that?
No. It was only half the truth.
The age thing was only part of her
hesitation.
"You're so well-defended emotionally," Sam
said, popping his head back inside the room,
"that you've picked your age as the big barrier.
But that's not all it is."
"I know," Darling said.
"And I'm a doctor, not a psychologist, but I
think I know what's really bugging you. You're
afraid."
"Could you be more specific, Doctor?" she
asked. "Because I don't think my fear of spiders
is actually coming into play here."
"I can be as specific as you need. You're
afraid of falling in love. Need I elucidate
further?"
She held up a hand. "I think that was just
sparklingly clear. Thank you."
"You're welcome. And
now I'm going."
Then he left, this time closing the door
behind him.
Chapter
Fifteen
"That will teach me not to sleep with my
boarders,"
Darling murmured, taking a fast shower and
changing into fresh jeans and a light blue
T-shirt that read Union Junction's the Heart of
Texas. "Bad, bad Darling."
Of course,
Sam might have hit irritatingly close on
some salient points. It was best not to go
there, though. What was the point? He'd be
leaving in the morning.
And even if he hadn't made that decision, he
would have left eventually.
"What was I thinking? The worst possible
package of temptation and I fall for it like a
desperate woman." She padded down to the kitchen
in feathery slippers and found Sam putting the
raisin-cinnamon muffins she'd intended to bake
into the oven. "What are you doing, Sam?"
"Cleaning up the mess in here. I'm not one to
just ride off and leave a mess behind me."
Uh-oh, double entendre. She wrinkled her
nose, smelling the warm fragrance of spices and
appreciating the fact that he was wearing her
pink apron. "That looks good on you."
"I'm masculine enough for pink. Unless Mason
were to show up, and then I might hear about it
for a while. But I thought I'd put myself in
your shoes for a while — apron, as it happens to
be."
"That's free-thinking of you."
"Well, that's me." He peered into the oven at
her handiwork. "Free."
Darn it. Of course, that was the bottom-line
problem. He was free to go, and would be going —
in the morning or at the end of the week — and
she'd be left with a lonely, broken heart.
"Guess I'll snap the rest of these beans," she
said brightly.
"What you're missing in this recipe," he
said, holding up the muffin recipe, "is vanilla.
I put it in fairly liberally. Like a
tablespoon."
She stared at him. "I don't think vanilla is
the total problem with my desserts."
"No. It's an adjustment. A tweaking of the
recipe. I think you'll be surprised what a new
attitude can do to your muffins."
He was picking on her. "I don't need a new
attitude."
"Well, you think about it, Darling." He
pulled off the apron, handing it to her. "I feel
fairly certain not everything in life is bland
or spicy. There's probably 'just right'
somewhere in between."
She took the apron, put it on, but when she
turned around, he was gone. Somehow the kitchen
seemed smaller and lonelier without him in
there.
Twenty minutes later, when the buzzer went
off, she pulled the pretty muffins from the
oven, setting them on a rack to cool. "Vanilla,"
she murmured, taking one to taste. "Mm,
delicious. Mm!"
So Sam was right about her muffins. But that
didn't mean he was right about her heart.
Chapter
Sixteen
Darling decided to throw courage, common
sense, and inhibition to the wind.
Sam thought she was giving him short shrift;
he was right. She was looking too much at
herself and not enough at his feelings.
A woman shouldn't be so insecure that she
pass on one of the most flavorful moments of her
life. She pulled out a tray, lined it with a
lace paper doily. Four muffins on a plate and
two mimosas were placed on the tray.
Carrying the tray to her room, Darling
exchanged the feathery slippers for high heels.
She wore nothing except the pink apron. Fluffing
her hair and putting on a dash of lightly
flowery perfume to override the cinnamon, she
peeked into the hallway to make certain no
boarders had come in.
Then, very quietly, she made her way to the
back of the house where Sam's room was. She
tapped lightly on the door.
"Come in," he called.
Closing her eyes for an instant to steel her
nerves, Darling slid the door open with a
pointed-toed shoe. Sam was lying in the bed
talking on the phone. He was freshly showered,
his dark hair awry and wet, his strong chest
bare above the fresh white sheets.
She nearly lost her nerve right then and
there.
"Room service," Sam said to whoever was on
the phone. "Gotta go." He hung up. "You can set
it down right there, Miss Room Service."
She did, then backed up to the still-open
door. "Just thought you might like a snack."
"Close the door," he said.
"I didn't mean to bother you —"
"Darling, please close the door."
She swallowed, feeling suddenly ridiculous
with nothing on under the apron and her
vulnerability exposed. "I just wanted to
apologize —"
He got up from the bed and strode to the
door. He was naked, and Darling couldn't take
her eyes off him.
"I'll close it for you," he said.
She stared up at him, her pulse pounding in
her ears.
"I like a woman who knows how to offer a
nearly naked apology." He grinned at her,
glancing at the tray. "I see two drinks over
there, possibly mimosas, and some awesome
muffins — more than I can eat. Were you planning
on staying?"
Chapter
Seventeen
"I like this apron,"
Sam said, "but it actually covers too much."
He helped her pull the full-length apron off.
"Now," he said, his eyes taking in every inch of
Darling's nudity. He had her down to just
black pumps, and he was feeling much better
about their problem. "Care to join me?"
He moved the tray to the nightstand and dove
back into bed. Patting the space next to him, he
said, "Don't just stand there nude. Bring your
apology over here."
It was obvious that Darling had used up her
sexual bravery by the way she hit the sheets,
jerking the covers up to her chin. She looked at
him, her expression shy.
"Can you eat lying on your back like that?"
Sam perused her. "Hope you brought a straw for
your mimosa because, unless you know some really
amazing way to get liquid down your esophagus
while on your back, this doctor says he's going
to have to perform the Heimlich on you. Only,
it'll go something like this," he said, rolling
her onto her stomach and tearing the sheet from
her. Then he spanked her, three rapid, gentle
but firm spankings that brought a howl of
laughter from her as she tried to flip back
over.
He wasn't about to let her, now that he'd
warmed the rounded skin. "That's for treating me
like a child," he said softly into her ear as he
lovingly rubbed her fanny. "But you get definite
props for the seduction attempt. Very mature of
you."
She giggled, and now that she'd made the
first move, Sam allowed himself to make slow,
lingering love to her, telling her with his body
everything she didn't seem to understand about
his feelings. He took the time with her that
they hadn't taken in the kitchen, and while fast
and furious had been mind-blowing, leisurely and
adoring was even better.
Afterward, he pulled her into his arms, laid
her against his chest, and handed her a muffin.
"So thoughtful of you to plan ahead. I know I'm
ravenous."
"I can testify to that."
In the act of putting a glass to his lips, he
grinned. "Now, now, no sexual innuendo from you.
Or I'll have to —"
"Sam." Darling sat up, pulling the sheet over
her breasts.
"Please. You really don't have to be so
formal. I adore your body." He tried to tug the
sheet down, but she held his hand.
"Sam. This is important. Yes, being older
than you bothers me, but I can get over that. In
fact, I already am."
"Good. Let's not have anymore of that.
Changing a stubborn woman's mind can wear a guy
out."
Darling took a deep breath. "The problem is I
don't want to fall in love with you."
Chapter
Eighteen
There. She'd said it. Laid her heart on the
line. And everyone knew that a man ran from a
serious discussion.
"Well,"
Sam said thoughtfully, "I can't wipe that
particular fear away. If you're afraid of
falling in love, I'm not going to be around long
enough to change your mind."
So that was it? Then she'd been right to try
to protect her heart. Okay, it had been fun to
have him teach her that she was attractive. It
had truly been fun and liberating to discover
her sexy side.
But she'd obviously have to simply chalk this
interlude up to experience. Losing her heart to
a born drifter was simply not an option. She had
deep roots in Union Junction, and giving up her
lifelong dream of running her B and B to follow
a drifter on the rodeo circuit would be
ridiculous, especially at her age.
Sure, she was alone, and maybe, just maybe
Sam had hit her at a lonely time. And sure,
nothing would please her more than if Sam
decided to stay a little while longer, maybe
even long enough to develop roots of his own.
Yet she knew with the wisdom of maturity that
men like Sam didn't hang around a
bed-and-breakfast forever, not with the open
road calling.
Darling knew in her heart that if she used
her feminine wiles to persuade him to stick
around, he'd always pine for the freedom he'd
once enjoyed, and would grow to resent her for
making him settle down. If Sam wanted to stay,
it was a decision he had to make willingly.
"Thank you for being honest." She reached
over to swipe one of the glasses off the tray.
"You were right about the vanilla. There are
some times in life when neither bland nor spicy
is appropriate."
"Excuse me? Are we talking about food or
love?"
"Both," Darling said with a smile. "But
you'll have to decide the context, Doctor."
"You're losing me here," Sam said. "And I'm
sensing emotional withdrawal."
Then she was doing everything right. "Don't
worry about that. It won't require surgery."
"Hey," he said, "I don't think I like that
snippy tone. It smacks of one-night stand."
"Isn't that what we just determined? You're
leaving. I was simply a pit stop."
He stared at her, his eyes wide with
surprise. "I would never think of you that way."
"It's okay, Sam. I completely understand the
recipe now." She ate her muffin, licked her
fingers, and got up from the bed. "See you in
the morning."
But she didn't. Sam left in the night.
Chapter
Nineteen
Mason came by a week later to help
Darling change some pipes in the B and B's
bedrooms' baths. "By the way, what did you do to
my friend?"
Darling looked up from the PVC she was
measuring. "What do you mean?"
"I happened to see
Sam at a rodeo in Lubbock this past weekend.
His face was hanging lower than his britches."
"Sounds painful." She went back to measuring.
Mason grunted. "Women can be so cruel."
"
Women can be so cruel? Let me tell
you, men get exactly what they have coming to
them. It's the old you-reap-what-you-sow
theory."
"Whew." Mason rolled his eyes. "I'm glad I'm
not the one whose heart you threw to the
wolves."
"No one's heart got thrown." Darling handed
him the PVC. "It was a perfectly happy ending."
"Then why was my buddy drowning in his beer
mug?"
Darling layered her heart with an extra-tough
mental shield. "Mason, I don't want to talk
about Sam. Any relationship I have is off-limits
discussion with you. I hesitate to remind you
that the townspeople have for years called your
ranch Malfunction Junction. And there's a good
reason for that, which has to do with you and
your wild 'n' woolly brothers. Please don't try
to fix my life when yours is pretty much as
messed-up as the pipes in this house."
She burst into tears.
"That's what I thought," Mason said, pulling
her into his arms for friendly comfort. "I told
Sam you weren't nearly as black-hearted as you'd
tried to convince him you were."
She sniffled. "Shut up, Mason," Darling said,
liberally using his flannel shirt as a tissue
for her eyes. "You don't know anything about
love. You and Mimi have avoided falling for each
other for years."
"Well, let's not talk about that," he said
hastily. "Let's concentrate on the
L word
you just used."
"It slipped out," Darling said miserably.
"Don't tell Sam."
Mason raised his head to glance toward the
kitchen door. "Don't tell Sam what, Darling?"
"That I fell in love with him."
"And damn glad I am to hear it," Sam said,
stepping into the room.
Chapter
Twenty
"Sam!"
Darling jumped into his arms. "I didn't
think I'd ever see you again!"
"You wouldn't have. You scared me too much,
woman." Sam looked down at her. "Mason convinced
me to come back and talk to you."
"I'm glad he's good for something." Darling
sniffed. "Next you have to fix your own love
life, Mason."
"I'll be going now," Mason said hastily.
"I'll be swiping a muffin off the kitchen
counter as I make my escape. "Did I ever tell
you those are the best muffins I ever tasted?"
Sam and Darling laughed as Mason quickly
exited, leaving them alone.
"New recipe," Darling said. "My boarders have
been requesting them ever since that night." The
night he'd left her.
"So," Sam said, "last time I checked, you
were worried about falling in love alone."
"Right." Darling stared into his eyes. "But
I've accepted that you're a rolling stone."
"Me? You were kicking me out emotionally
before the sheets even got cold."
"I might have been a bit too hasty."
"Yeah. I didn't even get to romance you
properly."
"Romance me? You mean there was more?"
"Definitely. That was just the hors
d'oeuvres."
Happiness bloomed inside her heart. He really
was crazy about her. "Thank you for coming
back."
"I had to, so that I could ask you to marry
me. I love you, Darling Montgomery. Will you
marry me?"
Darling's whole world burst into sparkling
colors. "Yes," she said without hesitation.
"Yes!"
Sam grinned at her. "I like the fact that you
didn't ask how this is going to work."
"Then I'm glad you noticed that I learned a
lot from you, and one of those things is not to
think too far ahead. I know that it will all
work out."
"Trust is a good thing in a relationship." He
kissed her forehead, holding her close to him.
"And one of the things I learned from you
is...history," Sam said. "Roots. Ties. I bought
the old doctor's office on the square. I'll be
right there with the Dusty Mule so I can see you
fight over Clove's dresses. And I'll be right
there where we can drink lavender tea together
at the Peppermint Patty."
"And the rodeo?"
"On the weekends, I'll head to the rodeo and
fix up my busted friends who don't have a good
woman to keep them home."
"That sounds like a very smart plan. Union
Junction hasn't had a good doctor in a long
time." Darling put her head against Sam's chest,
feeling the solid warmth and strength of him.
"You're awfully young," she said, her voice
teasing. "How can you be so certain I'm the
right woman for you?"
He lifted her chin with a finger. "I've been
all over this country a few times. I knew when I
met you that you were what I'd always been
looking for." He kissed her lips gently.
"Besides, I've got advanced degrees, lady. I'm a
smart man."
She laughed. "I love you, Sam."
He smiled and held her close. "Then serve me
a generous portion of love, Darling. I'm
starving for you!"
The End
Cowboy Lover
by
Tina Leonard
Chapter One
"Come in!"
Darling Montgomery called. "That will be
Mason," she muttered, leaning further under the
sink so that she could connect the sink's U-pipe
more tightly. "The Jefferson cowboy with the
plan to change all these dratted old pipes to
efficient PVC. Won't that be a nice change!"
She was certainly tired of banging on old,
leaky, easily clogged metal drainpipes. With a
steady stream of customers at Darling's Bed &
Breakfast in Union Junction, Texas, she needed
pipes that didn't back up, toilets that flushed
and lights that stayed on. Most fix-its she
could do herself — no hard chore since she loved
this charming B and B she'd inherited from her
beloved grandmother ten years ago.
With no husband and no children, she enjoyed
nurturing her guests. Darling's B and B had a
farther-than-local reputation for excellence and
caring.
"It's my desserts that are the real problem,"
Darling murmured, standing to wipe her hands.
"Fix those,
Mr. Anything-You-Can-Do-I-Can-Do-Better
Jefferson."
"Excuse me," a strange man's voice said
behind her. "Not to get into a family squabble
or anything, but from where I stand, it sounds
as if you could use some help."
She whirled around. "I'm so sorry! I was
expecting someone else!"
A confident cowboy grinned at her. "So I
gathered. Someone you have competitive issues
with."
Switching to hostess mode, Darling said, "I'm
Darling Montgomery."
"I'd like to say you certainly are darling,
but I'm afraid I'm already pushing my luck."
She looked more closely at the man as she
pushed a lock of short, chocolate-colored hair
behind one ear uneasily. He was a cowboy, yes —
she recognized that from the well-worn Wranglers
to the seen-better-days felt hat to the
devil-may-care grin. A young cowboy, she
guessed. He didn't have enough scars and
bitterness on him to be middle-aged.
She certainly had all the prerequisite scars
and maybe a touch of world-weariness of the
middle-aged. She ignored the flash of regret and
the sting of attraction making her wish she
wasn't so disheveled from banging around under a
sink. "Consider your luck pushed. What can I do
for you, stranger?"
"I hear you rent rooms," he said with a drawl
from a part of the country she didn't recognize.
"And there's a sign out front that says so,"
she said impatiently.
"Yeah. But I also heard you're a wonderful
hostess with a ready smile and a family style,"
he said easily. "My name's
Sam Lightfoot. Can we start over? I didn't
mean to startle you."
He extended his hand. Darling hesitated. She
didn't want to touch him — she was dirty and
sweaty and he was way too cute. A
boy,
she reminded herself. She didn't have to worry
about anything.
Assuming a motherly air, she swiftly shook
his hand, withdrawing from what was really just
a touch. "I have a room available. I'm sure
you're tired. Would you like dinner tonight or
just breakfast in the morning? Breakfast is
served on the antique mahogany sideboard in the
formal dining room."
He grinned at her. She flushed.
"Am I making you nervous?" he teased.
Chapter Two
"No,"
Darling fibbed, wishing she weren't wearing
a tight tank top, the kind that looked so cute
on younger models in the Victoria's Secret
catalog but just looked comfy on her. "You're
not making me nervous at all. Are you trying
to?"
"Absolutely not."
"Excellent. Then we'll get on famously. Now,
shall I show you to your room?"
"Would you like me to help you with that
U-pipe first?"
Sam asked. "I'm assuming that if I take you
up on the dinner offer, I don't get it until the
sink is in working order. And I'm real good at
fixing things, I promise."
He laughed, the sound low and sexy, almost a
growl of a chuckle. Darling's hair practically
stood on end from the sensual fire it sent
through her. "I have a friend coming, thank
you," she said briskly. "I've got it under
control. Are you just driving through Union
Junction?"
"Yeah. Just driving through."
"Rodeo?"
He shifted on one foot, setting down his
denim duffel bag. Dark brown hair fell over one
eye, which he carelessly swiped back. "Maybe."
"Oh, you're the asker, and I'm the askee,"
she said. "You know, Mr. Lightfoot, for all the
questions you've asked of me, I think I deserve
to ask a few of my own. Especially as you'd like
to stay in my home."
The flash of irritation she'd glimpsed on his
face was quickly replaced by studied
nonchalance. "Of course. Here's my credit card
and my driver's license so that you can charge
my room."
She took the items, more out of curiosity
than anything. His driver's license picture
showed the same man who stood before her. How
could anyone look sexy in their license photo?
His address was stated as Billings, Montana.
And then she held back a gasp as the birth
date caught her eye.
He was twenty-nine.
And she'd been fighting some strange sizzle
inside her forty-year-old body. A flush crept up
her neckline — darn it, she could feel the
pinkness rising to the top of her flesh. Slowly,
she raised her gaze as she handed back to Sam
the driver's license and credit card.
He was smiling at her, knowing exactly what
she was thinking!
"You're gonna say I'm jes' a baby," he
drawled deeply to annoy her.
"Yes, I am," she snapped.
"You have those competitive urges, you know.
So you're older than me."
"A lot."
He nodded, and she sensed he was vastly
amused by her attraction to him.
"The only competitive urges I have are in the
rodeo," he said. "I prefer to leave the
competition out of the bedroom."
She stiffened.
"Now, don't get all bent out of shape," he
said easily. "I didn't say
your bedroom."
Her eyes widened. "Do you have personal
references? I really don't think —"
"Hey," Mason said with a hearty laugh as he
walked into the kitchen. "Sam Lightfoot, you old
dawg!"
The two men embraced, pounding each other
liberally on the back. "So, you took me up on my
recommendation, I see," Mason said. "You'll like
it at Darling's. I've known her since we were
practically babies."
Darling flushed crimson. She'd had a crush on
Mason during their teenage years, despite the
age difference. Later in life, that feeling had
minimized to the comfortable friendship between
them. He had his eleven rowdy Malfunction
Junction brothers to raise and a
five-thousand-acre ranch to run, and she'd had
her grandmother to care for. And then a B and B
to make profitable. "You know this man?"
"Yeah. He's the best on the circuit when it
comes to fixing busted bones and rearranged
chops."
"Busted bones? Rearranged chops?" Darling
repeated, her gaze caught by Sam's laughing,
dark one.
"Sure. Didn't he tell you?" Mason said. "This
is Dr. Sam Lightfoot. One of the best men at
fixing things that you'll ever meet."
Chapter
Three
Sam looked at
Darling, grinning. From the moment he'd
heard her call out to "Come in!" and found
himself staring at her dynamite little fanny as
she wrestled under the sink, he'd hoped the rest
of the package was as cute. What a nice surprise
to discover that not only was she adorable, but
she had attitude he liked, too. Yeah, he saw the
protective wall go up; he saw the nervous sweep
of her hand through her dark hair; he saw the
self-conscious glance of her gaze before she
pulled her posture straight and looked him in
the eye.
She dug him as much as he dug her — and she
was going to protect herself.
Fine with him. He knew all about being
gentle. Doctors had to have those skills. Did no
good to have a patient startled or scared of
him. He'd perfected his technique, and there was
no human he couldn't soothe.
"Well, Doctor," she said, "my sink helper is
here, so your kind offer of repair assistance
won't be needed. Which is best, since I don't
make my guests work for their keep. Let me show
you to your room so you can put your stuff
away." She glanced at Mason. "You can get to
work with your theory."
"Theory?" Sam asked.
"That older isn't better and that new is just
what I need." Darling walked from the kitchen so
that Sam would follow her, which he did, but not
without a raised brow at Mason, who shrugged at
him and bent to get under the sink.
"So, you and Mason know each other well?" he
asked as they walked through the B and B, aware
that something more than handyman issues were
going on between Darling and Mason. "Beyond the
diaper stage, that is."
"We've never dated, if that's what you're
asking," she replied briskly.
He hadn't figured. During a few of their rare
meet-ups, he remembered Mason wheezing about his
next-door neighbor, Mimi.
But he was glad to know she wasn't throwing
the ol' hanky down for Mason. "So, you run this
place by yourself?"
"Yes." She turned down another hall.
"It's nice."
"It's wonderful," she replied, opening the
last door along the hall. "Large bedroom,
bathroom, a door that opens to the outside so
you can come and go without coming through the
main part of the house. Mini fridge. Anything
else you think you would like, Doctor?"
He smiled and watched her eyes widen. "I
think you've taken care of just about
everything, Miss Darling."
She paused. "Did you say you'd be staying
only one night?"
"Actually, I was planning on a week."
She stared at him, and he saw a pulse beating
in her pretty neck. Whoa. He was going to have
to be extra-gentle with Darling. "Will that be
all right?" he asked softly.
"I — of course. Any friend of Mason's is
welcome here. There are guest cards on the
bureau. Please fill them out in the mornings and
leave them in the box in the kitchen. That way
I'll know your food preferences and also
anything else you may need to make your stay in
Union Junction more comfortable."
Ah. She was going to use the card trick.
Communication by note card. No chance of
interaction there. And he hadn't missed the hint
about using the door in his room so that he
wouldn't have to go through the house. No chance
of interaction there, either.
She was so soft, so sexy. So feminine. So
well-defended emotionally.
He just couldn't let her get away that
easily. "I could use a tour guide," he said with
no hint of a grin. "If you have an afternoon
free." He kept his voice calm and kind as if he
were tending a patient. "Or an evening."
Chapter
Four
Darling stared at
Sam. Was he hinting at a date with her?
"I imagine you're busy cooking and stuff for
your boarders during the day. I guess evening
would fit your schedule better," he said.
She relaxed slightly, although still keeping
a sharp eye on him. He didn't appear to be
hitting on her, and she doubted he would,
knowing that Mason was a good friend of hers.
Still... "Exactly what would you be
interested in seeing, Mr. Lightfoot?"
"Sam," he said. "I'd like to see what's in
this Union Junction that Mason thinks so highly
of."
"You know, Mason probably has a little time
on his hands. He'd be a better tour guide than
me." Briskly, she turned to leave his room,
finding Mason standing behind her.
"Mason would be a better what?" Mason said.
"Sorry, came in on the backend of that
conversation."
"Be a better tour guide. Sam wants to see the
town. His old friend should do the honors."
Mason glanced at Sam over the top of
Darling's head. "Sure. I've got time now."
The breath Darling had been holding slowly
left her. She wasn't even going to ask if Mason
had fixed her sink. Sam leaving with Mason would
provide her with a gracious way out of this
conversation — and for the rest of the week, she
was communicating only by note cards!
"All right." Sam put his duffel on the bed.
"I'm up for a ride around town. And I'll spring
for dinner."
Darling beamed as the two men walked out the
door. Then Mason popped his head back inside.
"What are you doing?" he demanded.
The smile slipped instantly off her face.
"What do you mean?"
"Lock up and come on. You're going with us."
"No, I'm —"
"Come on," Mason said. "Didn't you hear Sam
say he was buying dinner? It'll seem rude if you
don't join us. And anyway, you've got nothing
better to do than stand there rooted to the
floor. Come be a good hostess."
"My hostessing doesn't extend outside my B
and B." She glared at Mason. "And he didn't
invite me, which is actually not a problem."
Sam stuck his head around the door. "Miss
Darling," he said, "I promise that the only
thing I'll bite tonight is my food. And you
could certainly use a margarita."
"I could?" was all she could manage. Why had
she imagined he'd gone on down the hall and
couldn't hear her conversation with Mason?
"I think so. Don't you think so, Mason? After
wresting with those pipes, she deserves a
margarita."
"Those pipes are fixed," Mason said
cheerfully.
"That took you five seconds!" Darling said,
outraged. "And I worked so hard!"
"Ya gotta know what you're doing," Mason said
smugly. "And ya gotta have the right hands for
the job."
Sam winked at her. "He's bragging. And using
one of my lines."
Oh, right. Physicians had to have the right
hands to treat patients. "I get it," she said.
"Do you find that your patients respond well to
lines?"
"Yeah, and the ladies respond even better,"
he said, getting a grin out of the usually dour
Mason. "You're a tough case to crack, but we'll
help you think up some lines of your own by the
end of the evening if you come with us. Come on,
Miss Darling. It'll be fun, I promise."
Darling hesitated.
"Come on," Mason said. "You deserve some fun.
Margaritas and dart-throwing. Maybe some
dancing. C'mon. Take a load off for a while."
It sounded fun. Actually it sounded
wonderful. But glancing at Sam, Darling had a
million thoughts going through her head. He knew
that she was attracted to him, and that she
didn't like it — none of which seemed to worry
him. Without sexual attraction coloring her
responses, Darling knew she would treat Sam like
any other man many years her junior. Simply like
one of Mason's friends. So what difference could
one night possibly make?
Nothing was
going to happen, especially with Mason there.
Sam waited patiently for her answer, his eyes
gleaming, and suddenly, Darling threw ten years
of pent-up caution to the wind.
"Let me change," she said. "And then I'm
ready to challenge two handsome men to a game of
darts."
Chapter
Five
Mason and
Sam went to the truck to wait while
Darling freshened up.
"So, what's her story?" Sam asked Mason.
"Beyond the B and B reference you gave me."
Mason shrugged. "Not much more. The B and B
became her life once her grandmother passed.
It's her tie to everything she holds dear."
Sam nodded. "A homemaker. Never planning to
leave Union Junction."
"I can't see it. She's comfortable here."
Mason rested his arms on the wheel. "Why? She
catch your eye?"
"Not if she's caught yours."
"Nah. We're just friends. I suppose you
figured out that she's closer to my age than
yours. She's four years older than me,
actually."
"So, about your theory..."
Mason looked at him. "What?"
"That older isn't better."
"Pipes for the house, friend. I'm sticking to
my story on that one."
"Yeah, but would it bother you if I decided
to convince her that older isn't necessarily a
bad thing?"
Mason met Sam's eyes. "She really did catch
your fancy."
Sam gazed out the window, watching Darling
walk across the yard to the truck. She was
dressed in hot-pink cropped pants and
high-heeled white sandals. Her top was a crisp,
white blouse that showed her arms and a little
neckline. Curves bounced and swayed and Sam
wondered why a woman like her didn't have men
lined up on the porch ringing her doorbell.
Location, location, location, of course.
Union Junction was small, and she knew everybody
here too well for them to be on anything but
brotherly terms.
Lucky for him. "I just think I might be in
the right place at the right time," he murmured,
hopping out to open the truck door for Darling.
"You look real nice," he told her.
She looked at him a second too long, as if
he'd surprised her. "Thanks." Stepping under his
arm, she slid along the truck seat next to
Mason. Sam got in next to her, and closed the
door.
"Okay, shall we give Sam the tour of the old
town square?" Mason asked. "Hang on a sec, my
pager's gone off." Checking the screen, he said,
"Bad news, friends. I'm needed back at the
ranch. Unfortunately. I know the evening won't
be the same without me, but you'll have to
manage."
And then he grinned at Sam.
"Uh, okay, that's too bad, Mason. We'll take
my truck," Sam offered, hoping Darling wouldn't
go gun-shy and forego the evening. She did look
as if her protective layer had been stripped
away.
"Go on," Mason told her gently. "Get out of
my truck and go have a good time."
Sam opened the truck door and got out.
Darling slid past him, and he breathed in the
scent of lavender. As she headed toward Sam's
truck, he quickly reached out and snatched the
pager off the seat where Mason had laid it.
"Bring home Chinese food; no groceries. Frisco."
He glanced at his friend, appreciating the
ruse. "Needed back at the ranch, huh?"
"Guess so."
Sam grinned. "Thanks, Mason."
"I'll see you tomorrow. Make good use of your
time."
Sam planned to.
Chapter Six
Slamming the truck door,
Sam hurried after the curvy package he'd
just been gifted with for the evening.
Darling stood by his truck, waiting, and he
hoped that was a good sign. Staring down into
her face to gauge her mood, he opened the door
for her. The smile he gave her was meant to
reassure.
"You know," she said, "you don't need me for
throwing darts and drinking beer."
Oh, yeah, I do. "Don't chicken out on me
now," Sam said. "Darts is a lonely game without
a friend."
She raised her brows. "All right," she said,
her tone reluctant. "You know, I think what
bothers me about going into town with you
is...is..."
"That you're older than me," he finished.
Darling smiled slightly. "Well, yes. I don't
want to offend you. But people might think it's
strange that I'm showing a man eleven years
younger than me around town."
"Oh, is that the bed-and-breakfast syndrome?
You don't go out with your boarders because it
might look like you're a lonely spider with a
web meant to catch prey?"
She gazed up at him. "Something like that. I
do have my reputation to consider, Sam. If I
date my boarders, then people will assume other
things go on in my house. And then they won't
recommend me anymore."
"I see." He grinned at her. "I do see the
problem."
"It is a problem."
Sam nodded. "But there's just one thing I
should point out. I think you're beautiful. And
I've never been worried about spiders.
'Physician, heal thyself' and all that. This
wouldn't really be a date, anyway, as much as
showing the poor lonely fly around town for a
friend, not necessarily rolling me up in your
web."
She stared at him. "Are you daring me,
Doctor?"
He grinned. "I'm saying you're in good
hands."
Darling slid into his truck, deciding that
one night without her reputation wasn't going to
kill her livelihood. Darts wasn't dancing, after
all. Now
that would cause people to talk.
"I have to be home by ten."
"Yes, Cinderella." Sam gunned the engine.
"Not a moment later. Now relax. I promise not to
make you any more nervous than you are."
Her mouth opened. "I'm not nervous."
He headed down the neat driveway. "Good. I'm
not, either. Although I should be. I'm with a
real attractive woman who claims her desserts
suck."
Darling laughed. "Just how long were you
standing there while I was talking to myself?"
Her back end had been sticking out of the
cabinet while she wrestled and made unattractive
grunting sounds. And conducted a soap opera with
herself. "It wasn't my most attractive moment."
Sam shook his head. "From where I was
standing, Darling, it was a very attractive
moment."
Darling took a deep breath, the smile
hitching on her face. "Sam, I get the strangest
feeling that you're coming on to me."
He watched a slow-moving truck roll across
the farm road before he got on the main road
into town. Then he looked directly into her
eyes.
"I'm sure trying to."
Chapter
Seven
Darling took a deep breath, unprepared for
his expected honesty. "Maybe I don't want you to
come on to me."
At the same time,
Sam's attention flattered her. The woman in
her perked up, came to life, assessed his eyes,
his fingers, the curve of his lips, his chest
and the waist that tapered into nice jeans that
hinted at hidden pleasures. The smell of his
truck was pleasant, manly. Evocative of hard
work and maleness. Even the way he held the
steering wheel was confident. Her heartbeat
began beating in a new, different and nervous
way.
She liked it.
"Just say the word and I won't," Sam told
her. "If you don't mind us making this a real
date, we can give it a shot. If you do mind,
it'll be a friendly game of darts and nothing
more."
Well, he certainly was confident about
putting her in the driver's seat. Darling felt
her interest flare, something she hadn't equated
with a man in a long time. The feeling was new
and exciting, and maybe just a little bit
dangerous. And yet, it felt safe, too, since
Mason thought so highly of Sam.
She was being offered the closest thing to a
"safe fling" that could possibly exist, and
Darling was ever so tempted. What would it be
like to be kissed again? Her brow wrinkled. When
was the last time she'd been kissed?
"You know, I could explore my wild side. It's
new territory for me. Any rules to the game?"
"Yeah. Quit acting like you're about to
atrophy, calcify and roll yourself into an old
folks' home. I don't want you to think of me as
a boy in short-pants. Can we make a deal on
that?"
"Yes, if you'll answer one more question on
the age thing. Do you always hit on older
women?" she asked, curious.
"Can't say they've ever been my preference.
You would, in fact, be the first," he said, his
voice even.
"Why me, then?"
He sighed. "I don't know, Darling. You've got
sassy pants when you're bent under a sink.
You're a nice lady. I'm dying to know if you can
throw a dart worth a damn. Does it have to be
more than that?"
"You're explaining the rules of the game to
me. But it doesn't have to be more than that as
far as I'm concerned." Sam liking her figure
forced her to admit to herself that he was a
pretty appealing package as well. To be honest,
it had been a long time since a man looked at
her the way Sam did — more honestly, no man had
ever gazed at her with the obvious
interest his gaze held.
A pleased shiver ran up her spine.
"Well, then." He shoved his hat back and
gazed at her as he stopped at a stop sign. "Are
we calling this a date?"
All of Darling's senses absorbed the tension
of the moment as she looked over the very
handsome, very virile man sitting next to her.
What do I have to lose?
"Definitely a date," she said.
Chapter
Eight
Sam liked how
Darling shored herself up and opted for fun
instead of caution. It showed that she trusted
him.
"Good," he said, smiling at her. "What do I
need to know about Union Junction?"
Darling smiled back at him. "It's old. It's
small. The townspeople are genuine and proud of
their history. Everybody knows everybody, which
has its good and bad points."
"Were you born here?"
She nodded. "What about you?"
"Born in Montana. My folks split up when I
was young, and a neighbor mostly raised me.
Figured I didn't have much chance to see the
rest of the country if I stayed where I was, and
I was ready to move on, so I hit the rodeo
circuit. Was doing fine until I took a spill off
a bronc that put me into the hospital. While I
was getting put back together, I decided
medicine was safer. And more interesting." He
glanced at her. "All those nurses in white
uniforms, you know."
She shot him a slanted brow.
"Teasing." He laughed. "I went to college,
got my degree, and then another, picked a
specialty and decided to hit the rodeo circuit
again, this time to help out my fellow riders.
It's good to me. Travel a lot, make lots of
friends, see the country." Stopping the truck in
front of the building that had once housed the
town's beauty salon before hard times had forced
it closed, he glanced at Darling. "And tonight's
my lucky night."
"Because?"
"I met you." He got out of the truck and came
around to her side, opening the door so he could
help her down. Somehow, she found herself
sliding down the length of his body more than
moving straight to the sidewalk. "Don't suppose
you're much for traveling the U S of A in a
truck."
She held her breath as he set her down. "I
think the town square is far enough for
tonight."
He tweaked her nose gently. "You're so
careful."
"Careful?"
"Guarded."
Darling looked away for a second. "Maybe I
haven't had many younger men try to sweep me off
my feet and into their truck and onto the open
road."
"Maybe I'm the first."
She put her hands on her hips and stared up
at him. "Maybe you are."
"Good," he said, "then I'll also be the first
to do this."
And then he pulled her to him, putting his
lips on hers and kissing her breathless.
"Whoa," Darling said, pulling away after a
moment. "Sam, I —"
"Yes?" His eyes gleamed down at her in the
lamplight. "You...have a boyfriend? Don't like
kissing? Aren't interested?"
Her response to his kiss told him she was
very interested, the rat. But his passion for
her was such a surprise that she needed a moment
to regroup. "I don't have a boyfriend. I like
kissing. I am interested. I thought kisses came
at the end of the evening, though, and you
caught me off guard."
"Oh. I disturbed the natural order of
things."
"Yes, you did."
He winked at her, hoisting her into his arms
and carrying her down the street. "Sam, put me
down!"
"Am I disturbing the natural order of things
again?"
"Yes!"
He set her down gently, pretending to look
around to see if anyone on the deserted street
was watching him play with her. Pretending to
whisper in her ear, he said, "But if you had to
be honest, would you admit you liked it?"
She gave him a playful push on the chest.
"No."
"I'm shocked."
Darling laughed. "No, you're not. You think
you've got me figured out. I'm going to throw
darts now," she said, walking backward ahead of
him, facing him so that she could tease him the
way he was teasing her. "You can stand out here,
or we can get down to the business of the game.
I think you're stalling because you know I'm
going to win."
She pointed to the softly glowing, small
orange neon sign on the otherwise darkened
sidewalk. Nothing else was open. "Beat you to
the dartboard. Loser forfeits a kiss."
He howled, running after her. She shrieked
and leaped through the doorway of Lampy's Bar.
Before Sam could reach her, she'd snatched up a
handful of darts. "I won."
"You had a running start!"
"And the element of surprise. Deal with it,
Doctor."
He stared at her, his eyes intent.
"What's the matter?" Darling asked. "Scared
of the forfeit? Don't like not being in the
driver's seat?"
"You must have liked my kiss, to make sure
the deck was loaded in your favor."
"Doctor," she said, "quit talking and pay
up."
Chapter
Nine
Sam was intrigued. He liked
Darling trying to turn the tables on him.
Still, it wasn't good for her to get too cocky.
"Forfeits come later," he said, turning away.
"Meanie!" she said, laughing and pounding
lightly on his back. "Now I'll have to beat you
at darts."
"You can try. We could put a bet on this to
make it interesting."
"Like what?"
"Winner collects any forfeit they choose. Any
forfeit — not including sex."
Darling looked at him. "That's an interesting
addendum."
"I don't want you to think I'm trying to take
advantage of you. It's not good manners to pick
on the weaker sex." He shot her a playful wink.
"Ladies first."
"You already owe me a kiss," she reminded
him.
"Not if I win. I can opt out."
"I don't think you would." She gave him an
arch look, backed-up, aimed — and hit the wooden
board beside the circular board. "Oops."
Sam blinked. Hmm. Mason had said she was good
at this game, so she had something up her
sleeve. It would be fun seeing what it was. He
threw a dart, hitting a bull's-eye with
authority.
"Would you look at that?" she said. "Dead on
the money. What does the loser get?"
"A slash in the Loser column," he said,
removing his dart from the board. "And no kiss."
"Guess I'd better get to winning."
And for the next hour, Darling proceeded to
beat the pants off of him. No matter how hard he
tried, he couldn't get the best of her. She was
focused, she had purpose, and he liked being the
object of her determination.
"Whew!" he said at the end of the last game.
"You win."
She smiled at him, putting the darts back
where they belonged.
"So, what's your prize, Miss Darling?" he
asked, watching her walk toward him with sweet
intent on her face. He very much liked that she
had a playful side.
"The kiss you already owe me," she said,
"unless you're going to put kisses under the
heading of sex. Which would be a total cop-out."
"No," he said huskily, wrapping his arms
around her when she got close enough and pulling
her tight to him. "You worked hard for your
kisses, Darling. I like you wanting me that
bad."
"Maybe I don't want you that bad. Maybe I
just want to be kissed."
He laughed. "Don't chicken out now. Just for
that, you have to say it. Or no prize for you."
"No." She glared up at him, but he wouldn't
let her out of his arms.
"Honesty is the best policy, Darling. You
were doing so good there for a while."
"Until you made the crack about earning your
kisses." She gave him a look of total disgust
but quit fighting in his arms, he noticed.
"You did, you know," he said softly. "Your
body gives away what you won't say with your
lips."
She glanced away for a minute. "Then may I
suggest you listen to my body? Because I'm going
against everything my mind is telling me by
being on this so-called date at all. Common
sense tells me not to make a fool of myself;
practicality tells me nothing good can come of
this. Remember, I'm not good at disturbing the
natural order of things. I've already used up
all my bravery."
"Say it," he demanded.
"I want you to kiss me," she said without
hesitation.
"Sam," he prompted.
"Sam, I want you to kiss me," Darling said
breathlessly.
Fire flooded Sam's body — and he didn't waste
another moment.
Chapter Ten
Darling wasn't prepared for the storm of
emotions sweeping her as
Sam kissed her. He held her face so gently,
but his lips demanded her complete compliance.
She kissed him back with every ounce of
enthusiasm she'd ever had, trying to get closer
to him.
When they pulled apart, she felt like a
reborn woman. "Gosh," she murmured. What else
could she say? She'd never been kissed like that
in her life. "Some prize."
Sam laughed, pulling her with him to the
door. "C'mon. Show me the town."
They walked along the empty sidewalk streets,
she tucked comfortably under his shoulder, as if
they'd done this many times. The moon shone
overhead, brightening the winter sky.
"Where is everybody?" Sam asked. "Or are we
the only ones with a penchant for darts?"
"Union Junction isn't exactly flush with
business," Darling said. "It was always a small
town, but people have moved away to find work.
The economy's been tough on us."
"So are any of these stores still open?"
"Lampy's is usually busier than it was
tonight." Darling pointed across the street.
"The Peppermint Patty sells wonderful baked
goods and ice cream, and teas of varying types.
It's a family affair, owned by Patty and run by
her crew of kids. No father, so the kids grew up
in the store and branched it out. We hold our
church circle meetings in there. Bored with
history yet?"
He stared down at her, giving her tingles.
"No."
"All right. In the middle of the square, you
see the courthouse."
"Of course. Obligatory to small towns."
Darling smiled. "Pretty much. Then we have
the Dusty Mule."
Sam peered in the window. "Aren't all mules
somewhat dusty?"
Darling stood beside him. "Yes, but this is
actually a consignment store for clothes. If you
see a really pretty dress on someone at church
or at a party, you hustle in here the next day
to see if the owner put it up for sale. Some of
the ladies around here sew like a dream, and
they advertise by wearing their creations. It's
a small but efficient economy, and keeps us from
having to drive into the city." She gave him a
wry look. "Ma Carsons's clothes don't get bought
very quickly. She loves pickled onions too much.
On the other hand, her daughter, Clove, sees
ladies bickering over hers."
"Poor Ma Carsons," Sam said, sympathizing.
Darling's eyes twinkled. "On the bright side,
if you're very understanding about the onions,
and you catch her on a day when her pipe is
full, Ma Carsons can teach you how to make a
vanilla soap that is so wonderful you never want
to leave your house."
His brows rose. "Kudos to Ma."
"That's right." Darling nodded. "Now I've
told you all about Union Junction."
"I fear you've only scratched the surface."
She turned to face him. "What about your
home? Do you miss it?"
"No."
She blinked. "You must. No girlfriend back
home, no family? Friends?"
His eyes darkened. "I wouldn't be here with
you right now if I had a girlfriend. I have a
rodeo family and rodeo friends. And that's it.
There are no Dusty Mules or Ma Carsonses I care
to think about."
She drew in a breath. "Am I being nosy?"
"Are you?"
"No. I'm being interested."
He smiled. "My world's just not like yours,
Darling, full of interesting anecdotes and
storybook framework."
Drawing away, she said, "Home is what you
make it."
"And I think home is where you take it. For
me, that's on the road."
Chapter
Eleven
Darling looked down, and
Sam hoped he hadn't hurt her feelings.
"We're similar and yet so different," she
murmured. "Too different."
"Not that much." He put his arm around her
and they walked aimlessly toward the truck.
"Age, lifestyle, desires. What more is
there?" Darling asked.
"Ah, the desire word. That makes me think of
you." He kissed the top of her head. Of course
his feelings were sharply sexual right now. He
was so attracted to this woman. But he'd also
heard her underlying question: Did they have a
future?
He frowned. Why did he think of future in
relation to Darling? She'd pointed out the very
obvious facts separating them.
"It's nearly ten," Darling said, glancing up
at him. "I really do need to get back. The
morning goes smoother if I have everything
prepared the night before, especially the tea
and bread."
Fun and games were over. "All right. Let's
head that way." She had a business to run, so he
tried not to think about the fact that any other
woman would be trying to get him into her bed.
Somehow it was better this way.
The drive back to the B and B was
companionably quiet, with both of them thinking.
"I had a good time," Darling told him when
they'd gotten out of the truck and walked to the
porch.
"I did, too." Sam gazed down at the lady
looking up at him. He read hope in her eyes,
hope that he'd put there. For an instant, he
felt regret. Darling was extremely attractive to
him — more so than any woman he could remember.
It was her maturity, it was her sense of fun, it
was the total package.
And yet, her tour had told him more than just
fun history of Union Junction.
This was a woman with strong, deep ties to
her community. He was a man with essentially
none.
They had no future, and it wasn't fair to
play with her heart. Not when she had so much
more to lose than he did. He was going to ride
off to the next rodeo. She'd remain here with
her memories, sipping tea at the Peppermint
Patty and trading clothes at the Dusty Mule.
"Good night," he said.
Darling nodded. "Good night."
She went inside, and he stayed on the porch,
waiting until he'd heard her close the kitchen
door. He heard a pot come out of a drawer, water
turning on in the sink Mason had repaired.
Sam shook his head. "I'm going in," he said.
Chapter
Twelve
Sam headed into the kitchen, stopping in his
tracks.
Darling had slipped on a pink apron that
said Sugar and Spice and Everything Nice in
scrolling white letters down the length of her
cute little body. "Whew, I'll say so," he said.
"Say what?"
Darling looked so surprised he'd entered her
private domain that she remained still, wooden
spoon in hand. "Never mind," Sam said. "Can I
help? How many guests do you have on the
premises right now?" He talked fast to overcome
the sudden fantasy that had hit him. High heels,
naked Darling, pretty pink apron —
"Are you all right?" Darling asked him. "You
seem...rattled."
I'm just fine, Suzy Homemaker. Except that
I'm having a helluva sugar craving. "I'm fine,
thanks. How about I stir?"
She glanced down at the round bowl on the
counter in front of her. "There's nothing to
stir yet."
"Oh." He was invading her space, but he hoped
she wouldn't make him leave.
"Here." She handed him a bowl of long green
bean things. "Snap those."
"Snap them?"
"Yes, Sam." Her smile was teasing. "Like
this." Efficiently she snapped the beans, and he
stared, wondering if her fingers looked so
delicate with everything she did. He tried
snapping like she did, but it wasn't as crisp
nor beautiful. Yet he set himself to learning
it. He really, really wanted to watch her move
around her domain.
She was damn sexy for a woman wearing an
apron. There was major movement in his jeans,
and Sam forced himself to think
beans and
not
lust. But the kitchen table was like
a mirage, a sexual playground, shimmering in his
gaze.
"You're awfully quiet," Darling said over her
shoulder.
"Just trying to keep my mind on the ass," he
said helpfully.
"What?" She turned to stare at him.
"The task, the task. Mind on the
task."
He raggedly kept snapping beans, wishing he
wasn't experiencing sexual overload over Darling
in her kitchen. She sprinkled cinnamon into the
bowl, and the aroma of it drifted to him.
Quietly, he edged his chair over so he could sit
closer to her.
"Would you like a bite?" she asked, holding
up a spoonful of whatever it was that she was
fixing, and right this second, he didn't give a
damn what it was. He stood, putting the bowls on
the counter, and grabbed Darling like a man
grabbing at salvation.
He consumed her lips as if they were his last
meal; he practically tore her clothes off. The
thing that heartened him was that she was
totally into him, too, reaching for him, pulling
him toward her.
"Sam," she murmured. "Oh, my, Sam."
That was all he needed to hear. The kitchen
was
his.
Chapter
Thirteen
"Cooking is more fun than I ever thought it
could be,"
Darling said, after she'd recovered from the
acrobatics she and
Sam had just performed. "Let me get some of
the cinnamon off your face."
"My God," Sam said, helping her up, "I may
take up cooking lessons. I may join the Julia
Child fan club. I saw an ad once for the Naked
Chef, and now I think he may have been on to
something."
Darling tried not to feel self-conscious
about her body and the fact that she had a
butter pat stuck to her rear. She tried
surreptitiously to reach it.
"Let me," Sam said gallantly, using the
opportunity to feel her fanny with enthusiasm.
"Sam." Darling laughed a little nervously and
backed away.
"Don't be shy about a little oleo," he said.
"What's a bit of margarine between friends?"
"Oleo?"
"That's what my mom called it. But she never
wore it on her ass." He picked up a raw carrot
and chewed on it thoughtfully. "At least not
while I was around."
While his attention was otherwise engaged,
Darling speedily put her clothes back on. Her
composure would be a little harder to regroup.
He'd made her feel so incredibly sexy and good —
and yet, she'd just let a man eleven years her
junior totally blow her mind.
"It was good, wasn't it?" Sam said, sitting
back down on the chair and snapping beans again.
She felt herself blush. "Yes."
He gave her a stare that gauged her mood. "I
feel you slipping," he said, "and it's not
because of the butter. You wish we hadn't done
that."
"Well, I feel...awkward."
"Why?"
Because he was sitting in her kitchen,
watching her every move, making her feel as
though she were the kitchen queen of sex, and
she wanted him again! "I don't know," Darling
murmured. "Maybe it's the age factor."
He tapped her hand lightly. "Who was it who
said no cop-outs? I believe that commandment
fell from your luscious lips first."
She turned away, washing her hands. Reaching
for a sponge to wipe down the counters and the
kitchen table, where somehow flour had flown
everywhere, she said, "Maybe it's because you're
Mason's friend."
"Forget about that. Mason would be happy for
me."
"Because you had sex in my kitchen?"
"No. Because I like you."
"Okay." She quit wiping and stared him in the
face. "What exactly do you want from me? A
quickie every night while you're here?"
"Are you offering? Because I really don't
think you'll have to twist my arm too hard."
She tossed the sponge at his smiling face and
left the room, heading to her bedroom.
"Hey, where are you going?" he called after
her.
"To shower." She needed desperately to get
away from him and think about what she'd just
done.
"Hey." He caught up with her as she reached
her bedroom, and kicked the door shut behind
her. "Darling, you need to relax. Otherwise,
I'll have to find another place to stay, and I'd
really rather stay here. With you."
She looked at him, realizing she'd never had
a man inside this bedroom and she wasn't sure
how she felt about it. Encroached? No. Happy?
Happy that it was Sam.
"I'm in big trouble," she whispered.
"Why?" he whispered back. "We used a condom.
And I can run to the store and get you some more
flour."
Darling looked at the younger man in front of
her. With cinnamon still smeared across his face
like war paint, he was sexier than she knew how
to handle and greatly in danger of making her
fall for him. "I don't want a teen crush," she
said. "That's what this feels like."
He frowned. "You don't take me seriously —
what we just did seriously — because of my age?"
His whole body stiffened, and instantly,
Darling realized she'd carelessly said words she
couldn't take back.
Chapter
Fourteen
"So I really don't stand an even chance with
you."
Sam couldn't believe he'd misjudged the
situation like that. He'd thought
Darling was mature enough to handle the way
he was feeling about her. If she didn't feel the
same, that was fine. That was life. Sometimes
two people's emotions and needs didn't meet on
the same plane.
But if she was counting him out because of
something stupid like their age difference, then
they really had nothing further to talk about.
It made him sad.
It also made him angry. "Excuse me," he said,
turning to leave. "I'll be going in the
morning."
"Sam, wait," Darling said.
He turned. "For what? Until I grow up by your
definition?"
She blinked, and momentarily he was saddened
that he'd misjudged her insecurity. Then he
realized what a waste of time it would be to
worry about what she was thinking. He certainly
couldn't change it. "I'm going to get back in my
sandbox now."
And then he left.
Darling stared after him, knowing she'd let
her doubts ruin a beautiful evening. He was
right. She hadn't taken him seriously since the
moment she'd met him. At least not serious for a
meaningful relationship. "I'm out of practice,"
she muttered. But could she tell him that?
No. It was only half the truth.
The age thing was only part of her
hesitation.
"You're so well-defended emotionally," Sam
said, popping his head back inside the room,
"that you've picked your age as the big barrier.
But that's not all it is."
"I know," Darling said.
"And I'm a doctor, not a psychologist, but I
think I know what's really bugging you. You're
afraid."
"Could you be more specific, Doctor?" she
asked. "Because I don't think my fear of spiders
is actually coming into play here."
"I can be as specific as you need. You're
afraid of falling in love. Need I elucidate
further?"
She held up a hand. "I think that was just
sparklingly clear. Thank you."
"You're welcome. And
now I'm going."
Then he left, this time closing the door
behind him.
Chapter
Fifteen
"That will teach me not to sleep with my
boarders,"
Darling murmured, taking a fast shower and
changing into fresh jeans and a light blue
T-shirt that read Union Junction's the Heart of
Texas. "Bad, bad Darling."
Of course,
Sam might have hit irritatingly close on
some salient points. It was best not to go
there, though. What was the point? He'd be
leaving in the morning.
And even if he hadn't made that decision, he
would have left eventually.
"What was I thinking? The worst possible
package of temptation and I fall for it like a
desperate woman." She padded down to the kitchen
in feathery slippers and found Sam putting the
raisin-cinnamon muffins she'd intended to bake
into the oven. "What are you doing, Sam?"
"Cleaning up the mess in here. I'm not one to
just ride off and leave a mess behind me."
Uh-oh, double entendre. She wrinkled her
nose, smelling the warm fragrance of spices and
appreciating the fact that he was wearing her
pink apron. "That looks good on you."
"I'm masculine enough for pink. Unless Mason
were to show up, and then I might hear about it
for a while. But I thought I'd put myself in
your shoes for a while — apron, as it happens to
be."
"That's free-thinking of you."
"Well, that's me." He peered into the oven at
her handiwork. "Free."
Darn it. Of course, that was the bottom-line
problem. He was free to go, and would be going —
in the morning or at the end of the week — and
she'd be left with a lonely, broken heart.
"Guess I'll snap the rest of these beans," she
said brightly.
"What you're missing in this recipe," he
said, holding up the muffin recipe, "is vanilla.
I put it in fairly liberally. Like a
tablespoon."
She stared at him. "I don't think vanilla is
the total problem with my desserts."
"No. It's an adjustment. A tweaking of the
recipe. I think you'll be surprised what a new
attitude can do to your muffins."
He was picking on her. "I don't need a new
attitude."
"Well, you think about it, Darling." He
pulled off the apron, handing it to her. "I feel
fairly certain not everything in life is bland
or spicy. There's probably 'just right'
somewhere in between."
She took the apron, put it on, but when she
turned around, he was gone. Somehow the kitchen
seemed smaller and lonelier without him in
there.
Twenty minutes later, when the buzzer went
off, she pulled the pretty muffins from the
oven, setting them on a rack to cool. "Vanilla,"
she murmured, taking one to taste. "Mm,
delicious. Mm!"
So Sam was right about her muffins. But that
didn't mean he was right about her heart.
Chapter
Sixteen
Darling decided to throw courage, common
sense, and inhibition to the wind.
Sam thought she was giving him short shrift;
he was right. She was looking too much at
herself and not enough at his feelings.
A woman shouldn't be so insecure that she
pass on one of the most flavorful moments of her
life. She pulled out a tray, lined it with a
lace paper doily. Four muffins on a plate and
two mimosas were placed on the tray.
Carrying the tray to her room, Darling
exchanged the feathery slippers for high heels.
She wore nothing except the pink apron. Fluffing
her hair and putting on a dash of lightly
flowery perfume to override the cinnamon, she
peeked into the hallway to make certain no
boarders had come in.
Then, very quietly, she made her way to the
back of the house where Sam's room was. She
tapped lightly on the door.
"Come in," he called.
Closing her eyes for an instant to steel her
nerves, Darling slid the door open with a
pointed-toed shoe. Sam was lying in the bed
talking on the phone. He was freshly showered,
his dark hair awry and wet, his strong chest
bare above the fresh white sheets.
She nearly lost her nerve right then and
there.
"Room service," Sam said to whoever was on
the phone. "Gotta go." He hung up. "You can set
it down right there, Miss Room Service."
She did, then backed up to the still-open
door. "Just thought you might like a snack."
"Close the door," he said.
"I didn't mean to bother you —"
"Darling, please close the door."
She swallowed, feeling suddenly ridiculous
with nothing on under the apron and her
vulnerability exposed. "I just wanted to
apologize —"
He got up from the bed and strode to the
door. He was naked, and Darling couldn't take
her eyes off him.
"I'll close it for you," he said.
She stared up at him, her pulse pounding in
her ears.
"I like a woman who knows how to offer a
nearly naked apology." He grinned at her,
glancing at the tray. "I see two drinks over
there, possibly mimosas, and some awesome
muffins — more than I can eat. Were you planning
on staying?"
Chapter
Seventeen
"I like this apron,"
Sam said, "but it actually covers too much."
He helped her pull the full-length apron off.
"Now," he said, his eyes taking in every inch of
Darling's nudity. He had her down to just
black pumps, and he was feeling much better
about their problem. "Care to join me?"
He moved the tray to the nightstand and dove
back into bed. Patting the space next to him, he
said, "Don't just stand there nude. Bring your
apology over here."
It was obvious that Darling had used up her
sexual bravery by the way she hit the sheets,
jerking the covers up to her chin. She looked at
him, her expression shy.
"Can you eat lying on your back like that?"
Sam perused her. "Hope you brought a straw for
your mimosa because, unless you know some really
amazing way to get liquid down your esophagus
while on your back, this doctor says he's going
to have to perform the Heimlich on you. Only,
it'll go something like this," he said, rolling
her onto her stomach and tearing the sheet from
her. Then he spanked her, three rapid, gentle
but firm spankings that brought a howl of
laughter from her as she tried to flip back
over.
He wasn't about to let her, now that he'd
warmed the rounded skin. "That's for treating me
like a child," he said softly into her ear as he
lovingly rubbed her fanny. "But you get definite
props for the seduction attempt. Very mature of
you."
She giggled, and now that she'd made the
first move, Sam allowed himself to make slow,
lingering love to her, telling her with his body
everything she didn't seem to understand about
his feelings. He took the time with her that
they hadn't taken in the kitchen, and while fast
and furious had been mind-blowing, leisurely and
adoring was even better.
Afterward, he pulled her into his arms, laid
her against his chest, and handed her a muffin.
"So thoughtful of you to plan ahead. I know I'm
ravenous."
"I can testify to that."
In the act of putting a glass to his lips, he
grinned. "Now, now, no sexual innuendo from you.
Or I'll have to —"
"Sam." Darling sat up, pulling the sheet over
her breasts.
"Please. You really don't have to be so
formal. I adore your body." He tried to tug the
sheet down, but she held his hand.
"Sam. This is important. Yes, being older
than you bothers me, but I can get over that. In
fact, I already am."
"Good. Let's not have anymore of that.
Changing a stubborn woman's mind can wear a guy
out."
Darling took a deep breath. "The problem is I
don't want to fall in love with you."
Chapter
Eighteen
There. She'd said it. Laid her heart on the
line. And everyone knew that a man ran from a
serious discussion.
"Well,"
Sam said thoughtfully, "I can't wipe that
particular fear away. If you're afraid of
falling in love, I'm not going to be around long
enough to change your mind."
So that was it? Then she'd been right to try
to protect her heart. Okay, it had been fun to
have him teach her that she was attractive. It
had truly been fun and liberating to discover
her sexy side.
But she'd obviously have to simply chalk this
interlude up to experience. Losing her heart to
a born drifter was simply not an option. She had
deep roots in Union Junction, and giving up her
lifelong dream of running her B and B to follow
a drifter on the rodeo circuit would be
ridiculous, especially at her age.
Sure, she was alone, and maybe, just maybe
Sam had hit her at a lonely time. And sure,
nothing would please her more than if Sam
decided to stay a little while longer, maybe
even long enough to develop roots of his own.
Yet she knew with the wisdom of maturity that
men like Sam didn't hang around a
bed-and-breakfast forever, not with the open
road calling.
Darling knew in her heart that if she used
her feminine wiles to persuade him to stick
around, he'd always pine for the freedom he'd
once enjoyed, and would grow to resent her for
making him settle down. If Sam wanted to stay,
it was a decision he had to make willingly.
"Thank you for being honest." She reached
over to swipe one of the glasses off the tray.
"You were right about the vanilla. There are
some times in life when neither bland nor spicy
is appropriate."
"Excuse me? Are we talking about food or
love?"
"Both," Darling said with a smile. "But
you'll have to decide the context, Doctor."
"You're losing me here," Sam said. "And I'm
sensing emotional withdrawal."
Then she was doing everything right. "Don't
worry about that. It won't require surgery."
"Hey," he said, "I don't think I like that
snippy tone. It smacks of one-night stand."
"Isn't that what we just determined? You're
leaving. I was simply a pit stop."
He stared at her, his eyes wide with
surprise. "I would never think of you that way."
"It's okay, Sam. I completely understand the
recipe now." She ate her muffin, licked her
fingers, and got up from the bed. "See you in
the morning."
But she didn't. Sam left in the night.
Chapter
Nineteen
Mason came by a week later to help
Darling change some pipes in the B and B's
bedrooms' baths. "By the way, what did you do to
my friend?"
Darling looked up from the PVC she was
measuring. "What do you mean?"
"I happened to see
Sam at a rodeo in Lubbock this past weekend.
His face was hanging lower than his britches."
"Sounds painful." She went back to measuring.
Mason grunted. "Women can be so cruel."
"
Women can be so cruel? Let me tell
you, men get exactly what they have coming to
them. It's the old you-reap-what-you-sow
theory."
"Whew." Mason rolled his eyes. "I'm glad I'm
not the one whose heart you threw to the
wolves."
"No one's heart got thrown." Darling handed
him the PVC. "It was a perfectly happy ending."
"Then why was my buddy drowning in his beer
mug?"
Darling layered her heart with an extra-tough
mental shield. "Mason, I don't want to talk
about Sam. Any relationship I have is off-limits
discussion with you. I hesitate to remind you
that the townspeople have for years called your
ranch Malfunction Junction. And there's a good
reason for that, which has to do with you and
your wild 'n' woolly brothers. Please don't try
to fix my life when yours is pretty much as
messed-up as the pipes in this house."
She burst into tears.
"That's what I thought," Mason said, pulling
her into his arms for friendly comfort. "I told
Sam you weren't nearly as black-hearted as you'd
tried to convince him you were."
She sniffled. "Shut up, Mason," Darling said,
liberally using his flannel shirt as a tissue
for her eyes. "You don't know anything about
love. You and Mimi have avoided falling for each
other for years."
"Well, let's not talk about that," he said
hastily. "Let's concentrate on the
L word
you just used."
"It slipped out," Darling said miserably.
"Don't tell Sam."
Mason raised his head to glance toward the
kitchen door. "Don't tell Sam what, Darling?"
"That I fell in love with him."
"And damn glad I am to hear it," Sam said,
stepping into the room.
Chapter
Twenty
"Sam!"
Darling jumped into his arms. "I didn't
think I'd ever see you again!"
"You wouldn't have. You scared me too much,
woman." Sam looked down at her. "Mason convinced
me to come back and talk to you."
"I'm glad he's good for something." Darling
sniffed. "Next you have to fix your own love
life, Mason."
"I'll be going now," Mason said hastily.
"I'll be swiping a muffin off the kitchen
counter as I make my escape. "Did I ever tell
you those are the best muffins I ever tasted?"
Sam and Darling laughed as Mason quickly
exited, leaving them alone.
"New recipe," Darling said. "My boarders have
been requesting them ever since that night." The
night he'd left her.
"So," Sam said, "last time I checked, you
were worried about falling in love alone."
"Right." Darling stared into his eyes. "But
I've accepted that you're a rolling stone."
"Me? You were kicking me out emotionally
before the sheets even got cold."
"I might have been a bit too hasty."
"Yeah. I didn't even get to romance you
properly."
"Romance me? You mean there was more?"
"Definitely. That was just the hors
d'oeuvres."
Happiness bloomed inside her heart. He really
was crazy about her. "Thank you for coming
back."
"I had to, so that I could ask you to marry
me. I love you, Darling Montgomery. Will you
marry me?"
Darling's whole world burst into sparkling
colors. "Yes," she said without hesitation.
"Yes!"
Sam grinned at her. "I like the fact that you
didn't ask how this is going to work."
"Then I'm glad you noticed that I learned a
lot from you, and one of those things is not to
think too far ahead. I know that it will all
work out."
"Trust is a good thing in a relationship." He
kissed her forehead, holding her close to him.
"And one of the things I learned from you
is...history," Sam said. "Roots. Ties. I bought
the old doctor's office on the square. I'll be
right there with the Dusty Mule so I can see you
fight over Clove's dresses. And I'll be right
there where we can drink lavender tea together
at the Peppermint Patty."
"And the rodeo?"
"On the weekends, I'll head to the rodeo and
fix up my busted friends who don't have a good
woman to keep them home."
"That sounds like a very smart plan. Union
Junction hasn't had a good doctor in a long
time." Darling put her head against Sam's chest,
feeling the solid warmth and strength of him.
"You're awfully young," she said, her voice
teasing. "How can you be so certain I'm the
right woman for you?"
He lifted her chin with a finger. "I've been
all over this country a few times. I knew when I
met you that you were what I'd always been
looking for." He kissed her lips gently.
"Besides, I've got advanced degrees, lady. I'm a
smart man."
She laughed. "I love you, Sam."
He smiled and held her close. "Then serve me
a generous portion of love, Darling. I'm
starving for you!"
The End