“That’s what I’m hoping to do,” he said, passing by her into the café.
After the second trip with the third and fourth boxes, Aggie thanked him for his help. Climbing into her truck, she settled in and rolled down her window. “I was serious about the pies at home.”
“Thanks for the invitation, but I may take a rain check on it, depending on what I find to do.”
Aggie squinted and looked up at the sky. “You might want to make that a sunshine check, but like I said, stop by anytime.”
He watched as she backed onto the street and waved as she drove away. Yep, he was planning to enjoy the day, in spite of the weather. Kate had conspicuously avoided him after he had put a stop to her curiosity and questions, and Trish had been busy with other things. Aggie had been his only source of decent conversation, and that had been limited because they had been so busy.
Maybe, he thought with a smile, as he wandered back into the café, Kate would be done with her mad-on.
He’d hang around the café a little longer, before heading out to the Claybornes’ for some pie. It wouldn’t hurt to catch up on the latest town gossip—or even some more ancient—and he might pick up a few things about the family that employed him. He might even get a handle on Kate and what people thought of her. And if that didn’t happen, he could simply enjoy the company. But he had to admit that it was Kate who was on his mind.
Chapter Three
“So this is where you hide out.”
Startled, Kate looked up from her work to find Dusty leaning against the door frame of her tiny office in Desperation’s old opera house. Her stomach gave a flutter, which she immediately ignored. “I’m not hiding out. I’m working.”
Going back to her work and hoping that by ignoring him, he would take the hint that she wasn’t interested, she was nonetheless completely aware that he hadn’t gone away.
“Income tax preparation,” he said, the sound of his voice nearer than before. “You’re an accountant?”
Keeping her eyes on the paperwork in front of her, she pointed her pen over her shoulder. “With a diploma from the University of Oklahoma to prove it.” Without meaning to, she looked up and directly into his eyes, but she held her ground. He would not charm her today. “Do you have a problem with that?”
“No, I find it interesting.” He took the last few steps to her desk, and then perched on the edge of it. “Isn’t tax season over?”
Kate felt her heart rate increase and frowned. She didn’t like the feeling, and she certainly didn’t like him being so close to her. “Usually, yes, but Tom Travers filed an extension back in March.”
It was a good excuse and had worked well when Aunt Aggie had returned from making a delivery to the café that morning and told her that Dusty was stopping by the farm for a piece of pie. Not particularly pleased at the news and wanting to make some headway on a plan to keep her aunt from leasing the farm, Kate had decided her office would be a safe place. She’d been wrong.
And just why was he here? Not to have his taxes done, she was sure. “What are you doing here, Dusty?”
“I was at the café and heard there’d been renovations on the old opera house, so I came by to see and saw you in here.”
He reached across the desk to her papers and pulled one toward him. “I never realized you were a number cruncher.”
She quickly retrieved her notes and folded her arms on top of them. “Is there some reason you should know that?”
“Curiosity,” he said with a shrug of his shoulders. “People are interesting. You can learn a lot just by watching.”
When he leaned across the desk, she was too slow to react, and he managed to tuck a stray strand of hair behind her ear. Cursing herself for her racing heart and for not being on guard, she straightened her shoulders and leaned back in her chair. From that position, she figured he’d have to vault the desk to touch her.
“Yes,” she said, then cleared the breathiness from her throat, “people watching can be educational. Maybe you should go out and find more to watch.”
“Take you for example,” he went on, as if she hadn’t spoken.
“Let’s not.”
“You’re a hard worker,” he continued, apparently oblivious to anything she said. “Dedicated to farming and, from what I’ve heard, more knowledgeable about it than many.”
She looked up at him and wished she hadn’t.
“Do I have that right?” he asked, his warm gaze on her.
Quickly looking at his shirt buttons to avoid that gaze, she shrugged. “If you say so. Now if you’ll—”
“And now this.” He pointed at the papers spread out on her desk, then turned his attention elsewhere. “The rain has stopped and the sun is out. It’s a beautiful day out there, yet here you are, working away.”
She didn’t see any reason in trying to participate in the conversation, when he seemed to be the only one talking and certainly wasn’t listening.
“What do you do for fun, Kate?”
The question took her by surprise, and she looked up. “Fun?”
“Yeah, fun. All work and no play make Kate a dull girl.”
Feeling a bit insulted, she took a deep breath. “If I’m so dull, why are you still here?”
His mouth turned up in a slow, sexy smile. “Maybe I like the company.”
She gave an unladylike snort. “And maybe I don’t.”
“Maybe we could go out sometime.”
She couldn’t believe he had said that. “Go out?”
“Yeah, like on a date.”
“I don’t date,” she said, without missing a beat.
“You’re already taken?”
“No, I just don’t date.” She didn’t feel the need to tell him she had dated in the past. Those times were on her list of disappointments. She had always been too unsure of herself. From the moment she and Trish had arrived in Desperation, she had tried to stay in the background. And now it seemed Dusty was doing his best to pull her out in the open.
“Why don’t you date?”
Her frustration at his digging was beginning to take its toll. Still, she reminded herself, she had dug into his personal life, asking questions she shouldn’t have of someone she hardly knew. “I really don’t have time for it. Besides, why do I need to date?”
For a moment, he merely looked at her. “That’s the strangest question I’ve ever heard. I think mine was better.”
“That’s not a surprise.”
“But I’ll answer it anyway.”
When he stopped to take a breath, she held up her hand. “That’s okay,” she hurried to say before he could get a start. “I retract the question.”
“No, it’s not okay. I want to answer it.”
“There’s no need to.”
Again, their gazes locked, and he shrugged his shoulders. “If you say so.”
She was relieved. She didn’t need him or anyone else telling her how strange she was. She admitted it. But she hadn’t been so different before the accident had taken her parents’ lives. She and Trish had been like peas in a pod as children, happy and content, with more friends than they could count. The accident hadn’t changed Trish much, but it had Kate. Angry and grief-stricken, she had taken scissors to her long red hair and whacked off the lengths that her mother had brushed every night. It had been a foolish, adolescent act, and she had paid the price in embarrassment later. Being different became her hallmark, and she was now accustomed to it, finally feeling right in her skin.
“I remember you in high school,” he said, as if he could read her mind.
“I doubt that,” she replied, knowing full well that she had stood out among others, at least for a while. Once Trish began making friends and her own hair had begun to grow out, Kate was able to disappear in the crowd of other students.
“I didn’t say I knew you, but I do remember you, at least a little.”
“Because of my hair,” she said, accepting the fact.
“And you were new
in the school. That’s the way it is in small schools. I was new once, too, so I know what it’s like.”
She didn’t want him to understand. She didn’t want them to have anything at all in common. “Then you’ll understand when I say that I have work to do.”
“Checkmate. You win this game.” He stood, but didn’t move toward the door. “This doesn’t let you off the hook though. I’m serious about you getting out more. I’ve traveled all over the country and beyond. Desperation is a great little town, but you can’t really know how great until you have some perspective. The same is true in life.” His sudden grin was devilish. “And dating.”
She couldn’t believe he was still thinking of that. “You’re equating extensive travel with dating? How do you come up with this?”
“The more people you get to know—through dating—the better your perspective, just like travel.”
“Oh, really? Well, I’ll keep that in mind the next time I plan a vacation,” she said, knowing she really didn’t care.
“In your case, I’d say you need to start small. Locally would do, and I’m more than happy to help with it.” He turned and walked to the door, but before stepping out of the office, he turned back. “Looks like we’ll be back in the field on Monday, if the skies stay clear. I’ll see you then.”
Kate could only stare. When he was gone, she breathed a sigh of relief. The tingles that always went off when he was around could go back to sleep. She was happy where she was, working the land and making extra money with her accounting business and a little cooking. She didn’t need him or anyone else to provide entertainment. Or happiness.
WITH THE FIELDS still too wet to get into with a combine and the Saturday morning baking finished, Kate decided to take the rest of the day off and do nothing. Sitting at the kitchen table, flipping through one of Trish’s bridal magazines, she heard voices and looked up to see her aunt limp into the kitchen on her bad knee, with Dusty right behind her.
“Pull up a chair and make yourself at home,” Aggie told him with a wave of her hand in the direction of the chair near Kate.
Not wanting to be near him, after his appearance at her office two days before, and considering the effect he had on her, Kate jumped up. “I’ll get that laundry finished.”
But Aggie stopped her. “No, you keep Dusty company while I finish it.”
“But your knee—”
“Gotta keep moving or it’ll stiffen up more,” Aggie said, as she disappeared into the hallway.
Knowing how bad-tempered her aunt could be when her knee was hurting, Kate did as she was told. Aunt Aggie’s stubborn streak sometimes precluded common sense.
“I would think you’d be out getting more perspective on the world,” Kate said, without looking at Dusty, as she returned to her chair and pretended to read the magazine.
He pulled out the chair next to her and sat. “A friend of mine’s riding in a rodeo over in Altus.”
“That’s nice,” she said, as unaffectedly as possible.
“I thought I’d see if you might want to go along.”
She continued to flip through pages and prayed he couldn’t hear how her heart had suddenly started thudding. “Sorry, but I have—”
“Dusty, would you like some pie?”
Kate looked up to see her aunt standing in the doorway and wondered how much she had overheard.
“That’d be great,” he answered.
Aggie limped to the cabinet and opened it, pulling out a large plate. “What kind? Peach, apple, cherry or pecan?”
For a second, Dusty didn’t speak, his brow furrowed in thought. “Peach. No, apple. No, make it peach.”
Chuckling, Aggie placed the plate and a fork on the table. “Cut him a piece of each, Kate.”
Kate again did as she was told and went to the counter, where she removed a dishtowel covering the four pies. After cutting a large piece of peach and apple, she turned to Dusty. “Are you sure you don’t want to try the cherry and pecan, too?”
“Maybe later.”
She hoped there wouldn’t be a later. The sooner he left, the better. But if the gleam in his eye was any indication, later wasn’t that far away. “Hand me the plate, would you?”
He jumped up to pass her the plate with a smile that made her breath catch, and then returned to his chair. “Now, back to my question.”
“What question was that?” Aggie asked, taking her usual seat across the table.
“I answered it,” Kate said, “or tried to.” She shot a look at her aunt. Had Aunt Aggie been listening outside in the hall?
“I asked Kate if she’d like to go to a rodeo in Altus with me. You might know the friend who’s riding. Shawn O’Brien.”
“Of course we know him,” Aggie said. “And all the O’Briens. I’ve known Tanner since he was born, and Kate and Trish both know his wife Jules. What event is Shawn competing in?”
“Bronc riding, like his uncle. I didn’t know Tanner well until we met up, years ago, on the circuit. Shawn and I have team roped together some.” Dusty turned to look at Kate. “So how about it?”
“I usually spend time with the family on Saturday,” Kate began, “so I’m sure you understand—”
“No need to do that,” Aggie said. Standing, she walked to the door and grabbed a set of keys hanging from a hook. “I thought I told you we planned to pay Hettie a visit. You know how much she loves your pies, and I haven’t had a chance to see her for a while. Trish has been looking forward to it.”
As if on cue, Trish stepped into the kitchen, her purse in her hand, and took one of the pies, before she hurried to the door with nothing more than a quick smile.
Kate glanced at Dusty, who held a forkful of pie on its way to his mouth, his smile reaching from ear to ear. She wasn’t sure what to think. This was the first she knew about a visit to Hettie Lambert. “But—”
“Why don’t you go on along to the rodeo with Dusty, Kate?” Aggie held the door open and Trish stepped outside. “We’ll be gone most of the day. Trish wants to stop at the library before it closes. No need for you to stay here alone, when you can get out and enjoy yourself.”
“No, I can’t—” But her aunt was out the door, down the porch steps and almost trotting to the pickup, in spite of her bad knee, and Trish was already waiting at the truck.
Kate stood at the door and stared after them as they drove away. She couldn’t imagine what Dusty might be thinking.
When she turned around, she saw that he had finished the first piece of pie and had started on the second. Setting his fork on the plate, he looked up at her, his grin challenging. “Afraid to spend time alone with me?”
She wasn’t about to let him think that and offered a confident smile of her own. “Not on your life.”
“Then let’s go,” he said, pushing away from the table and getting to his feet.
“I’m ready. Lead the way.”
His gaze swept her from her head to her toes and back up again. “You’re sure about that.”
“Of course I am.”
He glanced down. His grin sent her heart racing. And she realized what he was looking at.
She liked being comfortable when she baked and had slipped on her fuzzy purple slippers early that morning—the fuzzy purple slippers with the googly eyes.
Hot flames of embarrassment swept through her, and she knew her face must match her hair. “I’ll get my boots,” she squeaked and ran from the room.
DUSTY HAD TO KEEP from laughing out loud at the way Aggie had bamboozled Kate into going with him. He wondered if Kate had noticed and hoped she didn’t. He had been sincere when he’d told her that she needed to get out more. And he was glad he’d had Aggie on his side to make sure she did. Now that he was getting to know her better, he was finding he was right about Kate. She was a knowledgeable companion, and he was enjoying spending time with her as much as he had suspected he would.
“How is it again that you know so much about rodeos?” he asked, midway through the bronc
riding competition.
Beside him on the wooden bleacher seats, she shrugged. “My dad took me to a rodeo the first time when I was maybe three years old. I must have enjoyed it, because we went to more. I suppose I picked up the lingo along the way and probably asked a million questions.”
Dusty would have been surprised to learn she hadn’t asked questions. “You miss him, don’t you?”
Kate stared straight ahead and pressed her lips tightly together, then nodded. Dusty recognized her pain and turned his attention to the arena.
“There he is,” Kate said, pointing to the rider in the chute. “There’s Shawn.”
Dusty looked across the arena and spied Tanner’s nephew getting ready for his ride. “Yeah, that’s him.”
At the rider’s command, the chute opened and the cowboy bounced out on the back of the bucking horse. Even for Dusty, the eight-second ride seemed to last an eternity, but Shawn stayed on until the buzzer.
“Not bad,” Kate said.
“He could still use a little practice, especially with the spurring, but he’ll get there. He definitely has what it takes.”
“With a champion for an uncle, he has the support he needs.”
Support, or the lack of it, was something Dusty knew a lot about. His mother had never supported his father’s love of rodeo. In fact, her complaints about him never being home had driven him away. Dusty had been only four years old, but he remembered the fights, the slamming doors, and his father walking out the door. He had wanted to be just like his dad, and eventually he had followed in his footsteps, even down to a failed marriage for the same reasons. Dusty had thought his young wife had understood what rodeo would mean, but they were both too young and selfish. He bore her no grudge. It was as much his fault as hers. Hadn’t he seen it happen with his parents? He wouldn’t make that mistake again. In fact, he intended to be better than his father and had already proved he was, at least in the world of rodeo. His father hadn’t ridden for years, and the last Dusty had heard, was selling used cars in Norman. That wasn’t what Dusty had in mind for himself.
Bachelor Cowboy Page 4