Course of Action: Out of Harm's WayAny Time, Any Place

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Course of Action: Out of Harm's WayAny Time, Any Place Page 22

by Lindsay McKenna


  “Not too late,” Dan muttered out of a corner of his mouth. “You’ve still got time for an emergency extraction.”

  “I’ll remind you of that when some sweet young thing shoots you down in flames.”

  “Never happen,” the Ranger asserted confidently.

  Duke sent Travis a quick glance. “Yeah, well, Coop and I didn’t think it would happen to us, either. Just goes to show how wrongheaded...”

  He broke off, unable to push another word past the goose egg that suddenly got stuck in his throat. The three women serving as bridal attendants were making their way down the aisle. Their ruby dresses shimmered in the afternoon sunlight. Behind them came Anna and her father.

  Duke couldn’t remember taking a breath during that slow procession. All he saw, all he would ever recall, was the woman with her dark hair caught up in a cascade of curls and her brown eyes smiling at him.

  * * *

  The wedding soon became a blur to Anna, as well. All she took away from it was the hitch in Duke’s voice when he gave his response to the traditional do-you-take-this-woman?

  “Any time,” he vowed. “Any place.”

  The honeymoon, on the other hand, she would always remember in vivid detail. She and her new husband escaped the reception and the good-natured ribbing of the Sidewinders a little after seven that evening. By eight-thirty, they were checked into a suite at the ultraposh, five-star Inn at Little Washington. The canopied bed and crackling fire set an instant mood. The sheer, celery-colored silk gown Anna slithered into before emerging from a bathroom felt liquid and totally sinful against her skin.

  But it was the sight of her husband minus his uniform jacket, his tie dangling, and his shirt half unbuttoned that curled her bare toes into the pinewood flooring.

  “Let me do that.”

  Brushing his hands aside, she worked the rest of the buttons. By the time she planed her palms across his soft, cottony T-shirt and eased the dress shirt off his shoulders, her breath had gone fast and shallow. It picked up even more when he drew her into him.

  His mouth was hot on hers. Hot and hungry and so skilled that Anna barely noticed when he tugged off the gown she’d slipped into just moments ago.

  She noticed when he yanked down the bedcovers, though. And when he tumbled her to the mattress. And when he shed his remaining clothes. Aching for him, she opened her arms. Spread her legs to accommodate his lean hips and muscled thighs. Welcomed him into her wet, eager body.

  The burning logs spit and cackled. Anna flamed right along with them. Duke used his mouth and hands and hard, driving thrusts to push her up and up and up. She was at the edge, teetering right on the brink, when he stiffened.

  “Dammit!”

  “What?”

  “I almost forgot.”

  “Forgot what?”

  “Just hang on a sec.”

  “Hang on?” It was half wail, half moan. “Please tell me you’re kidding.”

  “We have to do this right.”

  “I thought we were!”

  He rolled off the tangled covers and rummaged through the carryall perched next to her weekender on the bench at the foot of the bed. Raging with need, Anna levered up on one elbow.

  “What on earth are you looking for?”

  “This.”

  Her jaw dropping, she gaped at a much-folded patchwork of color and embroidery. “Is that Auntie Oksana’s wedding quilt?”

  “It is,” he confirmed with a grin that melted her bones. “Your babushka made me promise to spread it on our bed. She says it’s guaranteed to produce results.”

  Laughing, Anna flopped back down. “Spread it, for God’s sake, and get back to work.”

  * * * * *

  Keep reading for an excerpt from THE COLTON HEIR by Colleen Thompson.

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  Chapter 1

  On the day her second life went up in flames, a female shopper stared out as the rain came sideways, driven by the high winds of a sudden squall. Just inside the automatic glass doors, she hesitated, watching another woman stagger beneath her umbrella before a gust blew it inside out.

  With a murmur of sympathy for the drenched customer scurrying to her car, the shopper in the doorway wondered whether her frozen dinners would survive if she waited out the downpour. Or whether she would have at least thought of an umbrella if she hadn’t been too miserable, too anxious, to check the weather forecast—or even look up at the sky.

  A baby-faced manager trotted up to her, the loose knot of his necktie peeping out from beneath his plastic poncho. “If you’ll point out your car,” he offered, his Adam’s apple bobbing, “I’ll pull it right up to the front here by the overhang.”

  Her knee-jerk response was to clutch her keys even tighter, to trust no one, as she’d been warned. But the young manager looked so newly minted and so earnest, and she’d almost forgotten what it was to be offered such an uncomplicated kindness. Besides, this was small-town Iowa, a world away from everything she feared.

  “Thank you,” she told him before pointing out a small sedan so nondescript it might as well be invisible. Which was exactly why she drove it, rather than the sleek, eye-catching Jaguar she’d been given for her thirtieth birthday, a replacement for the Mercedes from the year before. “You’re so sweet to do that for me.”

  Nodding, he turned quickly—though not fast enough to hide his blush—and dashed off into the rain.

  Seconds later, she flinched as a boom shook the air, the lot, the entire building and a gout of flame erupted, so blinding that her first stunned thought was that the poor manager had been struck by lightning.

  Behind her, screams competed with the sirens of a half-dozen car alarms, and several employees pushed past her to see what had happened. But she stood frozen, mute with terror, her panicked pulse pounding in her ears. With an almost-audible click, her shocked brain put together what she’d really witnessed. Not an act of nature, not a lightning bolt at all.

  The flames pouring from her car’s shattered windows and whipping in the wild wind had nothing to do with this storm. And everything to do with Renzo’s favorite means of disposing of “loose ends.”

  Where would she go now, now that he’d found her a thousand miles and a new identity away?

  Where could she hide this time—and who could be trusted with her life?

  Two weeks later...

  Huge, black and in a world of hurt, the bull was in no mood to be messed with. Inside the corral, nearly a ton of raw beef and attitude paced restlessly and snorted, his breath steaming in the freezing morning air.

  “Easy, Nitro. Steady, boy,” said Dylan Frick, noting the torn and bloody shoulder that Dead River Ranch veterinarian Amanda Colton needed to stitch up. Whether the massive creature had gotten caught on some barbed wire or fought with another animal, Dylan couldn’t say. All that mattered was keeping ranch owner Jethro Colton’s prized new Angus-Brahman cross strong enough to reinvigorate the herd.

  Dying or not, the billionaire was still counting on Dylan, the head wrangler and renowned large-animal whisperer, to calm the massive beast enough so he could be treated. But as he told Bingo and Betsy, the ranch’s two English shepherds, “Stay,” and stepped inside the pen, he automatically shifted focus, slowing his movements and syncing both h
is brain and body with the huge animal’s instincts.

  Big universities had experts giving clinics in stock handling all over Wyoming and beyond, but Dylan had never needed any training to get started. He’d known what to do ever since the day he’d first toddled outdoors and slipped into the stall of a stallion so dangerously unstable that Jethro had given orders for the horse to be put down.

  Dylan still remembered his mother’s terrified cry, her ashen face as she’d rushed toward him. In crystalline detail, the memory unfolded, and he watched her fear give way, first to astonishment, then joy and wonder, when the “vicious” stallion lowered its head and nickered for him to scratch its silky neck, the first step in the valuable stud’s rehabilitation.

  But Dylan’s thoughts zoomed in on the freeze-frame image of his mother, the mother who had held him, raised him, loved him....

  Who’d been murdered on this very ranch just four months ago, shot down by a kidnapper bent on taking Jethro’s only grandchild. Racked with guilt that he had even considered for a moment the possibility that she was not his biological mother, Dylan soon found himself drifting, plucking at the edges of a life that threatened to unravel.

  Nitro turned toward him and pawed the ground, still muddy with the remnants of an earlier November snowfall. Dylan looked away with feigned indifference, tracking a red-tailed hawk that flew out of the woods behind the stable. Then he strolled across the corral, his long-limbed body as loose and unhurried as his mind was troubled.

  From the corner of his eye, he saw the bull instinctively veer away, trotting in the direction of the open chute door. Trusting that the huge animal would stay put once he found the hay, sweet feed and water Dylan had placed there, he wondered again why he had allowed himself to be talked into taking the damned DNA test in the first place. Though he had bigger goals, he’d been happy in the work that he’d felt born to do, content living in his Spartan room in the employee wing of Dead River Ranch’s grand mansion. And he was proud, damned proud, to be the only child of widowed ranch governess Faye Frick, who had served as a loving mother figure for so many others. He didn’t need cushier surroundings, and he damned well didn’t want to find out he was actually Cole Colton, Jethro’s only son, who’d been taken thirty years before and never seen or heard of again.

  Worse yet, he didn’t want to deal with the suspicion that the woman, whose absence was still a raw wound, might have killed to claim him.

  Outside the corral, Betsy and Bingo leaped to their feet barking and raced toward him. It was the only warning Dylan had about the high price of his distraction, his only chance to avoid the black blur hurtling toward him—and a pair of wicked horns. He leaped sideways, dodging death, but not even that instinctive action saved him from a glancing blow off his right shoulder.

  The impact spun him, slamming him into the fence rails with force enough to rattle his back fillings. At his side in a split second, the shepherds leaped and barked, distracting the bull as he charged after first one, then the other, giving Dylan the moment he needed to roll beneath the bottom rail to safety.

  Still on the muddy ground, he caught his breath and whistled for the shepherds. The brown-and-white female heeded instantly, with black-and-white Bingo giving the bull one last, defiant bark and following a moment later. Both dogs rushed to fill his arms, their frantic licks and wagging tails encouraging him to get to his feet.

  “All right, you two. All right. Good dogs, very good dogs.” Dylan stroked the silky heads and rose with a grunt, aching everywhere. Looking around to see if all the noise had brought anybody running, he sighed and told the pair, “There’s an extra biscuit in it for you if you don’t let this get around. Maybe steak, if I can sneak one from the kitchen.”

  As he headed for the stable to wash up, he clenched his jaw, scarcely believing he’d made such a rookie mistake as assuming that an already-agitated bull would rather munch some sweet feed than take out his aggression on the nearest target. If he kept it up, Dylan knew, his worries over this damned DNA test and all the recent criminal activity would be the death of him.

  Leaving the dogs outside, he closed the stable door just behind him, then went to the big sink. Stripping to the waist, he washed off the ground-in mud and beading blood from the scraped skin of his lower left arm.

  He didn’t get much further when he froze, abruptly aware of the shuffling of hooves and a horse’s nervous nicker. Turning off the water, he heard a thump against another stall, followed by the low rumble of another horse. An uneasy rumble, as if there were something—or someone—in this stable that did not belong.

  He pulled on his shirt, his thoughts returning to his mother’s murder. Though a young hand named Duke Johnson had confessed to the crime, no one yet knew who had put him up to it—or later murdered two other household employees. Except that, somehow, there was a woman involved, a woman who might very well be the mastermind behind it all.

  Was someone skulking around now, maybe even doing something to the horses that Dylan spent so much time with that they felt like personal friends?

  Too angry to take the time to grab his jacket, Dylan crept toward the row of stalls, his shirt still unbuttoned. Looking into the first doorway, he saw Gabby Colton’s sweet old sorrel, his ears flattened and the rims around his brown eyes white.

  “Shh,” Dylan whispered, and almost instantly, the gelding quieted.

  In the next stall, his own horse, a stocky buckskin he called Bushwhack, stuck his head out to give him a friendly nudge. Though the quarter horse was one of the most laid-back animals Dylan had ever worked with, he wondered, was he so distracted by recent events—or rattled by his run-in with Nitro—that he’d imagined an intruder?

  He continued walking along the line of stalls, gooseflesh breaking out along his arms and shoulders. But it wasn’t from the cold alone, for ahead, he heard more agitated stamping—and was that a female voice?

  Unable to recognize the speaker, he crept past stall after stall, looking in on a gray, a palomino and then Amanda Colton’s chestnut. What he saw in the next stall froze the air in his lungs—and made him completely forget his aching body.

  A tall, clearly female figure had her back to him as she faced another chestnut, a troubled young mare that a neighboring rancher had asked Dylan to evaluate. Though there were other brunettes on the ranch, this woman’s long, chocolate-colored waves and statuesque build made him absolutely certain she was a stranger, as he’d feared.

  Dylan doubted that the intruder knew the fidgeting animal wasn’t one of Dead River Ranch’s horses, just as she wouldn’t know that the flighty young mare had recently put an experienced cowboy in a body cast.

  “Easy there,” the woman crooned, her rich, sweet tones stirring a reaction in the pit of Dylan’s stomach, a reaction he couldn’t spare the time to think about.

  “Who are you?” he asked sternly. “And what the hell are you doing in there?”

  With a cry of alarm, she spun around, dropping a brush as her hand darted inside her jacket. Startled by the sudden movement, the young mare squealed and spun around, and a pair of steel-shod hooves flashed, aimed straight for the woman’s head.

  Reacting on pure instinct, Dylan wrapped his arms around her waist and swung her out of the way. As he kicked the stall door shut behind him, he turned the stranger around to face him, then noticed, for the first time, the small, snub-nosed revolver in her trembling hand.

  A gun pointed straight at his thundering heart.

  * * *

  For over a year now, she had been telling herself that, when the moment came, she wasn’t going to go down without a fight. In her mind, she’d run through dozens of scenarios, preparing herself to scream, to claw, to stab or shoot—whatever it took to survive to get justice as she’d sworn to and reclaim some semblance of a normal life.

  Yet faced with the bare-chested man, she froze for a crucial moment, as stricken by his serious blue eyes as the fact that this particular “assassin” had just saved her from the suppose
dly gentle horse she had been grooming.

  Close as he was standing, the moment’s hesitation cost her. Before she registered his movement, he’d snatched the gun from her hand and turned it on her.

  “Don’t. Move,” he warned, digging into his jeans’ back pocket with his free hand. “I’m calling the police.”

  “No. Please,” she begged, realizing that this gorgeous specimen, with his tight, toned abs and his unforgiving gaze, hadn’t come to kill her. But if he sounded the alarm and called in the authorities, anyone might arrive, and there would be a lot of questions. Questions that were bound to leave her just as dead.

  A memory detonated in her mind, an image filled with rain and fire, with the horrifying reek of burning metal, gas and—at least in her imagination—human flesh. The knowledge that that fate had been meant for her, that it could follow her here, too, revved her panic even higher. “He’ll find me if you do! He’ll kill me this time for certain.”

  He glanced down at the phone and swore, and she noticed the cracked, black screen. As he tucked the broken cell back inside his pocket, the devastating blue eyes narrowed. “I asked you before. Who are you? And who sent you? Tell me now.”

  “I’m H-Hope. Hope Woods,” she stammered. “I work here. Look, I’ll prove it.”

  Her hand jerked toward her jacket’s zipper, then stopped abruptly at the harsh, metallic click of the pistol’s hammer being cocked.

  “No sudden moves,” he warned her. “And what do you mean, you work here? I’ve been on this ranch for almost thirty years, and I’ve never laid eyes on you.”

  “I’m the new maid,” she said, her voice shaking. “I have the uniform, see?”

  “Stand still,” he ordered as he stepped closer. Close enough for her to smell the sharp scent of the soap he used, with the background aroma of hay, hard work and saddle leather. The combination was a far cry from the expensive colognes and exotic aftershaves worn by the men she’d once imagined she knew, but she decided on the spot she liked the honest smell of horse and cowboy better.

 

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