by Sandra Brown
Copyright © 1983 by Sandra Brown
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
This Warner Books edition is published by arrangement with the author.
Cover design by Jackie Merri Meyer
Cover photography by Judah S. Harris
Warner Books, Inc.
Hachette Book Group
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The Warner Books name and logo are registered trademarks of Hachette Book Group.
First eBook Edition: September 1995
ISBN: 978-0-446-54928-8
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
A Preview of "Tempest in Eden"
Praise for #1 New York Times Bestselling Author Sandra Brown
“A masterful storyteller, carefully crafting tales that keep readers on the edge of their seats.”
—USA Today
“Author Sandra Brown proves herself top-notch.”
—Associated Press
“A novelist who can’t write them fast enough.”
—San Antonio Express-News
“Brown’s forte is devising plots spiced with sexuality that keep her readers guessing.”
—Library Journal
“Plotting and pacing are Brown’s considerable strengths.”
—San Jose Mercury News
“A master storyteller.”
—Newport News Daily Press
“She knows how to keep the tension high and the plot twisting and turning.”
—Fresno Bee
“Sandra Brown is known for her memorable story-telling.”
—Tulsa World
Books by Sandra Brown
The Alibi
Another Dawn
Best Kept Secrets
Bittersweet Rain
Breath of Scandal
Charade
Eloquent Silence
Exclusive
Fat Tuesday
French Silk
Hidden Fires
Love Beyond Reason
Love’s Encore
Mirror Image
Prime Time
Shadows of Yesterday
The Silken Web
Slow Heat in Heaven
Standoff
Sunset Embrace
Sweet Anger
The Switch
Tempest in Eden
Temptation’s Kiss
A Treasure Worth Seeking
Unspeakable
Where There’s Smoke
The Witness
Dear Reader,
For years before I began writing general fiction, I wrote genre romances under several pseudonyms. Prime Time was originally published more than ten years ago (under my first pen name, Rachel Ryan).
This story reflects the trends and attitudes that were popular at that time, but its themes are eternal and universal. As in all romance fiction, the plot revolves around star-crossed lovers. There are moments of passion, anguish, and tenderness—all integral facets of falling in love.
I very much enjoyed writing romances. They’re optimistic in orientation and have a charm unique to any other form of fiction. If this is your first taste of it, please enjoy.
Sandra Brown
Chapter One
Are you sure he’ll be here today?” Andy Malone asked impatiently and shifted her weight into a more comfortable position. The “padded” stool in front of the counter was inaptly named—what padding there was beneath the red vinyl was lumpy and hard.
“Nope, sure ain’t,” Gabe Sanders, proprietor and chief cook of Gabe’s Chili Parlor, said as he ran an unbleached muslin towel around the rim of a clean, but cracked and stained coffee mug. “All I said was that he was likely to be in today. That don’t necessarily make it so, ya see? He’s likely to do just what he damn well pleases.” The grizzled old man chuckled.
Andy’s trained instincts twitched with renewed anticipation, and she forgot the hard, uneven surface of the barstool she was sitting on. She knew better than to attract the attention of the other lunchtime customers or to show too much interest in her quarry. At any moment Gabe Sanders might decide she was a nosy outsider and stop answering her questions altogether.
“Oh?” She took a nonchalant sip of iced tea. It had been served to her in a red plastic glass with the teaspoon standing upright in it. “Does Mr. Ratliff strike you as an impulsive person?”
The moment it was out, she knew the question had put Gabe on his guard. The towel stopped trying to polish the hopelessly stained coffee mug. Gabe’s bushy eyebrows dropped low over shrewd, now perceptibly less friendly eyes. “Just why’re you asking so many questions about Lyon Ratliff? Huh?”
Quickly composing a cover story, Andy leaned forward in what she hoped was a confidence-inspiring pose and said conspiratorially, “I had a classmate at SMU who came from here. She told me about this man who lived on a big ranch and drove a silver El Dorado. I thought he sounded like someone out of a movie.”
Gabe eyed her speculatively, and her self-assurance seemed to seep out of her slowly as his eyes peeled away her facade. His look frankly told her she looked too old to be a college student and that that was just one of her fibs. “Who was she?”
Completely disconcerted, first by Gabe’s intuitive appraisal of her and now by his question, she stammered, “Who was … who?”
“Who was that classmate of yours? I probably know her. Been serving chili and burgers here since ’47. Know most the families in Kerrville.”
“Oh, well then you wouldn’t know … uh … Carla. Actually she grew up in San Antonio and only came here in the summers to visit cousins or something.” Andy reached for the glass of tea and took a deep swallow as though it had a restorative tonic in it.
Ever since arriving in this community in the Texas hill country a few days ago, she had felt like a fish out of water. The careful, polite inquiries that usually got her through doors that remained closed to anyone else, had gotten her nowhere. It was as though the citizenry of Kerrville were protecting Lyon Ratliff and her ultimate target, his reclusive father.
General Michael Ratliff was the last surviving five-star general of World War II. Andy had vowed to interview him for her television program. And if the sketchy news reports of his failing health were true, it would have to be soon. So far, her trip had produced not even a flicker of hope that she would accomplish that feat. Now Gabe Sanders was being as reticent and stingy with information as everyone else she had encountered.
Determination raised the chin of her heart-shaped face, but the corners of her mouth lifted into a sweet smile. Her sherry-colored eyes shone beguilingly. “Mr. Sanders, would you by any chance have a slice of lime for my tea?” Her self-confidence returned when Gabe seemed momentarily flustered by the radiance of her smile.
“How ’bout lemon? Will that do?”
“Wonderful! Thank you.”
She pushed back a strand of golden-brown hair. She used her attractiveness to wheedle out information only when she was forced to, and it always galled her. She’d rather be able to tackle a story with the same forthrightness granted a male reporter simply by virtue of his sex. But when necessary, she wasn’t averse to using any advantage, and if someone found
her extraordinary coloring intriguing, there was no harm in being cordial. Her father, who had had a poetic flair, had once compared her to an ice cream parfait made with vanilla ice cream, Amaretto, and caramel sauce.
“Thank you,” she said when Gabe returned with two lemon wedges on a saucer. She squeezed the juice of one into the glass of tea, which had been presweetened and tasted like syrup to her, since she rarely used sugar in anything.
“You’re not from around here, are you?”
She was tempted to invent a lie in answer to Gabe’s question, but suddenly the fun had gone out of the game. “No, I’m not. I live in Nashville now, though I grew up in Indiana.”
“Nashville, huh? You with the Grand Ole Opry?”
She laughed, shaking her head. “No. I work for an independent cable company.”
“Cable?” Gabe’s eyebrows jumped, and Andy decided they were his most expressive feature. “Ya mean television-like cable?”
“Yes.”
“Are you on TV?”
“Sometimes. I have an interview show that’s syndicated to cable stations across the country.”
“Interviews?” He looked beyond her shoulder and around the room at his other customers, as though looking for someone she might consider interviewing. Then his eyes swung back to her with sudden comprehension. “You wouldn’t be thinkin’ ’bout askin’ Lyon for an interview with his daddy, now, would ya?”
“Yes. I am.”
He studied her for a moment. “There wasn’t any classmate at SMU, was there?”
She met his eyes steadily. “No.”
“I didn’t think so.” There was no censure in his voice.
“Do you think Mr. Ratliff will refuse to let me interview his father?”
“Sure as hell do, but we’re fixin’ to find out, ’cause that’s him a-comin’ in now.”
Andy’s eyes dropped to the wet ring her glass had left on the counter top just as her stomach dropped to her feet. The cowbell that hung on the metal bar across the door clanged loudly as he pushed through it.
“Hey, Lyon,” someone said from the corner of the diner.
“Lyon,” another customer called out.
“Jim, Pete.” His voice was deep and raspy. The sound rippled toward her, pricked the small of her back like a needle, and generated a shiver that feathered up her spine.
She had hoped he would take a stool on either side of her, so it would be easy to strike up a conversation. But the footsteps she tracked with her ears took him to the end of the bar, to an extension that ran perpendicular to the counter where she was seated. Out of the corner of her eye she saw a blue shirt. Gabe ambled toward it.
“Hiya, Lyon? What’ll ya have? Chili?”
“Not today. It’s too hot. Besides Gracie fixed chili the other night, and it took two doses of that pink gunk to get my stomach back in shape.”
“Could that bellyache have had anything to do with the margaritas you were drinking with that chili?”
A low laugh rumbled out of what must surely be a massive chest. “Could’ve been, could’ve been.” That voice. What kind of man had such a stirring voice? Andy didn’t think her curiosity could hold out much longer. Surrendering at last, she looked at him just as he said, “Give me a cheeseburger basket.”
“Comin’ up.”
Andy didn’t even hear Gabe’s reply to Lyon Ratliff’s order. She was too taken with the man who had given it. He wasn’t at all what she had expected. She had pictured him as older, well into middle age, probably because General Ratliff was in his eighties. Apparently his son had been born after the war. She estimated Lyon Ratliff’s age at around thirty-five.
Thick, dark hair lay in sculpted strands around his head. It was threaded at the temples with silver. Two sleek, dark brows arched over eyes whose color she couldn’t determine from that distance. Her eyes followed the length of the Roman nose, which reminded her of actors who play in Biblical films, to the sensual mouth, which reminded her of actors who play in another type of film.
“Is that Ratliff beef you’re frying up for me on that grill?” he asked Gabe.
Again Andy was intrigued by his voice. It was resonant, but quiet, as if you might miss something of great importance if you didn’t listen very closely. The hoarse quality lent a sexy undertone to everything he said. Definitely more like the second type of actor than the first.
“You bet,” Gabe said. “Best beef a body can buy.”
Lyon’s dark head tilted back slightly, and he chuckled. He was lowering his head and reaching for the glass of icewater Gabe had set before him when his eyes accidentally slid over her. Momentum earned them a few inches past her before they braked, reversed, and backed up slowly.
Andy could log the journey those gray eyes—yes, they were gray—took over her face. They started with her own eyes, and she read in his the expected surprise. It was the usual reaction of anyone who was looking into her eyes for the first time. They were a captivating tawny-brown, surrounded by thick, dark lashes.
The gray eyes lifted to her hair. Did the ponytail held in place on the nape of her neck by a tortoise shell clasp make her look too young? Or, God forbid, did she look like a thirty-year-old trying to look young?
Don’t get paranoid, Andy, she warned herself. She knew her caramel-colored hair with its golden streaks was attractive. But the beads of perspiration along her hairline? Could he detect that? Even though Gabe’s twenty-year-old sign in the window boasted Refrigerated Air Inside, Andy was aware of a sheen of perspiration glossing her entire body. Indeed, she was suddenly acutely aware of every pore of her body, every nerve. It was as though she had been slit open for dissection, and Lyon Ratliff was a scientist who was taking his time about examining this particular specimen.
When his eyes moved to her mouth, she looked away. She reached for her glass and almost let it slip through her fingers before taking a drink. Then she was afraid that rather than diverting his attention from her lips, she had only attracted more attention to them.
What was the matter with her? She had a job to do. For three days she had been stalking this man, asking leading questions about him and his father, gathering whatever crumbs of information were thrown to her, enduring rude dismissals. For hours she had sat in that tacky beauty salon and listened to all the local gossip, hoping for the mention of his name, and all the while refusing, kindly but firmly, to have her hair permed “just to give it body.” The only thing she learned there was that Lyon had had to miss the last country club dance because his daddy had taken a turn for the worse, and that new plants had been ordered for his ranch house, and that the resident manicurist had been trained by the Marquis de Sade.
Now, here he was, sitting a few feet from her, and she was sweaty and tongue-tied for the first time in her life. Where was all her cool confidence? The sheer bullheadedness that always kept her from taking no for an answer had deserted her. The objectivity that distinguished her was swamped by sexual awareness of a man. She had met kings and prime ministers and presidents, including two presidents of the United States, and she hadn’t been intimidated by one of them. Now, this … this cowboy strolls into a greasy spoon of a diner, and I’m all aflutter.
Stubbornly trying to restore her control, she raised her chin and looked at him defiantly. His eyes could have been twin boulders that rolled over her and crushed her bravery. His jaw was tilted at an arrogant angle. He could have spoken aloud, and she couldn’t have gotten the message any clearer.
Yes, I’ve heard of the equality of the sexes, and I think it’s fine in its way. But right now I’m looking at you and thinking of you only as a sex object, and there’s not one damn thing you can do about it.
Well, there was one thing she could do. She could stop him from thinking what he was thinking. She’d inform him in a calm, professional manner who she was and why she was here … just as soon as he finished his cheeseburger, she decided, as Gabe set the heaping plate in front of him.
Andy studied Gabe’s dusty-g
reasy menu, which had been updated through the years by ineffectually painting over the old prices to paint on the new. She suffered another glass of the oversweetened tea. She watched as a mother wiped the catsup off her little boy’s mouth, then watched as another red smear replaced the first one when a whole french fry disappeared into his mouth. She fidgeted with the wire rack in front of her that contained three varieties of steak sauce. She pulled four paper napkins from the dispenser and blotted up the puddle her tea glass seemed bent on replenishing.
Finally she glanced toward the end of the counter and saw that Lyon had eaten most of his meal. He was sipping a cup of coffee, his long, slender, strong-looking fingers wrapped possessively around the mug. His absorption with the midday traffic outside the wide windows ended just as she slipped off the high stool, and he looked at her. She smiled and wished it didn’t feel like a girlish, flirtatious, wobbly facsimile of one.
“Hello,” she said, managing to walk over, despite shaky knees, to stand beside his stool.
His eyes made a slow and thorough appraisal. He looked at her with barely suppressed amusement and an air of sexual assessment not even moderately suppressed. Was he that accustomed to strange women approaching him in cafés? “Hi.”
So, he was going to make it difficult, give her no leadins. Okay, Mr. Ratliff. She took a deep breath and said, “I’m Andrea Malone.”
Andy couldn’t have guessed that his facial expression could change so rapidly and so drastically, or that the eyes beneath those dark brows could harden and freeze over so quickly. He stared coldly at her for a long time, then presented her with a back view of his broad shoulders as he turned away. As though she didn’t exist, he insouciantly took a sip of his coffee.
She glanced at Gabe, who was ostensibly concentrating on filling a salt shaker but whose ears she imagined were peaked with avid listening. She moistened her lips with her tongue. “I said I’m—”