Boots and Buckles

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Boots and Buckles Page 14

by Myla Jackson


  Audrey winked. “Oh, so you like playing dirty?”

  As one, the women yelled, “Hell, yeah!”

  “Then let’s raise the stakes. For the first time in Cowboy Auction history, we’re offering up a two-fer.”

  The ladies roared their approval.

  Despite her resolve to remain unaffected by the goings on in the saloon, Bunny leaned forward, a tingle of anticipation rippling through her body. Cory hadn’t been offered up for auction yet and he’d hinted at a surprise. Was this it?

  “All our cowboys have been fabulous sports about this auction, but the last bidding opportunity we’re offering tonight is special and near and dear to my heart. Please welcome the two-fer deal of Cory ‘The stripper so hot you’ll singe your fingers’ McBride…”

  Cory danced out on the stage, wearing a vest, boots and leather chaps over a black G-string. The only thing not showing was his package, and it was swelled enough to give every woman enough information to go on. The man was hung.

  Bunny sucked in a breath and held it while her pulse pounded so loud she could barely hear herself think. Her deliveryman had been in her sex dreams and fantasies more and more often lately. Now this… Holy smokin’ cowboys!

  Audrey continued, “The other half of this dynamic duo is our very own man of peace, Deputy ‘Pull over and let me frisk you’ Jack Monahan!” Audrey handed the microphone back to Charli.

  Deputy Monahan joined Cory center stage, slipping his uniform shirt off, exposing shoulders as broad as Cory’s and equally tanned and gleaming with a fine layer of oil.

  Holy rock stars! Between the Adonis blond beauty that was Cory and the dark, rugged sex appeal of Jack, Bunny could barely breathe.

  The crowd exploded in a frenzy, all the paddles raising in the air as the bidding started.

  Bunny perched on the edge of her stool, her body trembling.

  The two men danced around the stage in sync to bump-and-grind music barely audible over the cacophony of women yelling and whistling.

  Bidding started at five hundred dollars and shot up from there.

  Not that I’m interested in bidding. Bunny mentally calculated what she had in her bank account.

  Audrey handed the numbered paddle to Bunny. “I’ll match you dollar for dollar.” She shrugged. “I won’t keep one of them, but I want to contribute to the cause. This way I can, and Jackson won’t have heartburn about it.”

  “I can’t bid on those two. I wouldn’t know what to do with one man, much less two!”

  Audrey’s brows rose. “Seriously? Oh, honey, you really do need to get out more often. Did I ever tell you about the day I danced for Jackson, Mark and Luke on Jackson’s thirtieth birthday?” She tugged at the front of her shirt. “And I don’t mean two-stepping.” Audrey fanned herself. “Making me hot just thinkin’ about it.”

  “Audrey, you’re much more free-spirited. I’m…I’m…” Bunny glanced down at the paddle in her hand. “Not.”

  A soft hand rested on Bunny’s shoulder and Audrey leaned close. “How do you know if you’ve never tried to be?”

  Bunny shrugged. “I’ve always focused on getting my business going, getting my finances straight—”

  “Puttin’ your lousy ex-husband through school. Yeah, I can see where that gotcha.” Audrey shook her head. “That’s all well and good when it comes to running a business, but what about givin’ yourself a second chance at love?”

  “I don’t need a second chance. Once was bad enough. I don’t think I’m ready to float that boat again.” Although the two men on the stage could more than set her sails. Holy hell, they were built like brick houses, all muscle—hard, finely chiseled muscle.

  “If not for love, then date for fun or a release from stress.” Audrey threw her hand in the air. “Why not satisfy your sexual fantasies? Anything to get you out of your shell, girlfriend.”

  “One thousand dollars!” Charli shouted into the microphone. “Ladies, this is twice the spice for the money. Don’t stop now.” She nodded toward the throng. “One thousand one hundred from number forty-one.”

  “A thousand dollars?” Bunny did the math in her head. “I’d have to sell a lot of roses to afford those two.”

  “Raise your paddle. Remember, I’ll double whatever you can afford.”

  Even as Bunny shook her head, her fingers tightened around the paddle’s wooden stick. “I can’t.”

  “Yes. You can. It’s just a date,” Audrey insisted. “Think about what Cory can do with that whip. And Jack has handcuffs.”

  Cory cracked the whip, and number thirty-seven raised her paddle, bumping the bid up another one hundred dollars.

  Bunny’s heartbeat accelerated. She had over two grand in savings for a rainy day and maybe to pay off her ex when she got a little more saved. That money was not earmarked for a hot date with two sexy men.

  It still galled her to no end that Ray got half of her business in the divorce, Texas being a community property state. Out of the “goodness of his heart” Ray had let her keep the flower shop, as long as she paid him for his half over time, as a loan. He never let her forget it either, always giving her his unwanted opinion on how to run the flower shop. Spending so much money on a date would have him questioning her ability to stay in business. He might even foreclose on his loan.

  “Going once,” Charli said.

  “What?” Bunny’s breath caught and she leaned so far forward on her stool she almost slid off.

  “Going twice.” Charli paused. “They’re a steal at twelve hundred dollars. Come on ladies, won’t one of you bid thirteen hundred?”

  Bunny’s hand shook, her grip clenching on the paddle. Before she could analyze her actions, she raised her paddle.

  “Is that Bunny Leigh back there near the bar?” Charli shielded her eyes from the glare of the stage lights. “Y’all gonna let Temptation’s best florist go home with the two most drool-worthy men in the county?”

  Cory and Jack stared across the room, straight at Bunny, both smiling.

  Her pulse accelerated until she thought for certain her heart would jump right out of her chest. Her gaze panned the room, praying someone else would raise a paddle quickly before she bought the cowboy and the cop.

  Charli grinned, and before anyone else could get a paddle above shoulder-high, she pounded her gavel on the podium and shouted, “Sold!”

  It’ll take more than rope to tie down the man they love.

  Unbroken

  © 2013 Em Petrova

  Country Fever, Book 3

  When Christian comes out of the bar to find a bat-wielding country girl beating the hell out of his best friend Tucker’s truck, he does the only thing he can—he flirts with her. Unfortunately, he knows her pain—he’s in love with Tucker too.

  Claire plans to nurse her bruised heart alone, but inevitably Tucker draws her back in—along with Christian—and the three of them tumble headlong into delirious passion. Then she and Christian wake to find that Tucker has fled his horse ranch, leaving them to care for the animals and each other.

  Still grieving the death of his fiancée, pressured to sign over mining rights to a coal company, Tucker is boots-deep in emotional turmoil. Running only sharpens his longing for what he truly wants—Christian and Claire in his bed, in the barn, and under the stars.

  But roping themselves firmly inside the circle of love will take everything they have—bulldogged determination, flying fists and aching hearts.

  Warning: Wrangle one heartsick cowboy, and the man and woman who love him. Throw in weeks of working in close quarters, bales of pent-up lust, and feel the burn of prairie-fire-hot desire. Now just try to walk away with your heart unbranded.

  Enjoy the following excerpt for Unbroken:

  The bartender tucked a hand under the brim of his cowboy hat and peered across the dim space through the grimy window of The Hellion.

  Christian Davis grunted. “You gonna hand over that six-pack of Budweiser before I hit middle age, Shady?”

&nb
sp; A few sharp metallic clinking noises sounded from the parking lot. Shady’s thick white mustache twitched as he winced. Three more sharp raps and Christian turned to follow the bartender’s gaze.

  “You drivin’ that big ass Ram truck, Davis?”

  “Uh, yeah.” He ducked his head, trying to get out of the shadow of his Stetson and see what the hell was going on in the parking lot.

  The grating sound of glass breaking filtered into Christian’s senses just as he spotted her.

  “Looks as if you’ve got a jilted lover taking her frustrations out on your truck with a Louisville Slugger.”

  Adrenaline surged to the tips of his boots. “That’s not my truck!” he managed as he swung out the door without a care for his beer.

  The big red Ram truck Christian had borrowed from his best friend, Tucker, stood in the gravel lot, both headlights bashed out and so many divots in the hood and fender that it looked pocked.

  A gush of air froze in his throat as a little gal in teeny cut-off shorts and cowgirl boots danced around the side of the truck. Swinging.

  “Jeezus, lady!” Christian hollered as she landed the bat full force and smashed in the side mirror. He took off running, boots digging into gravel and heart thumping. Tucker’s gonna wipe the floor with my ass. He’d sent Christian on the beer run in his truck because it was parked in the way of Christian’s own vehicle.

  Springy curls bobbed on the girl’s head as she cocked the bat for another blow. Christian caught the tip, ripping it from her hands before she swung.

  She whirled on him, hands fisted, face pink with exertion. “What the hell do you think you’re doing?”

  He gaped at her. “Are you crazy, girl? Or don’t you realize that destroying a Ram will earn you three-to-five in these parts?”

  With a growl, she lunged for the bat, but he flipped it behind his back, out of her reach.

  “Not crazy and I don’t give a damn about jail sentences. I’m related to just about every man with a badge in Reedy. Now give me back my bat!”

  He looked at her harder, noting the tears standing in her almond-shaped brown eyes and the way her lower lip trembled. What the hell was going on?

  “You got a problem with this here truck?”

  “No, I’ve got a problem with the owner of this truck.”

  Ah. So Tucker had pissed her off and she was reaping revenge. Not surprising, since Tucker’s screw-’em-and-walk-away creed had gotten him into more than one jam.

  She circled to Christian’s side to make another steal for the bat. “Uh-uh,” he drawled. “Give me your name.”

  Shifting her weight to one hip, she dug her knuckles into her upper thigh. “Who wants to know?”

  “Christian Davis, driver of this truck.”

  Her eyes widened. “But…it’s Tucker’s truck. I know by that cross he has dangling from the mirror.”

  Christian raked his gaze over her, starting at the curly roots of her dark hair, down her upper chest exposed by a white tank top, past the Daisy Dukes, and then lingered on her round thighs. Lightly tanned. Smooth. Perfect for tucking around a man on a cold autumn night.

  Forget the Budweiser. He wanted to curl up with her. What the hell was wrong with Tucker that he’d walk away from this glorious little darlin’?

  His fiancée’s what’s wrong with him. Tucker’s fiancée had died in a car accident two years before and he couldn’t get past it. Couldn’t see the sun shining all around him because he walked in shadow.

  Christian met her gaze, only to find a pained smirk twisting her pale pink lips.

  “I can see you aren’t any better than Tucker,” she said.

  Leaning against the door, still warm from the late afternoon sun, he clamped the bat under his arm. “That’s a broad statement from someone who doesn’t even know me.”

  “Yeah, well, I see the way you’re looking at me, and it’s no different from your friend.” She dropped her gaze. “I thought he was the real thing.”

  Christian scuffed a boot against the gravel and looked away. Yeah, he does that to a lot of us.

  Still, he’d like to believe he wasn’t as much of a hound as Tucker. And besides, this girl couldn’t very well run around looking like that and expect a red-blooded male to be immune.

  A pickup bumped into the parking lot, spraying gravel and dust around them. Christian stole another look at the girl’s face. “Your name?” When she hesitated, he said, “So I can at least give you credit for your handiwork.”

  Pivoting away, she started across the lot.

  “Hey!”

  “It’s Claire,” she tossed over her shoulder.

  He watched her wiggle off, fighting the heavy ache in his groin. “Claire, you want your bat?”

  “Give it to your friend as a souvenir.” With that, she yanked open the door of a midsize car that looked as if it belonged to an elderly person. The driver peeled out of the parking lot and lay rubber on the highway.

  With a half sigh, half laugh, he tossed the bat into the truck bed and climbed behind the wheel.

  Shaking his head, Christian pulled out and headed straight for the Quickie Mart. Two chili cheese dogs were in order. He wasn’t about to face an irate best friend on an empty stomach. And after shoveling gravel for eight solid hours on the road crew, he was starved.

  Gathering up his dogs and a giant soda, he turned the truck back toward Tucker’s ranch. As he passed the wide open fields and the blue smudge of mountains on the horizon, all he could see were Claire’s eyes, bright with anger. Swimming with tears.

  “Man,” he murmured and cranked the wheel to avoid two human-sized potholes in front of the driveway leading to the ranch.

  As he bumped up the lane, he horked down the second chili dog and slurped the remainder of the soda. Tucker was gonna be pissed. Not only had he returned his truck with three thousand dollars’ worth of damage, he’d left The Hellion without the six-pack.

  Dammit, he couldn’t help but think Tucker deserved it.

  Leaving his trash for his friend to take care of, Christian mounted the three solid wood porch steps to the front door. The ranch was picturesque against the satiny blue sky. Dark wood with real working shutters and a glass door, the old homestead of the Langley family had been restored by Tucker’s own hand. He’d spilled a lot of blood and sweat on this land, making his ranch one of the finest horse farms in the county.

  Christian pushed open the door and clomped across the mudroom. In the living area, Tucker was kicked back in the recliner with the remote in hand.

  Christian’s c*ck stirred at the sight of his friend in this position. How many times had they sat in this same space, watching porn and jacking off together?

  For two years, they’d been enjoying this intimacy. Watching, urging on the other. But their rule was hands off, and Christian wanted nothing more than to jump that gap from friends screwing around to more.

  He was work boots over hard hat in love with this guy.

  Tucker met his gaze. The shoulder-length hair that Christian longed to run his hands through covered one smoldering eye. “Got the beer? I’ve got the movie.”

  Christian’s c*ck reacted instantly, stretching, battering his fly. Last night they’d shared a woman, not a self-love session. Actually, Tucker hadn’t participated, just stood at the bedside with his c*ck in his fist, watching Christian love on the woman. And now that he thought of it, he realized this was most likely the reason for Claire’s fury.

  The scent of pine woods and strong coffee filled Christian’s head as he drew a deep breath. He sank to the edge of the couch. “Not exactly.”

  “What’s that mean? You get the beer or not?”

  Christian raked his fingers through his short hair. “I paid for it but left without it.”

  Confusion creased Tucker’s brow. “Not followin’, friend.”

  Plow on. “I ran into someone at The Hellion.”

  “Yeah?” That rough, drink-nails-for-breakfast voice ripped through Christian’s senses.
The same voice drove him wild as Tucker pumped out his pleasure.

  “Yeah, a hot little number by the name of Claire.” He drew her name out on his tongue, testing its flavor. Hell, it even tasted like her. Decadent with a hint of quirkiness.

  And violence.

  The corner of his mouth tipped up.

  Tucker stared at him hard. “What the hell happened, man?”

  Was that jealousy he read on Tucker’s face? “It seems Claire was mighty upset by something. So upset, in fact, that she beat the hell out of your truck.”

  At that, Tucker laughed out loud. “She weighs a hundred and ten pounds dripping wet. How much damage could she have done?”

  Christian scraped his fingers over his scalp. “Quite a bit with a baseball bat.”

  Tucker’s eyes bugged out, and in a flash, he was on his feet and storming out the door. Christian didn’t budge from his spot, one ear cocked, waiting.

  A howl of rage drifted in. A few seconds later, Tucker’s violent footfalls preceded the man.

  “Holy—”

  “I know,” Christian cut him off. “Question is what did you do to her?”

  Tucker dropped abruptly to the sofa arm and buried his head in his hands. “I stood her up last night.”

  Just as Christian had suspected. Instead of staying with one girl who he might fall for, Tucker ran out and found one to share with Christian.

  “You’re runnin’ again.”

  Tucker snapped his head up and he leveled his glare at Christian. Gaining his feet, Christian stared him down. Dammit, it was time to intervene. If Tucker wouldn’t come around and accept a relationship with Christian, he needed to at least set up house with a sweet little gal and have a string of horse-riding babies.

  His friend clenched his hands into fists. “And you’re crossin’ a line.”

  “Man, you can’t keep doing this. Running from these girls who might change your world.”

  Christian’s stomach bottomed out at the memory of Claire’s words. I thought he was the real thing.

  “Shut up, Davis. You don’t know what you’re talking about, and it’s none of your goddamn business.”

 

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