Irritation surged through him, irritation at being called away from a productive Saturday at work then being made to wait, irritation with his brother, his family, his life, and now at her, especially her. Yet, he couldn’t seem to quit staring. He’d never seen a woman quite like her.
Calamity Jane had tied the horse in the middle of the aisle by securing it with a rope attached to each side of the halter then to posts on either side. She glanced over her shoulder, cradling a huge barn cat in her arms, and aimed a dazzling smile at him. She turned back to the horse after placing the enormous cat on the ground.
Carson pursed his lips and watched as she leaned down and picked up the horse’s front foot. Bent over like that, she gave him a great view of her behind. Was she deliberately tantalizing him? Oh, Lord, he didn’t need that. Not on a Saturday afternoon or any afternoon.
Carson frowned and considered her position—literally. His irritation faded as he imagined possible uses for said position. Barring messy emotions, he could have a little fun with the owner of that nice ass and sassy mouth. He’d always been a leg man, but a guy would have to be blind not to notice her obvious ass-ets. Okay, bad pun, but humor had never been his forte. Just ask his brothers.
Now that he looked closer, her legs were heaven too, long and sweet, and encased in tight jeans worn low on her hips.
Carson mentally chastised himself for such improper behavior. Imagine him, Carson the Tight Ass, studying a woman’s butt. Next thing you knew he’d be imagining wicked sex acts. His youngest brother, who’d christened him with the “Tight Ass” title years ago, would be in absolute shock. It’d upset the status quo in their family. After all, Carson didn’t date, not seriously. And he never, ever stared at a woman’s butt.
Carson didn’t have his middle brother’s smooth charm or his baby brother’s raw sex appeal. He was just Carson, the dull, workaholic brother with an over-developed sense of responsibility and, until recently, the Midas touch when it came to making money.
As if she sensed the heat of his gaze, her entire body froze. She glanced back at him and stole his breath. A landscape of conflicting emotions traversed a face free of cosmetics. She might not be considered beautiful by today’s standards, yet he found her striking from a minimalist point of view, albeit one with a bent for grunge.
His feet, by their own volition, propelled him to within ten feet of her.
He forgot her earlier rudeness the minute her tawny eyes, with no pretenses and no secret agendas, met his probing gaze. Oh, man. How refreshing. Those eyes laid a welcome mat at his feet and invited him inside. Like a warm cozy cabin in the woods, he wanted to sit down, take off his shoes, relax and stay a while. An unexpected sensation rippled through his body and scared the shit out of him.
Stop it, Carson; you’re doing it again. His internal warning device sent out a red alert. He was treading in dangerous emotional territory.
Calamity pushed tangled hair the color of rich caramel off her face. Damn, her eyes matched her hair. He’d never seen eyes that color before. Technically, they’d be called brown, but were almost a dark gold. They gave her the look of the girl next door with a naughty twist. He found them so hypnotizing, his closeted romantic tendencies started to run amok.
Somewhere in the barn a horse kicked the side of its stall and startled him out of his trance. Suddenly aware he’d been ogling her like some horny teenager, Carson prodded himself into speech as he took a step closer. “Do you always crawl around underneath monster horses?” Add that to your list of clever pickup lines, Car. It’s certain to be an outrageous success with the ladies. Not that he needed pickup lines. He usually needed nice to meet you, now I’m going to run like hell lines.
She chewed on her lower lip. A whiff of pure female without all the extraneous trimmings wafted toward him on a breeze. She smelled fresh and wholesome and— He sniffed again. Horses. She smelled like horses. Surprisingly, the scent wasn’t altogether unpleasant.
Carson almost laughed. This was getting out of hand. It wasn’t like him to behave like this. He lounged against the stall door and adopted a nonchalant pose. “If you don’t mind me asking, who are you?”
“Samantha MacIntyre.”
His mouth curved into a smile he couldn’t control. He gazed into her eyes and fought the unwelcome urge to wallow in their depths. Carson clenched his jaw. He didn’t wallow in depths. And he didn’t like his safe, controlled world disturbed, especially by a smart-mouthed woman who smelled like Trigger.
“You must be Jake’s brother, Carson?”
Ah, that explained her change in attitude. He allowed himself a gloating smirk as he navigated into safer waters. So she’d figured out his genealogy. “Yes, that’s me.” He caught her worried expression before she concealed it and felt a twinge of guilt. Way to go, Carson, dig that knife in deeper.
“I’m sorry about earlier. I thought you were—were—uh, someone else.”
“Obviously, I’m not.” Carson stabbed her with a penetrating gaze. His persona as a ruthless, tough businessman slipped into place.
“Hey, Carson!”
Carson turned to see his brother standing outside in the sun. “We’ll talk later.” He gave Sam one last scathing look and joined Jake in the sunshine. He wasn’t finished with her yet, but the appearance of his brother reminded him that he had more immediate concerns.
Something was up with Carson’s sweet but ambitious sister-in-law and disgustingly happy, newlywed baby brother; and that something included him. Today of all days, he didn’t appreciate their meddling in his life. He’d rather bury himself in his work and forget that it was his thirty-fourth birthday and his ten-year non-wedding anniversary.
“Good to see you.” Jake grinned and clasped his hand.
Carson ignored the greeting and jabbed a finger toward Sam. “How long has she been working here?” He scowled one of his signature scowls.
“Almost a month.” Jake laughed. “What’s the matter? Did she throw you off-balance?”
“Me? No, of course not,” Carson spoke too quickly. He was as balanced as a man flailing on an unstable tightrope over a pit of hungry alligators.
Jake raised an eyebrow. “Bull. She does that to everyone, even me.”
“So, who is she?”
His brother slanted him a sly grin. “Why? You interested?”
“Absolutely not,” Carson barked with too much force.
“Sorry, forgot myself for a moment. She’d never lower herself to being arm candy. She doesn’t have Reynolds Corporation stamped on her forehead nor is she a merger or an acquisition, so why would you be interested? She’s just a woman.”
Carson ignored Jake’s innuendos about his workaholic personality. He liked his personality just the way it was. It fit him and his life. “I’d hardly call her just a woman.”
“She does look like she dropped out of a B-rated western movie, doesn’t she?”
“One with a miniscule wardrobe budget,” Carson quipped, his eyes following Sam as she jogged past him to retrieve something from her pickup parked near the barn. She looked like a walking disaster with her caramel hair in disarray, her smudged face, and grungy jeans. Funny, he hadn’t noticed all that earlier. He’d been too busy looking at her lioness eyes and a few other things. That was strange in itself. He hadn’t looked at a woman—really looked—in a long time. And why her? Damn, he needed to get laid. Soon. And not by her.
“I wonder how well she cleans up or if she cleans up?” he blurted out before he could stop himself. His face grew hot, right to the tips of his ears.
Jake jumped on his reaction like a rabid dog. “I know what you’re thinking.” His brother slapped him on the back and laughed heartily. “Welcome back, bro. You’ve rejoined the ranks of testosterone-driven males. I didn’t know you still had it in you.”
Carson glared at his brother. “You have no idea what I’m thinking. My mind doesn’t live in some gutter like yours.” So why was he indulging in a brief fantasy involving her, a show
er, warm water, and soap while bent over?
“Yeah, sure. Whatever.” Jake rolled his eyes. “And as far as her personal hygiene, you’d have to ask her.”
“I think I’ll pass. I doubt she’d be amused, and I don’t consider castration, especially mine, a viable form of entertainment.”
“Watch it, Car. I might have to accuse you of having a sense of humor.” Jake was enjoying this way too much.
“Never happen.”
Jake raised one skeptical brow.
“You never answered me? Who is the cowgirl?”
“She’s hardly a cowgirl. She’s a horse trainer and a damn good one. We were lucky to get her to train at this place considering the shape it’s in. Harlee saw her ride in Europe. She thinks she’s incredible.” Harlee was Jake’s wife who had at one time groomed horses in Europe for a living.
“I see.” Actually he didn’t, and for some reason he wasn’t sure he wanted to be enlightened. “What was so important that I had to drop everything and run out to your horse farm on a Saturday?” Carson glanced at his watch for effect.
“Not my horse farm,” Jake pointed out. “Remember? It’s all in the family.”
“Your family. Not my family.”
Jake’s smiled dropped into a frown and pain etched his features. “You’re still my brother.”
“Of course. For the hundredth time, I don’t blame you, and you know that. You did what you thought was right and so did I.”
“Yeah, but my actions split the family in two, and you paid for it.” Jake’s voice was laced with guilt. “So did the business.”
“It’s all water under the bridge now. Besides, things between Dad and I had started going downhill long before that incident.” Carson dismissed Jake’s confession with a wave of his hand. He didn’t want to talk about it. The wounds were still too raw, too fresh, and too damn deep for that matter.
Seeking a little space, Carson moved a few steps away and stood near the board fence. He took in the surrounding farmland with a sweeping glance.
Originally, he’d been against his father purchasing this rundown horse farm. Granted, the land was an excellent investment, a prime piece of real estate within easy commuting distance of the freeway and downtown Seattle, though not particularly designed to clear a profit. It was merely a frivolous write-off, which gave their sister the semblance of a job doing what she did best—spending money. The purchase price had put a huge dent in their liquid assets.
A large barn badly in need of repair or even better, bulldozing, sat near the middle of the property. An indoor riding arena was attached to one end, an overgrown pasture to the other.
Board fencing, once painted white but faded to a dull gray, crisscrossed green pastures. Broken sections had been replaced by wire fencing leaving a mismatched conglomeration adding to the seedy ambiance. To one side of the gravel parking lot was the foundation of another barn, one that had burned to the ground years ago in a fire that killed several horses and the former barn owner.
Eva, a self-proclaimed psychic and Harlee’s friend, insisted the place had bad karma. Maybe it did.
Overlooking the property was a seventies ranch house occupied by Jake and Harlee. If the place had been Carson’s, the only things he’d leave standing would be the large oaks that lined the driveway.
The shell of a new equestrian facility stood partially completed, a skeleton of what might have been. It didn’t look like any progress had been made since he’d been replaced as project manager over a year ago, though Mother Nature had contributed her own changes. Raspberry vines wound around the steel supports and small trees reclaimed the land. The hot summer sun wilted the weeds and turned the grass brown.
Jake moved to stand beside him. He didn’t say a word. Perhaps, there was nothing to say but the obvious.
Carson turned away from the fence. What had happened here shouldn’t concern him. His family had made their choices and so had he. He’d chosen the almighty dollar; they’d chosen each other.
Regret rattled the bars he’d placed around his heart, but pride kept that cell locked.
Chapter 3—A Girl’s Gotta Do...
Having his fill of painful reflection, Carson turned to his brother. “So why did you call me?”
“It’s a surprise.” Jake perked up. A crooked smile crossed features so very similar to Carson’s.
“What are you talking about?” Carson didn’t like surprises. He preferred his life neat and planned to the nth degree.
“Actually, it was Dad’s idea.”
“Dad’s idea? Since when does he plan surprises for me?” Hell, he could count on one hand the number of times he’d talked to or seen his father in the past year.
“Well, part of it was my idea. I mean, what do you get the guy who has everything for his birthday?”
“How about nothing?” Carson suggested.
“You know that won’t fly in our family. We all agreed it had to be so unusual that you’d never buy it for yourself.”
Carson stiffened. Uh oh. Beware of baby brothers known for their wild, unpredictable streaks bearing gifts. “I’m not sure I want to see this.”
“You’ll love it. Once you get used to the idea. Harlee will explain it.”
“Coward. Letting your wife do your dirty work.”
“Damn right. You won’t hit her.” Jake blew out a breath as his wife joined them on cue. She must have been eavesdropping around the corner.
“Harlee...”
“Oh, Carson. So good to see you. You are going to love this!” His petite blonde sister-in-law gushed like a broken water main. Her nervousness betrayed how much he was really going to love it. She looked over her shoulder and called to someone out of his eyesight. “Sam, we’re ready.”
Sam? Carson frowned. Calamity walked into the sunlight leading the same equine elephant as before. Not that he’d paid much attention to it. He’d been too busy gawking at her. He narrowed his eyes, suspecting a trap. His gaze swung to the cowgirl.
Sam patted the huge animal and ignored him. Her stiff posture betrayed her discomfort.
“Happy Birthday!” Jake and Harlee yelled at once, slamming him back to earth so hard he bounced.
“This is a joke, right?”
“Nope, all yours. Her name is Gabriella. We call her Gabbie.”
Gabbie? Sherman, as in tank, would be more appropriate. “Look, thanks but take her back. I don’t even like horses. Nor do I want to ride one.”
“This horse isn’t for you to ride. She’s too valuable.”
Carson’s interest peaked. Well, now they were talking. “She’s a race horse?” That might be fun. He could see himself now, sitting in the clubhouse at Churchill Downs on Derby Day, drinking mint juleps, rubbing elbows with influential people.
“No, of course not. She’s a dressage horse,” Harlee corrected him.
“Dressage?” Carson wished he could feign ignorance, but he’d grown up in a family of horsewomen. Unfortunately. To him, dressage was a bunch of obsessed women dressed up in top hats, tails, black boots, and white breeches, essentially clothes that only looked good on emaciated models. These overweight, middle-aged females pranced around a ring on horses big enough to rival locomotives. It was as exciting as watching a tree grow. “What would I want with a horse like that?”
“You’ll see.”
Carson didn’t want to see. Not today, tomorrow, or ever. He smelled a rat, a substantial, overfed Reynolds family rat.
“By the way, Carson, this is Sam MacIntyre,” his sister-in-law added pleasantly.
Carson nodded stiffly. “We’ve met.” He directed one of his best, irritated CEO glares at her, but she refused to look at him. Dismissing her, he turned his attention back to Harlee. “This horse really doesn’t win money at horse races?”
“Nope.”
“That thing is big enough to pull a wagon and star in beer commercials.”
“Sorry, not this mare.” Harlee shook her head and started laughing. He hated being lau
ghed at.
“I don’t get it.” Carson glowered, feeling put out and put upon.
“She’s a show horse. Sam shows her, and you sponsor her.” Harlee nodded in Sam’s direction.
“Sponsor her?” Could this get any worse?
“Yeah, in other words, you foot the bill, she does all the work, and you get all the glory.” His brother’s shit-eating grin added to his irritation.
“Does she win money at these shows?”
“Not usually. Not much.” Harlee shrugged in apology.
Carson ignored his younger brother. “If you don’t win money then what’s the point?”
“The point is that you’ll own her. You know, pride of ownership. Knowing you’re doing something for the sport. That kinda thing.”
“Are you nuts? I don’t even understand what this sport is, let alone care about doing something for it.”
“You’ll learn.” Harlee squeezed his arm. “It’s very artistic. This form of horsemanship has been around for centuries.”
Carson didn’t care if it’d been around before the big bang and created by Rembrandt and Van Gogh in their spare time.
“Jake, Harlee, thanks, really, but I don’t want the animal.”
Harlee giggled and batted her overly mascaraed eyes. His sister-in-law had never grasped the fine art of subtlety when it came to applying makeup. She subscribed to more is better. “Too late. Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth.”
“Especially when Dad wrote the check,” his smug baby brother added with a sly grin.
“Bridget must have set him up to this. It’s some scheme of hers to get someone else to pay the bill on a horse she wants.”
“Nope, Bridget had nothing to do with it. She’s still flitting around Europe. This was Dad’s doing.”
Carson didn’t know what to say. The father he’d grown up with wouldn’t have done something like this. But after his father’s heart attack a few years ago, so many things about the man had changed. Not only had his priorities done a one-eighty, but he did weird stuff like this gift horse. Not to mention, he’d made this sudden shift from ruthless businessman to a socially and environmentally responsible CEO.
The Gift Horse Page 2