Cherry Adair - T-flac 06

BOOK: Cherry Adair - T-flac 06
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ON

THIN

ICE

A Novel

Cherry Adair

BALLANTINE BOOKS

NEW YORK

CONTENTS

Chapter One
Chapter Two

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Chapter Three
Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six
Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Epilogue

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

A Ballantine BookPublished by The Random House Publishing Group Copyright © 2004 by Cherry Adair

Ballantine and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

www.ballantinebooks.com

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available from the publisher upon request.

ISBN 0-345-47579-8

Manufactured in the United States of America

First Edition

Text design by Susan Turner

To my darling husband, David.

You and Max the Wonder Dog are my inspiration.

Acknowledgments

To the Bears, Peggy and Bill of
Bear Air
, thank you for your time and patience; the wonderful people at Rainy Pass Lodge for letting Derek and Lily spend the night there; the Iditarod Committee and dedicated volunteers for sharing their expertise; the friendly people at Alaska Airlines; the helpful individuals at
Alaska Men Magazine
.

Thanks also to my wonderful editor, Charlotte Herscher; my terrific agent, Nancy Yost; my darling assistant and friend Amber Kizer; and to my fabulous friends—Maureen Child, Kelsey Roberts, and Myrna Temte.

Your help was invaluable.

ON THIN ICE

One

The newborn calf lay curled in the straw at its mother's feet while the proud mama started licking it clean.

Outside the glowing warmth of the birthing barn, night pressed icy black fingers against the windows, and snow lay thick on the ground.

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Exhausted but triumphant, Dr. Lily Munroe tried to ignore the itchy, someone-was-watching-her sensation on the back of her neck, a creepy feeling she'd had off and on for several hours. She patted the cow's russet-colored rump. "You have a beautiful bouncing baby boy. Good job, Peaches."

"Peaches?" a familiar husky voice said behind her. "She's not a pet, Doc."

The straw at her feet rustled as Lily whirled around, hand to her throat. "Damn it! You scared me to death!"

Tall, dark and annoying.

Derek Wright.

With one shoulder resting against the planked wall, he looked as though he'd been there awhile. His physical presence was like a hard punch to Lily's chest, and her stomach did its usual betraying flip-flop at the sight of six foot four inches of pure, potent male. His lean, handsome face was ruddy with the cold, his glossy dark hair mussed sexily by the wind she heard howling outside.

Beneath her fingertips she felt the hard pounding of her heart, and hoped to hell Derek couldn't hear it.

And if he could that he'd attribute it to the fright he'd just given her. The adrenaline rush made her feel light-headed. She ruthlessly tamped down her body's visceral reaction to the sight of him as she started cleaning up her instruments and other birthing paraphernalia from around the stall.

"Sorry," he said, voice silky. "Didn't mean to spook you." He didn't look the least bit sorry, and she shot him a dark look. His lips twitched. "You're hell on a man's ego, Doc."

"There's nothing wrong with your ego. It's healthy as a horse," Lily told him. The breathless, heart-stopping feeling would fade if she took deep breaths and got a grip. "Maybe you should wear a bell around your neck when you skulk. Or whistle. Or stomp or something." She bent to pick up the obstetrical handles and chains she'd used earlier and sealed them in a bag to sterilize later.

"I wasn't skulking. I was waiting for you to finish what you were doing so I didn't distract you."

Oh, he distracted her, all right, but she wasn't going to give him the satisfaction of knowing it. Had it been the subconscious awareness of Derek watching her that she'd felt for the last few hours? She couldn't imagine him staying quiet for that long. She met his eyes.
Zing
went the strings of her heart. She wished her heart and brain would get into sync.

"I'll have you know I have a reputation for being very light on my feet," he told her, suave as always. His dark blue eyes twinkled beneath midnight brows.

"Have to be to sneak out of all those bedrooms, huh?"

He shook his head and smiled. A smile, Lily noticed, that didn't quite reach his eyes. "No sneaking. No bedrooms. I dance like Fred Astaire," he told her immodestly.

He probably did. For such a big man he did move with surprising grace. "Good for you. Could you dance back a bit? You're spooking Peaches and the baby."

They both looked at the cow and calf. Neither had noticed the two humans invading their space. Derek gave her a slow, assessing look. "Feeling crowded, Doc?" One corner of his mouth lifted and Lily told
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herself to ignore his sex appeal.

He always made her want to fidget. With her hair. Her clothes. Her personality. Everything about Derek was attractive. Exciting. Larger than life. Being around him made her feel like a small brown bird. He was Technicolor. She was sepia.

Nothing wrong with sepia, she told herself firmly, annoyed that she felt this way when she was around him, and not quite sure how to fix it.

"I always feel crowded around you," she told him honestly, tossing a spare pair of surgical gloves back into her bag. She resisted his charm with the same determination she'd used for years. It wasn't easy. She felt his pull. Her tide to his moon. Which was fanciful nonsense. Her hormones misbehaved because he was a hottie. Chemistry. Nothing more.

"Why is that, I wonder?" he asked softly. His voice always reminded Lily of dark chocolate. It was smooth, rich and had a slight huskiness to it that abraded her nerve endings like a cat's tongue.

She straightened and gave him a firm look. "Give it a rest, would you? I'm not up to your sparring weight tonight. I'm exhausted, hungry and absolutely filthy. If you want to flirt with someone, go inside and make a call."

"It's midnight."

"Poor baby." She bent to pick up her jacket, then gave it a good shake and hung it over the rail. "All your lady friends turned into pumpkins?"

"Might as well have," he groused.

Lily shook her head. "You're incorrigible." And charming, and funny and unhealthily appealing.

"What's the baby's name?" Derek asked, white teeth flashing. He always teased her about naming the animals. He seemed to enjoy teasing her, period. He also seemed to know exactly how far he could push her, and then he'd cleverly back off. Devious man. "Pit?"

"Brad."

He smiled, and not being made of stone, Lily smiled back. "Only you would name a potential prize-winning bull after a movie star."

He got it. Of course he did. Lily bit back a sigh as her smile faded. Unlike her husband, Derek had a wicked sense of humor, and an agile and clever mind behind that handsome face. All of which made resisting him damn difficult. "It's a talent," she told him modestly, turning back to her task of tidying up.

"What can I say?"

Tucking her T-shirt hem back into her jeans as she straightened up, Lily wondered if resisting him would become easier over the years, or if it would always be such hard work.

Still, he was a pleasure to look at. No matter what the circumstances, he appeared darkly elegant and cultured. And tonight was no exception. As always he was appropriately dressed for tramping in the barn on a cold winter's night. Jeans, boots, and a thick, cream-colored wool turtleneck under a bulky shearling jacket. Appropriately dressed, but somehow looking as though he'd stepped out of the glossy pages of a
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men's magazine.

Conscious of her gunk-covered jeans, shit-covered boots and sweaty face, Lily forced her hands not to fiddle with her God-only-knew-what-was-in-it hair. "How long were you standing there, anyway?"

"Couple of minutes. Need a hand?"

"I'm good, thanks." What she was, was sweaty, filthy and worried. They needed to talk, and talk soon.

But a woman needed to be at her sharpest to match wits with Derek. And Lily wasn't nearly up to locking horns with her partner tonight. On either a personal or business level.

Besides, she needed to have all her facts together before confronting him, and damn it,
she
wanted to pick the time and the place. He made her jumpier than anyone she'd ever known, including her late, unlamented husband, and she was sure he did it on purpose.

His tone changed as he said softly, "You're skittish tonight."

The man was way too observant. Her instincts around him had always been primitive; Lily felt the need to raise the drawbridge, man the battle stations and drag out the big guns. "I'm not skittish," she lied. "Just tired. Peaches and I have been at this for sixteen hours."

He gave her an assessing look that made her blood feel as effervescent as champagne as it zipped through her veins. "You look good tired."

She snorted and shook her head. He really was incorrigible. "Sure. And wearing Eau de Bovine is downright tantalizing, too."

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