“Are you sure about this?” Nash
asked. “They’ll know what we’re up to.”
“Will that bother you?” she asked,
pausing and looking up at him. Perhaps he
regretted his offer. Maybe he hadn’t been
serious about taking a hotel room.
He laughed. “I was just thinking of
your potential embarrassment. I’ll mate
with you in the middle of the road if you
want.” His amber eyes were narrowed
dangerously, the feral look that made her
weak with need.
She pictured the pair of them making
love in the middle of the muddy road and
flushed. “We’d be arrested.”
“Better not then,” he teased, smiling
his irresistible crooked grin.
She moved forward again, pulling him
along by his hand. He was offering no
resistance. “Hurry,” she urged, “before my
impulsiveness gets the better of me at risk
of arrest.”
“Ah, Maralee,” he murmured behind
her. “What would I do without you?”
She didn’t want to think about that.
They entered the inn hand in hand and
paused at the front counter, waiting to be
greeted by the proprietor. Gordon Smithy
appeared behind the counter and looked at
her in surprise.
“Miss Decatur! Back already?”
She nodded. “We need a room.”
“Two rooms?” Smithy questioned,
looking from the young lady to the
dangerous looking man she had in tow.
“One room,” Nash entered and
Maralee felt her face redden with
embarrassment.
So
this
was
the
humiliation Nash had been trying to
protect her from.
“We…we just got married,” she said.
Smithy looked from Nash to Maralee,
not looking surprised by her news, but
rather suspicious. “Is that so?” he asked,
his tone condescending.
“Are you calling my wife a liar?”
Nash asked him, his hand circling
Maralee’s waist possessively.
Smithy looked from Maralee to Nash
and shook his head. “Of course not. One
room then. Will you be checking in now?”
he asked.
“Yes, right now,” Nash said, in that
low growl that always made Maralee’s
nipples harden with anticipation. She
shuddered, clinging to his thigh with one
hand.
“Do you have any luggage?” Mr.
Smithy asked.
“N-no,” Maralee admitted.
Smithy shook his head again. Their
story was rapidly falling apart.
“We came to get supplies from the
store,” Nash explained, “and became so
weary from the journey that we decided
we needed a rest before we make the long
trip home.”
Smithy handed over the key to a room
and the pair of them headed for the stairs
without further hesitation. “
Kids!
” the old
man bellowed, not realizing that Nash was
almost twice his age.
Maralee fumbled with the lock while
Nash began to fill his hands with her
always eager flesh. “Wait,” she gasped,
when his hands covered both breasts and
he placed an open-mouthed kiss on the
side of her neck. They were at the top of
the stairs in plain sight of the foyer below.
“Can’t wait,” he growled into her ear.
She dropped the key.
“Damn,” she muttered, kneeling down
to retrieve the key. Nash followed her to
the floor, hands running down her ribcage,
waist. She pressed her forehead against
the door, grasping the key, but unable to
think well enough to stand up and use it.
“Uh…um…e-excuse me, please,” a
timid, feminine voice said.
It seemed that they were blocking the
passageway from the other rooms to the
stairs. Nash stood up, removing his
distracting hands and lips from Maralee’s
person, before helping her climb to her
feet. The young woman sidled past them,
eyes downcast, face scarlet.
“Don’t mind us,” Maralee called after
her. An immaculate, coiled bun of
chocolate brown hair disappeared from
view as the young lady vanished into the
dining room below. “I don’t think we
made a very good impression,” she told
Nash.
“I’ve never been one to make good
first impressions,” he said, retrieving the
key from the floor and attempting to
unlock the door.
It finally swung open, but before he
could usher Maralee inside, the front door
of the inn opened and a man stepped into
the foyer. He glanced up the narrow
staircase and Maralee paused. She
recognized the visitor at once.
“Maralee,” Jared called in greeting,
his gentle blue eye brightening with
pleasure at seeing her.
“Jared,” Maralee greeted in return.
“What are you doing here?”
“Interviewing,” he said.
“Interviewing?”
“For the nurse’s position at my
practice.”
“Oh,” she called down to him. “I’d
forgotten about that.”
“Perhaps we should go downstairs so
you don’t have to shout,” Nash murmured
in her ear.
She turned to glance at him. Her
insatiable need for him had vanished, but
she was certain it wouldn’t take much for
it to return.
“It seems that you’ve changed your
mind,” Nash commented, while Jared and
Gordon’s voices echoed up the stairs as
they exchanged greetings. “What is it
about that man that makes you turn cold all
of a sudden?”
“I don’t know,” she said flustered.
“Looking at him is a total turn off for some
reason.”
Nash chuckled. “For the first time
since knowing you, I’m happy you’re
turned off.”
“Hey, Maralee,” Jared called up to her
again. “Why don’t you come down and
join me for breakfast? This interview
shouldn’t take long. Bring your…er…
friend.”
“Do you mind, Nash?”
Nash shrugged and she smiled at him.
“We’ll have more energy for later,”
she whispered.
“I suppose.” He sighed.
She took his hand and led him
downstairs towards the dining room.
Gordon watched them as they passed
through the foyer with a wary look on his
face. Jared was already seated in the
dining room across from the young lady
who they’d met upstairs. Her back was to
the entrance. Jared smiled at Maralee
when she entered the dining room. She
smiled back and Jared’s gaze moved to
Nash. The young doctor’s uncharacteristic
glare of contempt was unmistakable.
“Who is this?” Jared asked.
“This is…this is…” She couldn’t very
well say that this was Nash, since he knew
that she had a “dog” by the same name.
“I’m her husband,” Nash cut in.
“Husband?” Jared echoed.
Maralee smiled nervously. “Didn’t I
tell you that I was married?”
“No,” Jared said flatly. “I think I
would have remembered that.”
“This is my husband…uh…”
“Nash,” Nash supplied.
“Nash?” Jared echoed, looking at
Maralee, obviously stunned. “Isn’t that
your dog’s name?”
Maralee’s palms were sweating. She
hated to lie. She wasn’t good at it. “Um…
yeah…I named my dog after him.”
Jared gave her an appraising look,
before his trusting nature allowed him to
accept her lies. “I only have a few
questions for Miss Jewel. Would you
mind waiting just a few minutes and we’ll
join you for breakfast?”
“Sure. Is that all right with you,
Nash?” she asked.
He shrugged, looking more out of sorts
than she’d ever seen him.
“Just have a seat at the next table and
we’ll join you in a moment,” Jared told
her in a polite tone. He glared at Nash
when he thought Maralee wasn’t looking.
Nash and Maralee sat down beside
each other at the next table.
“So, Miss Jewel,” Jared was saying to
his prospective employee, “what made
you decide to go into nursing?”
“Well,” she answered, her voice soft
and timid, “I have always had the desire
to help people, and being a nurse allows
me to help many, many people.”
“I see,” Jared said, chewing on the end
of his fountain pen thoughtfully as he read
over the paper in front of him. “For
someone so young, your résumé is
spectacular.”
Maralee started when Nash took her
hand and began to kiss her fingers with
more passion and noise than was entirely
necessary.
“Nash,” she whispered, drawing her
hand away. “Not here.”
Jared was watching them, entirely
distracted from interviewing the young
nurse across the table from him.
“Then where?” Nash murmured,
leaning closer to kiss her neck. “Here?”
“You know that’s not what I meant,”
she said, trying to feel exasperated with
him, but wishing that they were alone so
she didn’t feel compelled to stop him.
“I only have two years of experience,”
Miss Jewel entered, trying valiantly to
regain the doctor’s attention, “but my
references are excellent and I’m a hard
worker. I really care about my patients.
All of them.”
“That makes the job more difficult,
you know,” Jared said, drawing his gaze
from the couple at the next table to look at
her.
She nodded in agreement. “But it’s the
only way I know how to work.”
Jared smiled, and Maralee noticed the
nurse flush. She took a moment to examine
the young woman. Miss Jewel was quite
lovely, in a meek sort of way, with large
brown eyes and hair of the same shade.
She was especially adorable when she
blushed, which she did whenever Jared
paid her any attention. He seemed
oblivious to her reaction.
“I’m the same way,” he admitted. “I
guess we’d make a fine team of
emotionally
involved
health
care
providers.”
Miss Jewel smiled, her small mouth
curving upward with pleasure. “Does this
mean I’m hired?”
“Can you start tomorrow?” he asked,
extending his hand to shake hers. “I’m
really short-handed.”
She hesitated before she placed her
fingertips in his hand. “I can start today,”
she said, looking pleased with herself and
even more pleased to be employed by Dr.
Jared Sabin.
“Excellent,” he said. “You’ll join us
for breakfast I hope.”
Miss Jewel blushed. “I don’t want to
intrude.”
“I insist,” Jared said.
The young woman hesitated, and then
nodded.
His obligations fulfilled, Jared’s
attention turned at once to Maralee and her
newly identified, mysterious husband who
had a keenly intelligent dog named after
him. Jared rose from the table and moved
to sit across from Nash. Miss Jewel rose
slowly and seated herself beside Jared,
looking out of place. Maralee offered her
a friendly smile.
“So, Miss Jewel, wasn’t it?” Maralee
worked at breaking the ice.
Miss Jewel glanced up from the hand
she was staring at. “My first name is
Emerald, but you can call me Emma,” she
insisted, her eyes darting from one
stranger to the next.
Emerald
Jewel?
Maralee bit her
lower lip. It wasn’t as if the poor thing
had named herself.
Emma
reminded
Maralee
of
a
frightened, little bird and imagined her
heart must be beating in her chest like
fluttering wings.
“Emma,” Maralee started over. “Are
you from Sarbough originally?”
“No, I’m from Relwood,” she said.
“Pleasant town. I was there the month
before last,” Maralee said, happy to find
some common ground and a safe topic.
“I know,” she murmured nervously. “I
saw that pile of Wolves you killed.”
“Oh,” Maralee gasped and glanced
anxiously at Nash. Not so safe, after all. A
muscle was twitching in Nash’s jaw, but
he
seemed
to
be
ignoring
their
conversation. He was more intent on
winning the glaring contest between
himself and Jared.
“The need for medical care has
declined in Relwood since the threat of