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Authors: Jacquie Rogers

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BOOK: Much Ado About Mavericks
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“The boys just got the gifts mixed up.” He ducked another punch.  “The Colts were supposed to be yours, not Suzanne’s.” 

“Bullshit.  You stood right there with a goofy look on your face and let me open up that package in front of God and everybody.”

She threw out her foot to trip him.  Instead, he shoved his boot under her and laid her low, then pounced on top of her to keep her there.  And then, God help him, he kissed her--and she kissed him back.

“Are we gonna have a baby?” he heard Teddy ask.

Mabel, Suzanne, Henry, and the boys stood on the porch staring at him and Jake. 

Henry scowled at Teddy.  “No, dummy, he’s gotta give her a poke  to get a baby.”

*   *   *   *   *

“When’s the wedding?”  Whip asked.

Jake scowled at him.  “Get everyone signed up for the tournament by tomorrow morning.”  She jammed her Stetson on her head and threw her plate in the wreck pan.  “I have to tell Crip how many mustangs to collect.”

“How about saying your ‘I do’s’ right before the dance?”

“How about you keep your mouth shut.”  It was a statement, not a question, and Whip seemed to have the brains to figure it out.

She saddled Red and took off down the road, not sure where the hell she was headed.  Not shackled to some man, though.  Especially when he didn’t even have the decency to ask proper--kissing her in front of his family and the strays. 

Course, she’d have laughed in his face if he had proposed.  Why, she’d be nuts to think she could fit in with
Boston
’s fancy society--all those empty-headed greenhorns who didn’t even know what a day’s work was.

And he’d be nuts to think she’d even consider it.  There were other things to worry about.  The Saturday night dance, for instance.  It was already Tuesday, and that dad-blamed dance was coming on her fast. She tried to blank it from her mind.  There was no help for it--as foreman, she had to show up for the roundup dance. 

The trouble was, she had to dance as a female.  Since there was a shortage of women, the men all drew straws to see which of them had to wear fancy garters on their sleeves and take the lady’s part.  But she didn’t get to draw, and she hated wearing that damned garter more than any man there.  And she sure as stinkin’ hell wouldn’t wear that froo-froo pink thing that Ben had bought her.  And he could wear that ostrich feather bonnet up his ass.

She nudged Red into a gallop, scattering what few cattle were left on the south range.  Soon the place would be crowded with over ten thousand cows and their bouncing calves.  Not much was cuter than a baby calf, although the ones they’d be rounding up would be five or six months old by now.

The day was warm, but a few spots of frost still hid in the shadows of the larger boulders.  Sometimes it was hard to tell the frost from the alkali at a distance.  Breathing in the late September air was enough to get any heart pumping--and ready for the roundup.  Cold nights, warm days.  It was her favorite time of year. 

But in a month, Ben Lawrence would hightail himself back to
Boston
.  She ignored the emptiness the thought brought her and reined in her horse at the Circle J corral gate.

Teddy leaned up against the fence with a red, pouty face.

“What’s the matter, cowhand?”

“Henry took all my marbles.  She said we was playing keepsies.  But I wasn’t.  But she took ‘em all, anyhow.”  He pursed his lips and blinked his eyes.  Jake knew he was trying hard to keep tears back.

She squatted beside him.  “Well, sometimes we gotta be smarter and work harder than other people.  I tell you what, I got a pack of marbles in the bunkhouse and I’m a pretty damn good marble player, if I do say so myself.  How about you practice some with me, and then you can win your own marbles back?”

After a half hour of lessons, Teddy had shown remarkable improvement.  But still he seemed down.  Jake wondered if he was jealous that she’d taken Henry in.  “Partner, you just about whooped me--I bet you could take all your marbles back, and some of hers, too.”

He nodded but didn’t smile.  “You ain’t never wrong.”

His sad eyes dismayed her.  She ruffled his hair.  “So what else troubles you?”

He shot another marble out of the circle in the dirt.  “Henry says if you and Ben get a baby, you won’t want us no more.”

Jake sucked in her breath.  Her first impulse was to pounce all over that ornery little girl, but Henry wouldn’t have said that if something of the like hadn’t happened to her.  “She don’t know what she’s talking about, Teddy.  I hired you on for as long as you wanna stay--eighty years if that’s what you want.”

He took aim and shot her agate out of the circle.

“So what chores will the baby do?”

“There ain’t no baby.”

“Ever?”

She paused, knowing in her heart she would like to have a kid or two if she’d grown up differently, but she loved the strays and they’d do her just fine.  Besides, she’d have to tie herself to a man to get one from her body.  She was having damned good luck just collecting strays as she went along--hurt less, too.

“Nope.”

Chapter 9

Ben would have been indignant to be forced to share roping lessons with a six-year-old girl--except he’d found the right touch a couple of weeks back.  He wasn’t about to let Jake know, though, or she’d end the lessons.  Watching her shirt tighten over her breasts while she whirled the rope over her head was more sensual than just about anything he’d ever seen.  In fact, just about everything about her made him want to take her on the spot.

He was just torturing himself, though, and he knew it.  Jake wasn’t the woman to hostess society parties in
Boston
.  Patience Morris was.  He’d thought he could spend his life with her not more than a month ago, but no man who knew Jake would ever think Patience a better woman.  Not by a long shot. 

Still, he planned to propose to her when he got back to
Boston
.  Creighton Morris would throw a big engagement party and invite all their clients, society friends, and the newly moneyed.  While he hated parties, he certainly enjoyed the benefits they afforded him.

Mr. Morris had been pressuring him to name a date for a long time, holding a senior partnership as a lure.  Ben knew why, too.  Morris’s own son, Reginald, was a high-flyer and a womanizer.  Creighton didn’t want Reginald to control the firm--that privilege he had reserved for his future son-in-law.

“Pay attention,
Boston
,” Jake said as she nudged his shoulder.  “You’re first.”

“Why don’t you throw first?”

“Because I already know how to rope.”

“I’ll go,” Henry hollered.  “I’ll try first!”  She uncoiled a length of rope and let out the loop.  “My brand new rope will catch anything.”  She twirled it over her head and let fly.  The rope settled just short of the set of horns Jake had stuck in a pile of hay.

Jake smiled at the near success.  “Not bad, Henry.  Keep at it.”  She turned to Ben.  “Think you can outrope a six-year-old?”

He pulled her to his chest.  “I’m more interesting in roping a twenty-four-year-old.”  He immediately felt contrite about his remark.  He’d made up his mind to propose to Patience, and there was no need for him to make flirtatious comments to Jake.  Problem was, he couldn’t keep his hands off her.

Pushing away, she said, “You’ll come up short, then.”

He was afraid that he already had.  While he needed Patience to continue his rise in the law firm, life with her held little appeal.  Jake, though . . . Maybe he should just stay a junior partner.  He whirled the rope over his head and let fly. 


Boston
,” Jake flew into his arms and hugged him hard.  “You done it!”

Damn, he’d been thinking about other things and forgot to miss.  But if roping a pair of horns got Jake glued to him, hell, he’d hit the target all the time. “Beginner’s luck,” he mumbled.

She kissed him on the cheek and gazed at him, eyes sparkling.  Lord, what he wouldn’t give for her to look at him like that all the time.  He held her closer, enjoying the fit of her body with his.

“If you’re gonna poke her, it’s a dollar up front,” Henry declared, tossing her loop and missing. 

They sprang apart, Jake looking flustered and Ben, wondering what the hell had come over him.  His thoughts and behavior had been totally wrong--both to Jake and Patience.  And even if he were in a position to court Jake, he sure as hell didn’t need to do his sparking in front of a little girl. 

“Sorry,” he mumbled, and picked up his rope.  “You go ahead and help Henry, Jake.  I need to do errands for Ma before the dance.”

On his way to the barn, he walked all the way around the house so he could calm himself--all of himself--down before seeing anyone.  Harnessing the team and then hitching the wagon before he fetched his mother and sister seemed like a good idea.

It had been years since he’d hitched up a wagon himself, so it took him over an hour, fiddling with this strap and that.  He swore at himself for coming up with such a bad idea.  Thank goodness the draft horses were a calm pair and stood quietly while he arranged, rearranged, buckled, unbuckled, and rebuckled.  He finally got the job done.

That the women weren’t ready yet was no surprise to him--they hadn’t planned to leave for another hour yet.  He hurried them as best he could.

The noon sun warmed them as Ben drove the ladies into Henderson Flats.  Mrs. Hiatt, the storekeeper, was sweeping the boardwalk when she saw the
Lawrences
and hailed them with her broom.  “I was expecting you folks.  Got some goods in just this morning.”

Ben pulled the wagon to a stop and set the brake.  “Hello, beautiful.”  He hopped down and helped the ladies, chuckling when he thought about Jake swatting him when he tried to help her off her horse that day before.  He couldn’t imagine her in a trussed-up dress and sporting a parasol.  Or if she did have a parasol, she’d use it to stab someone.

“Ready for the dance Saturday night?” he asked the storekeeper. 

She grinned wide, showing the gap where her front teeth should have been.  “I’m ready to dance your boots off, Skeeter.”

He winced, wishing she’d quit calling him that, then tipped his hat to her.  “It would be my pleasure for you to try.” 

Suzanne and his mother prattled on about this centerpiece and that refreshment.  He stood near the door, arms crossed, and waited for them to finish.  Mrs. Hiatt busily hauled the goods they picked to the counter, then tallied up the bill.

Harley Blacker came into the store and removed his hat.  “Good afternoon, ladies.”

“Mr. Blacker,” Mabel responded politely.  “What brings you into town so close to roundup time?”

“Fetching my son from the stage.”  He looked at his timepiece.  “Should be in pretty soon.  I see the ferry’s on the other side of the river, waiting.”

“Peter’s back?” Suzanne asked--somewhat breathless.  Too breathless, Ben thought.  “I thought he wouldn’t be back until next spring.”

“I thought so, too, but he wrote and told me there’s no country anywhere as beautiful as
Owyhee
County
.  I knew that, but he had to find out for himself.  Said he wanted to be here for roundup.”

“And the dance?”

Blacker chuckled.  “We’ll be there--and for the tournament, too.”

Ben wondered about Blacker--how he could act normal around a woman and her daughter when he was in a position to take their ranch away.  He’d never thought of him as a ruthless sort, but there it was.  Whether Blacker was responsible for the cut fences and the dammed up creek, Ben didn’t know, but he’d find out soon enough.  Meantime, the man was innocent until proven guilty
,
but Ben intend
ed
to
exercise caution nonetheless
.

And the way his sister nearly swooned at the sound of Peter’s name, well, that was practically indecent.  He’d have to set Pete straight about her.

“Can you stay in town to meet the stage?” Blacker asked.  “Pete would surely like it.”

“Of course we can,” Suzanne declared, then looked at her mother.  “Can’t we?”

She nodded.  “Ben, after you load the wagon with our supplies, take it down to load the feed that Jake ordered.  Suzanne and I will meet you at the confectionary.”

“Mind if I join you
?
” Blacker asked.

Hell, yes, he minded.  But Mabel said, “Why, of course you’d be welcome,” and took his arm as he escorted her on one arm and Suzanne on the other.

Frowning, Ben puzzled at his mother’s behavior

after all, she knew as well as he did that Blacker would inherit the ranch
if all didn’t go well

Ben
shook his head, dismissing the notion that his mother was up to something, then turned to Mrs. Hiatt.  “Join me at the confectionary later?”

She giggled.  “I don’t know.  Marshal Hiatt’s a jealous man.”

*   *   *   *   *

“You got enough wood for the stove?” Jake asked Whip.

BOOK: Much Ado About Mavericks
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