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Authors: Patricia Davids

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She skittered past him, huddled into herself, the bright blue sweater stretched taut
across her stooped back. She was like a wounded blue jay, a flash of color against
the deep gray rocks.

Austin wanted to take hold of her elbow to steady her ascent but she didn’t give him
the chance. She was a strange creature, a mystery with her scared-doe eyes and defiant
rock thumping.

He lifted a hand to his temple, found the knot. It didn’t hurt much, nothing compared
to how the woman’s arm must feel. He’d had a broken bone once when a horse and cow
collided and his leg was sandwiched between. Hurt like the dickens.

He could hear her breathing, the puffs of someone unaccustomed to long hikes on rough
terrain. He thought of her girly heeled shoes, her upscale clothes, the bleeding face.
She was lying.

The question was, why?

He moved in behind her and took her elbow with one hand and supported her back with
the other. She flinched, a motion that made Austin grind his back teeth. But she didn’t
pull away, a good thing, because Austin was a stubborn man. If he had to, he’d swoop
her over one shoulder and cart her up the rise like a sack of sweet feed. She probably
didn’t weigh much more than a hundred-pound sack of oats.

They reached the top of the ridge and she paused for a moment to catch her breath
and look around. Not a casual glance at nature’s beauty, but a search. A furtive,
wary search.

For what?

Austin’s eyes narrowed. “My horse is this way.”

She spun toward him. “Horse?”

“Look, lady, there are no roads back in here. The nearest ATV trail is three miles
and then it’s another two miles to town. You either walk or ride horses.” Or like
some high-rollers, you flew over in helicopters. Man, did that ever set his teeth
on edge. He scowled. “You didn’t fly in on a helicopter, did you?”

“No.” She hitched her chin. He noticed long red marks on her throat. Funny place to
be injured in a fall. “I can walk if you’ll lead the way.”

Stacking fists on hips, Austin rolled his eyes. “Afraid of horses?”

“No.”

“Then why walk when you can ride?”

“But you said...it’s your horse.”

“I don’t know where you come from, lady, but around here a man doesn’t ride while
the woman walks. What’s your name anyway?”

She hesitated before saying, “Annalisa.”

No last name. Interesting.

“Fancy name.” But then she was a fancy-looking woman, sleek and well-groomed. Except
for the blood and bruises. “I’m Austin Blackwell. You’re on my ranch.” Practically.

She pressed her lips together in an expression of worry. “I’m sorry.”

He glared at her. “For what?”

Her fingers fluttered. Exactly like the pulse above her collarbone. “Trespassing.
I should have asked before...uh...hiking.”

Austin pinned her with a look. “Yeah. Hiking.”

It was none of his business if she fell or jumped or was attacked by Sasquatch, just
as it was none of his business if she lied. None.

Austin started to sweat.

The last thing he needed was a woman with suspicious injuries.

They approached Cisco who’d found a patch of grass to nibble on. The sooner he got
Miss Annalisa mystery woman off this mountain and into someone else’s care, the easier
he could breath.

“You know how to mount? One foot in the stirrup. Throw the other over. I’ll give you
a boost. You take care of the arm.”

She nodded and with a gritty determination given her condition, stuck a foot in the
stirrup and hopped. Austin leaned in to help, a hand beneath her free foot, the other
ready to brace her back. The scent of perfume, definitely not the cheap stuff, but
mysterious like her, contrasted with the earthy, wetness of the falls. He did his
best not to notice, but the fragrance reminded him of something. Something he’d put
out of his mind long ago.

He clenched his teeth against the fantasy, hoisted her other foot and put her into
the saddle as gently as possible. She was light if leggy, tall enough to reach his
stirrups. And he was no small fry.

Annalisa’s face paled with the movement. She bit back a groan. A small one, but he
heard it.

“Easy,” he said, feeling like a heartless slug for hurting her. If he wouldn’t have
been thinking of her long legs and heady scent, he could have been more careful.

Yeah, and if that sorry calf hadn’t gotten out, he wouldn’t be here in the first place
with his sixth sense screaming like a banshee.

Ifs
didn’t mean much in Austin’s vocabulary. If life was as it should be, he’d still
be in Texas.

He took Cisco’s reins and tossed them over the saddle horn. In quick, efficient movements
he swung into the saddle in front of his guest, taking care not to jar her. Annalisa
leaned back, away from contact.

Austin shifted in the saddle to look at her. “Brace your bad arm against my back and
give me your other.”

She hesitated, clearly not wanting to touch him. Well, too stinkin’ bad. He didn’t
want her falling off.

“One broken arm is enough,” he barked. She flinched, eyes widening.

He grabbed her good hand and slapped it against his rib cage. With a
tsk
and slight tightening of his knees, he set Cisco on an easy walk through the trees.

Behind him, Annalisa was as stiff as new leather.

What was up with this lady?

ISBN: 9781460313992

Copyright © 2013 by Patricia MacDonald

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