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Cowboys And Cradles
Cowboys And Cradles

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Cowboys And Cradles

Язык: Английский
Год издания: 2018
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The desert, far from barren as some believed it to be, was a starkly beautiful place. The variety of cactus alone, from short and squat to tall and stately, created a constantly changing landscape. Trees, delicately green paloverdes and darker, gnarled mesquites, also flourished, along with a surprising amount of animal life.

The cattle were expected, of course, and every now and then groups could be glimpsed in the distance, Herefords with white faces and rusty-brown coats. But there were other animals, as well. Big-eared rabbits, tiny lizards, bushy-tailed prairie dogs, chattering birds. They were all here if one looked carefully, before they darted away as the horses got too close.

Something Eve had suspected she might see, and was very grateful not to have seen so far, was anything slithering along the ground. She’d never considered herself a coward, but the mere thought gave her the shivers. She’d rather face a hungry lion than a…

Snake!

Without warning, it was there, coiled near the side of the narrow dirt trail they rode down. Instinctively reacting to the sudden sight, she let out a small shout, jerked back on the reins, and almost instantly found herself airborne as Sable shot up on two legs to paw at the sky.

Ryder’s curse, brief and graphic, followed a thump as Eve landed on her rear and rolled—right into the snake! Something pierced her upper thigh before she scrambled up and lunged back toward the trail, only to come up against a solid chest.

Strong arms wrapped around her, held her so close she could feel Ryder’s heart pounding and knew her heartbeat matched his. “Good Lord, are you hurt?”

She sucked in a breath and raised her head. “No, I don’t think so.” Then she remembered the instant of piercing pain she’d experienced and realized the spot still smarted. Her eyes went huge.

“Oh, my God. I may have been bitten by the snake. I almost rolled on top of it.”

Dark brows snapped together. “What snake?”

“It was on my side of the trail, just coiled there. Scared the living daylights out of me. That’s why I yelled.”

He eased her an arm’s length away, ran his gaze over her. “Where did it get you?”

She twisted slightly and pointed to a spot high on her outer left thigh, noting a jagged tear in the denim fabric there.

Plainly seeing it, too, Ryder cursed again while he maintained his grasp on one arm and led her to a short, rounded boulder located on the opposite side of the trail from where she’d fallen. “I have to get a better look,” he told her, then made quick work of unbuckling her belt and shoving her jeans nearly to her knees. That done, he urged her into a makeshift seat on the boulder and crouched down beside her.

“It’s a puncture wound, and it’s not bleeding much,” he said after a moment, taking a snowy white handkerchief from his back pocket to pat it against her skin. He tipped his hat back and gazed up at her, his expression sober. “I want a good look at that snake.”

Her blood went cold. “What if it’s poisonous?”

He snagged her left wrist, pressed her palm on the soft cloth to hold it in place before getting to his feet. “It could be totally harmless, but even if it isn’t, there’s rarely a grave danger when the victim is a healthy adult. I just need to make sure exactly what we’re facing here.”

She fought for control, took a steadying breath and managed to achieve it. “Okay.”

He launched a probing glance. Apparently satisfied that he didn’t have a hysterical woman on his hands, he turned away and headed for the place where she’d landed on her rump.

Left alone and prompted by a gentle breeze gliding over bare skin, she became fully aware of her exposure. Granted, the long front and back tails of her ecru cotton shirt covered more than short shorts would have. Still, enough flesh remained on view to make something inside her clench at the unbidden thought of a certain male mouth sucking venom from a wound that was scant inches from other parts of her.

Back to reality, Eve, she told herself briskly, fairly sure modern medicine frowned on that technique. If it turned out she was in any sort of danger, the head honcho would probably put his take-charge attitude to good use by hauling her off to the nearest hospital. And she’d be grateful, despite the fact that no one had taken charge of her since she’d gone off to college.

At the sound of footsteps Eve raised her gaze and watched Ryder approach, swinging something from one large hand—something that had her shuddering before she realized it was too stiff, too rigid as it cut a path through the air, to be what she’d thought it was. At the same time, it was something she recognized all too well.

He stopped directly in front of her and held up the object. “Is this the snake you saw?” he asked mildly. Too mildly.

She knew she was on very shaky ground. “It looks like a snake,” was all she could come up with to say.

“It’s an old, wind-twisted mesquite branch. A sharp edge must have pierced your skin when you rolled into it.”

“It looks like a snake.”

“It’s a damned hunk of wood.”

“It looks like a damned snake,” she said stubbornly.

With clear disgust, he flung it backward over a broad shoulder. “Heaven save me from greenhorns and their imagination,” he muttered as he turned away. “I’ll get the first-aid kit and patch you up.”

Ryder whistled for Lucky, and the stallion was immediately at his side. He reached into a saddlebag and pulled out a small plastic box, still grumbling. The fact that he half blamed himself for what had happened only added to his dark frame of mind. He should have just flatly refused to let Eve ride a horse she wasn’t ready for, he groused inwardly. And he would have done it…if she wasn’t his boss. Cripes, how was a man supposed to deal with that?

And how was any male supposed to hide what a glimpse of smooth-as-cream thighs did to him? At first, with health issues in question, he’d been too concerned to consider anything else. Then he’d found the twisted piece of wood no seasoned outdoors person would have mistaken for anything threatening, relieving his mind and rousing something else when he got another look at his companion, jeans at her knees. If her attention hadn’t been fixed on the bogus snake, she’d have probably noticed that his zipper was no longer as flat as it had been minutes earlier.

Ryder pried open the kit and knelt next to Eve. He drew a deep breath and instantly regretted it. God, she didn’t even smell simple, he thought, taking in a sophisticated blend of exotic flowers and warm woman. He willed his hands to remain fixed on their objective as he slipped the handkerchief from her grasp, letting it fall to the dusty ground, and began to clean the wound.

“The antiseptic may sting,” he told her with a trace of huskiness he couldn’t hide.

Her leg jerked slightly when he gently touched torn skin, but she didn’t make a sound. He continued his task, trying to ignore a scant inch of pink lace that peeked out from between the slit sides of her shirt, and failing. At that moment, ignoring a rattler primed to strike might have been easier. By the time he applied a flesh-colored Band-Aid, he’d started to sweat. “I’m no expert, but I don’t think it’s serious enough for stitches. It should heal fine on its own. You’ll need a tetanus shot, though,” he tacked on, dropping his gaze and making a bigger production of repacking the kit than necessary.

“I got a shot before I came here.” The soft rustle of clothing, the low rasp of a zipper, accompanied Eve’s reply. “I know it’s important when you live around animals.”

At least she knew that much, he griped to himself, rising. He ventured a glance, discovered she was fully dressed and, after a moment, also noted a tendency on her part to look everywhere except his way. It suddenly occurred to him that he might not have been the only one affected by their enforced intimacy. Somehow that put him in a better mood. He didn’t like what was coming next, yet if it made his boss half as uncomfortable as it was bound to make him, maybe she’d think twice before overriding his judgment.

Ryder checked the time on the plain gold watch Pete had traded hard-earned money for to proudly produce as his college-graduation present, something he wouldn’t have traded for the fanciest Rolex. “It’s late. I’ll take a look around for your hat, then we have to start back.”

Eve resisted the urge to wince and told herself not to be a wimp. Despite various aches and pains, most of which centered where she’d be sitting, she had to get back on a horse, and there was no sense whining about it. “Don’t bother with the hat. If my memory serves me right, I landed on it when I fell.”

Ryder replaced the kit and turned to her. “Okay, let’s get going. Fortunately, Lucky can carry both of us.”

Eve frowned, puzzled because she knew her horse was uninjured. She’d already been reassured by the sight of the black mare standing several yards away, head dipped to munch on sparse grass. “Sable’s fine. I’ll ride her.”

Crossing his arms over his chest, Ryder propped one shoulder against the stallion’s saddle. “I have a feeling that won’t be so easy.”

Eve’s chin rose right along with her renewed sense of pride. “I am perfectly capable of riding her.”

One corner of his mouth tipped up. “First you have to get her over here. Go ahead, call her.”

Recognizing the challenge underscoring those words, Eve called. Sable lifted her head, viewed her owner with gleaming dark eyes and stayed put. She called again. And nothing happened. When she took a determined step forward, the mare took a step backward. When she stopped and coaxed in a soothing tone, the mare went back to munching grass.

After several frustrating minutes of more of the same, Eve placed her fists on her hips. “Get your butt over here right this minute, Sable,” she ordered, stomping a foot to emphasize that statement.

The mare’s only response was to bob her head up and down, snorting all the while.

Eve’s spine stiffened in indignation. “I think she’s laughing at me.”

A sudden cough may have masked Ryder’s own laugh. Eve couldn’t be certain, since a quick spin found nothing to confirm it. “Are you ready to go now?” he asked calmly.

Still bristling, Eve returned to where he stood. “We can’t just leave her here. You try something.”

“I’d have to chase her down, and there’s no time for that if we’re going to make it back before the sun is history. Don’t worry, she’ll follow us. She’s smart enough to know there’s plenty of food and water waiting for her.” He bent over, linked his hands. “Put your foot here, and I’ll give you a leg up.”

She went up and up, and met the saddle with a small groan she couldn’t restrain.

“A bit tender, Miz Eve?” Now he was laughing at her. She was sure of it, even though she couldn’t see his expression as he mounted behind her.

Two people could indeed share a single saddle, she learned a second later—if the two in question were plastered to each other from shoulders to knees, if an unyielding chest melded to a supple backbone, if hard thighs cradled far softer ones, if some very private male anatomy came flat up against some very sore female anatomy.

It gave, she decided, a whole new meaning to the phrase up close and personal.

“Everything okay?” a low voice at her ear asked as Lucky ambled forward.

“Uh-huh.” She could hardly tell him that her nerves were stretched as taut as some of her muscles.

A skillful flick of the reins had the horse turning to retrace its steps. “We’ll take it slow and easy.”

“Uh-huh.” She wanted it fast and done with. A foolish wish, she knew. The stallion couldn’t handle both their weights and run a race at the same time. And, truth be told, her body wasn’t up to being jostled more than necessary.

As though well aware of the shape she was in, Ryder grasped the reins with one hand and slid an arm loosely around her waist. “If you tense up now, you’ll suffer for it later. Why don’t you lean on me and try to relax?”

The offer caught her off guard. Yet it shouldn’t have, she quickly realized. By and large, cowboys seemed to be naturally chivalrous. Fantasy knights in shining armor? No. Gallant in their own way? Absolutely. She recalled how Cody Bodeen had automatically tipped his hat. Ryder’s suggestion probably meant nothing more than that. Knowing she was bone tired, he had reacted accordingly.

What he didn’t know was that she seldom leaned on anyone, physically or emotionally. Her parents, special souls that they were, had raised her to be independent, encouraged her to never be afraid to try her wings. And she blessed them for it every time she met capable people too bound by what others thought they should be doing with their lives to try theirs. In her own way she had soared. Not to great heights but great enough for her. And she’d done it on her own. Still, that didn’t mean she couldn’t lean on someone else just a bit right now, just for a little while.

Eve let out a long breath and reclined slightly against the man behind her.

“That’s better,” he told her. “You won’t even have to put anything extra in my paycheck for the service.”

It made her smile faintly, eased more of her tension. “I’ll stick a gold star on your personnel file instead,” she promised, tongue in cheek.

“Thanks. I was afraid I’d have to do something truly amazing, like stand on my head on the back of a horse, to get one of those.”

The image had her chuckling. “Have you ever actually tried that?”

“Yeah,” he acknowledged, “when I was young and stupid.”

Although he’d certainly been young once, she didn’t believe for a second that this man had ever been less than intelligent. Reckless, perhaps. Stupid, never. “What happened?”

“I landed on the head I was trying to stand on.”

Now she gave in to the wince she’d held back earlier. “That’s a mental picture I can do without. Recent experience has proved it’s painful enough landing on the other end.” She let out a breath. “I have to admit I’ve been waiting to hear you say I told you so.”

“I told you so.”

His all-too-ready response had her grumbling. “Guess I should have kept my mouth shut.” But there was no real heat in that statement. “Is Sable following us?”

Ryder’s chin brushed her temple as he turned his head. “She’s there, all right, keeping her distance and having a great time, judging by the way she’s dancing around.”

Despite her exhaustion, Eve’s jaw set with determination. “I’m going to ride her again.”

“Eve—”

“But not outside a corral for the time being,” she assured him before he could continue the stern warning she was sure would have followed. “Not until I feel I can handle her no matter what we come across.”

His tone turned wry in a flash. “Does that include dead mesquite branches?”

Eve still had her pride, and she was sticking to her story. “It looked like a damned snake.”

RYDER VIEWED the sight of ranch buildings in the distance with sheer relief, grateful to know they were almost there. The return ride had seemed endless, and time had little to do with it. He assumed Eve was at least half-asleep, since she hadn’t said a word in some time and now leaned heavily against him, obviously totally relaxed.

He, on the other hand, was as tense as a steel fence post and quietly going crazy.

Even if Eve had been fully awake, her backside might be too numb to feel what pressed against it with growing enthusiasm, unmistakable evidence of a physical reaction he’d tried to curb. And failed. Thoughts of ranch business, which normally won his full attention, had proved to be no match for the lure of a woman’s softness.

And added to that, he supposed, was what he’d learned today about this particular woman.

Eve Terry could take it when the going got tough, and she did it without complaint. With some people, he knew the whining would have long since started. Hell, being thrown from a horse and then coping with a possible snakebite would have left more than a few shaken to the point of tears, not to mention hysterics.

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