An Intimate Bargain. Barbara DunlopЧитать онлайн книгу.
guessed were well-muscled, shoulders. She wondered if he also had a six-pack.
“You grew up in Lyndon?” he asked.
“I did.”
Technically her family’s ranch was two hours west of Lyndon. But she wasn’t going to fret over the details. Tonight she was a city girl through and through.
“Brothers and sisters?” he asked.
“Both. You?” She didn’t think the question would take them too far down the road to revealing their identities. Mainly, she didn’t want him to know she was the mayor’s sister, and she didn’t want him to know she was really a ranch hand.
He shook his head. “Nope.”
“You were an only child?”
“That’s right. Watch where you’re going.”
She turned her head to discover they were only a few feet from the first picnic table. The grass was about to give way to sand.
“Perfect,” she pronounced, dropping her sandals to the ground and stepping up on the wooden bench seat, intending to perch on the tabletop facing the lake.
“Hold up there.” Lucky swiftly set down the burgers. Stripping off his blazer, he laid it down like a blanket for her to sit on. The simple gesture made her chest tighten.
“Gotta love Texans,” she joked, taking in the breadth of his chest beneath the thin, white cotton shirt. The fabric was tight over his biceps, and she was more willing than ever to lay a bet on him having six-pack abs.
“Can’t have you ruining your dress,” he said.
“So we’re going to ruin your jacket instead?” But she sat down on the warm satin lining.
He shrugged, plunking down beside her, placing the burgers and shakes between them.
A couple of fat mallards splashed and waddled their way out of the water, crossing the pebbles and sand to investigate their presence, obviously on the lookout for bread crumbs.
Lucky handed her a foil-wrapped burger. “The jacket will clean.”
“So would the dress.”
He simply shrugged again.
The wrapper crackled as she peeled it halfway down the thick burger. Then Lucky was handing her a shake with a plastic straw already sticking through the lid.
She transferred the burger to the opposite hand as she accepted the drink, taking a sip of the icy, smooth treat.
“Yum,” she acknowledged, then took a bite of the burger. It was juicy and flavorful, with a fresh bun and crisp condiments. Her stomach rumbled quietly in anticipation.
“I’m starving,” she muttered around the bite.
“Me, too,” he agreed with a nod, digging in to his own burger. “Long day on the road.”
“Long day in the office for me.”
Then they both ate in silence, while a few more ducks made their way over from a small, reed-filled marsh. Abigail tossed them some bits of bun, and they quacked with excitement, wings flapping, orange beaks pecking the ground.
Satiated, she took a long drink of the milk shake and threw the remains of her bun to the birds.
“Better?” asked Lucky, crumpling his wrapper and tossing it into the empty bag. She tucked hers away, as well, and he set the trash behind them.
“Much better,” she acknowledged.
His gaze settled on the black horizon, where the moon was coming up over the mountains, fading the stars that were scattered across the sky. “So, are you going to tell me?”
“Tell you what?”
“What’s going on here?”
She waggled her cardboard cup at him, pretending to misunderstand his question. “I’m finishing my milk shake.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
“Then what did you mean?”
“You must have guys hitting on you all the time.”
Abigail coughed out a laugh. “Not really.”
She’d spent most of her life in dusty blue jeans, hair in a sensible ponytail, face free of makeup while she worked up a sweat on the land. Things had been slightly different during the campaign. But most of the attention had been on her brother Seth, and most of the people she spoke to in Lyndon remembered her as a little freckle-faced, red-haired girl with pigtails and skinned knees.
Lucky gazed down at her. “First of all, I don’t believe you. Second, I’m betting you don’t usually accept dinner invitations from strange men.”
She took a long, noisy slurp, draining the milk shake. “I do when it’s a mountain burger.”
He gently removed the cup from her hand, setting it on the table behind them. “Spill, Doll-Face. Who are you hiding from?”
“That’s a stupid name.” But she couldn’t seem to tear her gaze from his.
“Then tell me your real name.”
“No.” She was enjoying this anonymity. For a brief space of time, she wasn’t Seth’s campaign manager, or Travis’s stalwart sister and ranch hand. She was her own woman, nothing more, nothing less.
“Then Doll-Face is all I’ve got.” Lucky’s smooth baritone rolled over her like warm honey.
It really was a silly name, but when he said it, it sounded sweet. He reached up and brushed a strand of hair back from her forehead, and her skin tingled behind the touch.
“Don’t do that.” She closed her eyes, hiding her emotion as the incredible sensation slowly ebbed.
“Sorry.”
She shook her head, regretting the sharpness of her outburst. “Don’t worry about it.”
“You had to know I was attracted to you.”
Had to? No. Suspected? Sure. She wasn’t stupid.
After a long moment, he spoke again. “So why’d you come with me?”
She opened her eyes, and it was her turn to drink in the blackened horizon and the sharpening moon. She hesitated to tell him anything remotely close to the truth, but reality had been burning in her brain all evening long, and it seemed desperate to get out. “Because I’m putting off tomorrow,” she told him on a sigh. “It’s going to be a very bad day.”
She expected him to press for details, was already weighing exactly how much she’d say.
But he didn’t ask. Instead, he shifted, and the wooden table creaked beneath his weight. “I hear you.” He paused. “There’s a better-than-even chance that my tomorrow’s going to suck, too.”
Despite herself, he had her curious. She turned to take in his profile. “Yeah?”
He set aside his own cardboard cup. “Yeah.”
“Family?” she probed, promising herself, whatever it was, she’d keep the conversation to generalities.
He shook his head.
“Girlfriend?” she dared, swallowing a sudden lump.
He turned to paste her with a scowl. “While I’m hitting on you? Thanks tons, Doll-Face.”
She tried not to feel quite so relieved. “Gambling, drinking, illness?”
“Business,” he answered, his tone smoothing out. “There’s a problem with my mysterious, yet perfectly legitimate, business interests. But I take it your problem is family?”
“What makes you say that?”
“It