It had been a long day and it was colder than a
well-digger's backside. Cade had been working like a dog and
wanted a little reward. He wouldn't be getting it from a
woman tonight, so Cade Pritchett looked inside the cafe,
trying to decide whether or not to indulge in a slice of
cherry pie.
Cade looked away. Since that insane moment
he'd proposed to Thunder Canyon's beauty queen, the woman
he'd dated casually the past few years, he'd become all too
aware of his burning need for a family of his own. It didn't
make sense because Cade wasn't interested in falling in
love. He'd done that once and lost the woman to an accident.
He wasn't interested in risking his heart, but he wanted
more than what he had now. A partnership in his father's
business, his own spread just outside of town and his hobby
rebuilding motorcycles. Oh, and his hound dog, Stella. He
should have listed her first.
From his side, he heard
a sniffling sound. Curious, he glanced over and saw Abby
Cates wiping her nose as she leaned against the cafe window.
His stomach clenched. Abby, little sister of the woman he'd
asked to marry him during the Frontier Days celebration.
That had been a monumental mistake.
He heard Abby
sniff again and Cade felt a surge of concern. He should
check on the girl. The poor thing looked upset. He moved
toward her.
"Hey, what's up? Or down?"
Abby
glanced up in shock, her wide eyes blinking in surprise.
"Hi," she said and gave another sniff and surreptitious wipe
of her nose with her tissue. "What are you doing
here?"
"Thinking about getting a piece of pie," he
said. "Long day."
She nodded and blinked away her
tears. "This is the beginning of one of your busy seasons,
isn't it?"
"Yeah, how'd you remember?" he
asked.
"Osmosis," she said. "I guess I eventually
noticed during the last few years when you didn't hang
around the house as much."
"Yeah," he said. "So,
what's with the sniffles? I don't think it's allergies or a
cold."
She shrugged and lowered her gaze, her eyelids
hiding her emotions from him. "I don't know. Lots of changes
going on at my house. I guess I'm going to miss
Laila
now that she's getting married," she said, then froze and
met his gaze. "I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to say—"
He
waved his hand in dismissal. "No problem. My pride was hurt
more than anything else. Laila and I were never crazy in
love. I shouldn't have been such a darned fool by proposing
to her," he said.
"You weren't the fool. Laila was.
She should have never let you get away," she
said.
Cade laughed and shook his head. It felt nicer
than he'd like to admit for Abby to rush to his defense, but
he knew more than most that romance and emotion could be
fickle and elusive. He shoved his hands into the pockets of
his sheepskin jacket. "You shouldn't be out here in the
cold," he said. "Let me buy you a cup of hot
chocolate."
She met his gaze for a long moment, and he
saw a flurry of emotions he couldn't quite name except one.
Defiance.
She licked her lips. "I'd like something a
little stronger than hot chocolate."
Surprise punched
through him. "Something stronger," he said. "You're a little
young for that, aren't you?"
She gave a husky chuckle.
"Are you suffering from a little dementia due to your
advanced years? I'm twenty-two."
"Whoa," he said.
"When did I miss that?"
"I guess you weren't
looking,"
she said wryly. Her chocolate-brown eyes flashed with humor,
and his gaze slid over her silky, long brown hair.
"I
guess not," he said. "So you want to go to
the
Hitching Post?"
"Sure," she said with a
shrug, and they walked down the street to the town's most
popular bar and hangout. It was crowded when they walked
inside, so he hooked his hand under her elbow and guided her
to the far end of the bar.
"Hey, Abby," a young man
said from halfway across the room.
She glanced up and
shot the guy a smile. "Hi, Abby," a young woman called.
"Hey, Corinne," she said.
"You seem pretty popular
here," Cade said, finding a space next to the bar. "How
often do you come?"
She shook her head and rolled her
eyes. "I know those people from my classes at college. I'm
usually too busy to spend much time here. They're probably
surprised to see me here."
He nodded. "What do you
want to drink?"
"A beer's okay," she said with a
shrug.
He noticed her lack of enthusiasm. "What
kind?"
"Whatever you're having is fine," she
said.
He felt a twinge of amusement. "You really don't
like beer."
"I'm working on it," she said. "At least
once a year."
He laughed out loud. "I'll get you one
of those pink girly drinks. Cosmo," he said to the
bartender. "And a beer for me. Whatever you have on
draft."
Moments later, she sipped her pink martini and
he drank his beer. "It's loud in here," he said.
She
stirred her drink with the tiny straw. "Yeah, I guess that
might bother you older folks," she said with a naughty
smile.
He shook his head. Her teasing gave him a kick.
"Yeah, I'm thirty. Don't rub it in. What have you been doing
lately?"
"School. College," she corrected. "I'm also
working at the youth center. And as you know, my family can
get a little demanding. I have a part-time job teaching
skiing lessons at the resort when I can fit it in. What
about you? How's that new motorcycle coming?"
He was
surprised she'd remembered. "Close to perfection, but I'm
still tinkering with it."
"You wouldn't know
perfection if it slapped you in the face," she
teased.
Cade liked the way her long eyelashes dipped
over her eyes flirtatiously. Someday, Abby could be trouble,
he thought. "What do you mean by that?"
"I mean you
have that perfection complex. Nothing you do is ever good
enough. Not with your woodworking. Not with your
motorcycle."
She nailed him in one fell swoop, taking
him off guard. "How'd you know that?"
"I've known you
for years." She took the last sip of her cosmo martini. "How
could I not know that?"
For one sliver of a second,
she looked at him as if he was a dork then shrugged. "You
want another one?" he asked.
She shook her head and
smiled. "No. I'm a lightweight. Already feel this one. I'll
take some water."
Cade ordered water for her and
continued talking with Laila's little sister with whom he'd
played board games and computer games when he'd been waiting
for Laila. He was distracted by her mouth. Especially when
she licked her lips after taking a sip of her water. Her
lips were plump, shiny and sexy. He shouldn't notice, but he
sure did.
"So you're busy at work," she said and took
another long sip of water. "Bet your father's driving you
crazy."
"Yeah," he admitted. "No need to repeat
that."
She laughed. "I won't. That could be tricky
working with your dad. I mean, I love my own dad, but I
can't control him."
"That's for sure," he said,
thinking of his own father.
She clicked her half-empty
water glass against his beer and dipped her head. "We agree.
Cheers."
"So, what are you majoring in?" he
asked.
"Psychology. I finish next spring, but I may
need to get an advanced degree. I like working with the
teens."
"I can see where you would be good at that,"
he said, thinking that although Abby appeared very young,
she was pretty mature for her age.
"I don't know what
I'll do after I graduate. I haven't decided if I'll leave
Thunder Canyon or not," she said.
Her statement gave
him a start. "You would leave town?"
"I may have to if
I want to get an advanced degree. Plus, with everything
going on with my family, it may be time for me to strike out
on my own by then."
He nodded. "If you wanted to stay,
you could get an advanced degree online. And just because
you move out of your parents' house doesn't mean you have to
move out of town."
She smiled. "You almost sound like
you'd like me stay. That can't be true. You barely notice
me."
"You're a quality girl—" He broke off. "Woman,"
he corrected himself. "I hate to see Thunder Canyon lose a
good woman like you."
"Ah, so it's your civic duty to
encourage me to stay here," she said.
He felt a twist
of discomfort. "Lots of people would miss you."
"Well,
I haven't made any decisions yet. I need to finish my
classes first. I'm just glad the end is in sight. What do
you think about the rivalry between LipSmackin' Ribs and
DJ's Rib Shack?"
Cade would have had to have been deaf
and blind not to know about the controversy between Thunder
Canyon's longtime favorite barbecue restaurant DJ's Rib
Shack and the the new rib place, which featured waitresses
dressed in tight T-shirts. "I'm a DJ's man all the way. I
don't like it that the Hitching Post started featuring
LipSmackin' Ribs on the menu and I refuse to order them.
I'll buy drinks here, but no ribs."
"So you've never
even visited LipSmackin' Ribs?"
"I went a few times
just to see what the fuss was about," he said.
"You
mean the skimpy uniforms the waitresses wear," she
said.
He shook his head and rubbed his jaw. "I pity
your future boyfriend. He won't be able to pull anything
over on you."
"Future? How do you know I don't have a
boyfriend right now?" she asked. "I don't, but I certainly
could. There are even some men who think I'm attractive,
some who ask me to go out with them."
"I didn't mean
it that way. And you be careful about those guys. You make
sure they have the right intentions."
She shot him a
playfully sly look so seductive he almost dropped his beer.
"What would you say are the right intentions?" she
asked.
His tongue stuck in the back of his throat for
a few seconds. "I mean just that—you need to make sure they
have the right intentions. You shouldn't let anyone take
advantage of you."
"Unless that's what I want him to
do, right?"
He choked on his beer. Where had this
vixen come from? Although she'd been a spirited competitor
whenever she'd played games and been far more knowledgeable
about sports than most females he knew, Cade had always seen
her as Laila's sweet little sister. "I think it's time for
you to go home. I'm starting to hear things come out of your
mouth that aren't possible." He waved for the bartender to
bring the bill.
"Oh, don't tell me I scared big,
strong Cade Pritch-ett," she teased as he finished his beer
and tossed some bills on the counter.
"There's more
than one way to scare a man. Let's go," he said and ushered
her through the bar to the door.
Abby felt higher than
a kite. She'd been waiting forever for the time when it was
just her and Cade. She'd had a secret crush on Cade since
even before her sister had dated him, and watching Laila's
wishy-washy attitude toward Cade had nearly put her over the
edge on more than one occasion during the past few
years.
But now, she thought, her heart beating so fast
she could hardly breathe, she had Cade all to herself, if
only for a few more moments. "So is most of your work right
now for people who want to get special Christmas
gifts?"
"A good bit of it," he said. "But there's a
potential for a big order. We'll find out soon." He stopped
abruptly. "Is that old man Henson trying to change a tire on
his truck?" he asked, pointing down the street.
Abby
tore her gaze from Cade's and felt a twist of sympathy mixed
with alarm. "I think it is. Isn't he almost eighty-five? He
shouldn't be changing a tire during daylight let alone at
this time of night," she said.
"Exactly," he said and
quickened his pace. "Mr. Hen-son," he called. "Let me give
you a hand with that."
Abby joined Cade as they
reached the elderly man, who'd already jacked up the truck.
"I'm fine," he said, glancing up at them, his craggy face
wrinkled in a wince of pain. "It's these dang rusted
bolts."
"Let me take a shot at them. Abby, maybe Mr.
Henson might like a cup of that hot chocolate I was talking
about earlier."