He scared the hell out of her, but she’d been through a lot. A lot worse than some dangerous, sexy stranger standing on her porch holding spilled groceries.
“Tell me your name, Mary Smith.”
“I never said it was Smith.”
“Yeah, I know. Mary, you said, from here and there. Mary Smith from Peoria works pretty well, don’t you think?” Again he lifted those ironic, suspicious eyebrows. “As well as anything else.”
How did he know? she asked herself again. No one else had guessed she was lying. To cover the trembling in her arms, she marched toward him, key in hand. She had to pass him to get to the door and he didn’t move much out of her way. It was an obnoxious maneuver. She elbowed him sideways, trying to keep the ripple of awareness from overtaking her senses.
But damn, she thought as she fumbled with the stupid key, in addition to that aura of sex appeal he wore like exotic cologne, he was a giant. Her head didn’t even reach his shoulder. There was something exciting about a man so large—something primitive and reassuring that probably went back to caveman days. A big man like this might have a chance of defending a woman.
On the other hand, he might very easily be henchman material, hired to seek out that very same witness. The thought sent fingers of icy fear over her spine.
The key slipped home. Mattie opened the door and dumped her armful of groceries on a small table, then went to take Zeke’s load from him. He stood on her porch, as if sensing she didn’t want him to cross the threshold.
She plucked the groceries from his brawny arms and he stood there, cloaked in an amused calm, allowing her to take them, his gaze following her movements with a concentrated attention Mattie felt as a caress on her body. She felt him notice her legs, her hips, her breasts. It was not entirely unpleasant.
The last item he held was an apple. He held it up. “You know about apples, don’t you?” he said lazily, and bit into it with his strong white teeth. The flesh made a sharp cracking noise and a little of the juice moistened his lower lip.
A jolt of pure desire blazed through Mattie’s chest. Who would have dreamed an apple could be such a sexy thing?
He watched her, his gaze glimmering with something hot and promising. Mattie, halted a few inches from him, was struck deeply by two things.
The first was his scent. Not cologne or soap or anything artificial, it was deep and elemental, like moist earth steaming in the sun of a summer noon. And with the scent came a sense of heat, as if he were fevered.
The combination was so alluring, Mattie forgot to be careful, forgot she had to be on guard against everyone. She found herself, once again, simply staring at him, snared by the hard planes and generous mouth and unusual pale green eyes. The elusive shimmer made the color seem to flicker oddly, and Mattie felt another bolt of bone-deep yearning.
“Who are you?” she breathed.
He leaned in close. His gaze touched her mouth, lingered there. “Every man your mama ever warned you about,” he said softly, the drawl slipping through her flesh like an incantation.
That brought her around. What an arrogant pig! “I don’t have a mother, and I think you watch too many bad movies if you have to resort to lines like that.”
One arched dark eyebrow lifted. “Yeah?” Bracing himself on the threshold with one hand, the apple in the other, Zeke swayed toward Mattie until that rich, sensual mouth hung suspended just millimeters from her own. His breath whispered over her lips as he spoke. “You keep lookin’ at me like that and it’ll be more than secrets that I get from that pretty mouth of yours.”
She just looked at him, amazed and stunned that, after so many years, she could feel the kind of arousal she felt now, over a man she’d never seen twelve hours before.
He went still. Very, very still. With one finger, he lightly stroked her bottom lip. Stunned by the narcotic effect he had on her, Mattie allowed the slow deliberate touch.
Abruptly, he pulled away. His lips turned up in something very close to a sneer. “I’m not playing this game, Miss Mary.”
Stung, she hastily backed away. “It wasn’t me touching you.”
“Don’t kid yourself.” He tossed the apple aside, into the trees, and headed for the motorcycle. She watched as he mounted, pulled the enormous machine upright from the kickstand and took the mirrored sunglasses from his shirt pocket. With a flick of his wrist, he started the engine.
Looking at her, he took a rubber band from around his wrist and tugged his hair into a ponytail, then roared out, wind blowing his shirt against his chest. She watched until the trees swallowed him and the little dirt clearing was silent again.
Moving as if in a dream, Mattie went inside, shut the door and leaned against it. So this was lust, she thought, touching her middle. Good Lord.
She would have let him kiss her. Without an instant of regret or hesitation. When he pulled away, her most acute emotion had been disappointment.
But that was foolish. Very foolish. She didn’t have the luxury to indulge some lusty awakening on the part of her body, especially when she had no idea who he was or why he was so interested in her secrets.
A little noise against the window made her whirl, terrified. She stared wildly at the multi-paned square, seeking the source of the sound.
She sagged when she saw it was a twig from the pine tree outside the window.
“Mattie,” she said aloud, speaking to herself from long habit, “you are an idiot.” She began to put away the groceries, slamming them unnecessarily.
Willfully, she called up the night that had sent her running to this invisible little town—called up details she fought to keep tamped down. The memories would give her nightmares, but maybe she needed to be scared a little.
She called up the memory of an after-hours warehouse, the sound of gunfire, and blood. So much blood. She had slipped in it, trying to get away—
Familiar nausea filled her throat with bile. That was enough.
Hiding herself, living a lie, were things Mattie had never attempted. Maybe she was just getting careless and comfortable. If a complete stranger knew she was lying about her name, it was time to get moving. Find some other little town to hide in.
*
IT WAS ZEKE’S habit to rise early, one born in childhood when he’d awakened to help his mother weed the garden, knowing it would be the only time he could have her to himself in a day.
So even now, when his work was in the evenings and sometimes ran very late, he found himself wide awake as dawn broke the night sky. Over the past months, he’d developed a habit of going to the canyon, knowing that if he got there early enough, as with his mother, he’d have it to himself.
Of all the flyspecks on the map he’d blown through the past eighteen months, Kismet would be the hardest for him to leave behind, a thought that bothered him this morning—just a little. He had a rule about getting attached to things. When you got attached, you got in trouble. People, animals, places—he didn’t let himself get too comfortable with any of them. Probably time to move on.
But this morning, he was here, and that was good. He stripped at the edge of the river, taking deep pleasure in the brush of cool morning air against his skin. Overhead, a tangle of larks and sparrows sang to the light, as if it were a unique event. He smiled at them, standing on the bank for a moment to brace himself. Taking a deep breath, he touched his stomach in preparation, and with a whoop, jumped into a deep pool.
The water was a biting, icy shock—exhilarating as it stabbed through his hair and needled his flesh. He touched bottom and pushed himself back up, then lazily paddled in the broad pool, admiring the colors around him.
Back in Mississippi, rivers were wide and muddy and slow, as if the heat sucked their energy from them. Their banks were covered with cattails and grass. This river was crystal clear and mountain-cold and ran fast through the canyon it had carved from red sandstone. There was no mud to speak of, because the streambed was the rock itself.
The beauty of it was that the
water had played capricious games with the soft rock, creating slides and carving pools and ignoring little flats, with no rhyme or reason. Later in the day, it would be crowded with tourists, come from the campgrounds nearby to enjoy the miracle.
He kicked out and submerged himself again, now used to the invigorating cold. He looked at the sky, vividly blue above the red of the rocks, and wondered that such color could exist.
It was only then that he became aware of a prickling uneasiness. With a flush of embarrassment, he wondered if some campers had wandered over. He’d been coming here since summer started and had never been discovered. After a few weeks, he’d shed his cutoffs in favor of skinny-dipping just because it seemed natural to do so in such a place. Keeping himself covered to the shoulders, he spun around slowly, peering into the trees at one side of the water. Nothing moved but a squirrel, who chattered in some irritation at Zeke’s gall invading the quiet so early. He grinned to himself, relieved, and splashed backward to lean on a rock in the warming sunlight.
It was only then he caught sight of her, standing at the foot of a path that probably led straight back to her little cabin.
Mary. He wiped water from his face and straightened. “Well, well, well,” he said. “I’m just runnin’ into you all over the place.”
She carried a small paper bag and a thermos. “I come here every morning to eat my breakfast,” she said, and pointed to a small outcropping of rocks on the other side of the stream. A natural staircase led to the perch. “I won’t bother you.”
“Maybe I’ll bother you.”
“I doubt it.” He saw that it took some effort, but she resolutely headed toward the perch, leaving her sandals at the edge of the stream to splash through the shallows to the stairs. When she reached the top, she settled herself primly with her bag in her lap. “You mind your business and I’ll mind mine.”
Zeke half smiled. She probably had no idea he’d left his clothes in a pile at the edge of the water, or she wouldn’t be quite so calm. The pool he stood in was deep enough to cloak his nakedness, but if he moved at all, the clear water wouldn’t hide much. “Nice sentiment,” he said, “but we’ve got a little problem.”
“What’s that?”
“Well, Miss Mary, all my clothes are over there on the bank.”
A flash of something crossed her face—satisfaction? She raised her eyebrows. “I guess you’ll have to wait until I’m finished with my breakfast to finish your swim, then, won’t you?”
Zeke licked his bottom lip. It had been a mistake to underestimate this woman. She might look young and naïve, but there was something hard as barbed wire running beneath it all. If he hadn’t been so rattled by that mouth yesterday, he would have realized it, too.
“Not necessarily.”
She shrugged, cracking open a peanut. Her composure was utterly unrattled this morning, and he wondered what had brought about the change.
“I think you’re pretty mad at me, aren’t you?”
“Why would I be mad? You deliberately tried to embarrass me at the restaurant, then you followed me home, dropped all these innuendos, then made it sound like I was the one who initiated things.” A blaze of color touched her cheeks. “Not to mention the fact you stuck your nose in where it didn’t belong.”
“All right, all right.” He raised a hand. “You’re right. I’m sorry.”
Sunlight angled through the high trees and over the canyon wall to strike her face. “I’ll turn around if you want to get out.”
“Much obliged.”
She stood up, and Zeke frowned over her clothes—a dowdy pair of baggy shorts with an equally dowdy, baggy tank top. He winced at the waste of that body in those clothes as she turned around, putting her back to him.
For a moment, he paused, struck by the tenderness of her nape. He followed the path of her spine downward to the barely visible outline of her rear end, down farther over the taut thighs and strong calves, tanned to a deep golden hue.
“You’d better hurry up,” she warned. “I’m not going to stand here waiting forever.”
Zeke pushed out of the water and dashed for the bank, feeling a little tightening of his muscles as he scrambled into his briefs and cutoffs. Much as he hated to do it, he tugged his shirt on, too. Cover the scars.
He turned around and saw to his relief she was still standing with her back to him. “All right,” he called.
She settled once more on her perch. “Maybe you shouldn’t be out here skinny-dipping.”
He waded through the shallows toward her, even though he told himself he ought to be moving in the opposite direction. “You’re the first person who has ever come here.”
“There’s not really room for two up here,” she said as he began to climb up the slope.
“Sure there is. Move your fanny over.”
She scooted like a little brown mouse, her mirth and bravado shrinking as he sat down next her. He chuckled. “What’s wrong, Miss Mary? You scared of the giant?”
“I’m afraid of falling off here.”
“You could sit on my lap.”
“I think not.” To avoid his eyes, she dug in her bag and came up with a handful of peanuts in their shells.
“Some breakfast,” he commented and grabbed the bag to peer inside. Peanuts, another apple, a paper carton of orange juice and a small thermos. “Will you share?”
“Help yourself.”
He held up the thermos. “Is this coffee?” She nodded. “But I’m afraid it has cream. I never did learn to like it black.”
“That’s okay, Miss Mary. I’ll drink it your way.”
She didn’t make a response, just cracked open a peanut and picked out the nuts from within. As he poured a cupful of the still-steaming brew, he caught her sidelong glance sweeping over his bare legs.
“So, what are you doing up so early?” he asked.
“I have to be to work at five-thirty. Even on my days off, I can’t sleep past four.” A shadow crossed her eyes, and she was suddenly not with him here on the sandstone table, but lost somewhere inside herself. He narrowed his eyes and wondered again what she was hiding. A violent husband? Maybe. It was plain she was scared to death.
He restrained himself from asking any more questions, however. Bad enough he’d crawled up here to sit with her. “I like early morning,” he said, admiring the sky. “Private, quiet, peaceful.”
“I never knew I did until—” She broke off, bowing her head in consternation.
“I’m not gonna pry this morning,” he said quietly. “Promise.”
She raised wide brown eyes. “I never got up this early before I started working at the restaurant. I guess you do it all the time?”
“Pretty much.” He cracked a peanut and poured the nuts into his palm. “You ever wait tables before?”
A small, rueful smile touched her mouth. “No. It wasn’t a pleasant sight the first few days.”
He chuckled. “Roxanne train you?”
“Yes. She was so patient, too. She never yelled at me once.”
“She’s a good lady. Good waitress, too.”
Mattie looked at him, and he could see her weighing something in her mind. “She—um—rather likes you.” She pinched an earlobe. “That’s not really the right word, but you know what I mean.”
“Yeah.”
“It’s not mutual?”
“Are you matchmaking, Miss Mary?”
With a little shrug, she tossed the stem of an apple into the water. “Maybe.”
He inclined his head, wondering why she would take that role when he’d been getting pretty clear signals that she “liked” him, as she put it. He touched her bare arm with one finger, liking the silky pale flesh and the jolt it gave her. “Why don’t you match-make me with you?” he drawled. “Might be more successful.”
She didn’t look at him. “You aren’t my type, and I’m not yours.”
Only yesterday, Zeke had told himself the same thing. Two different worlds, lifestyles, values, every
thing. But he found his gaze wandering over the smooth length of her long neck, down to the shadow he could glimpse between her breasts, over her smooth, pretty legs.
“How do you know until you try?” he said.
She turned her head, and now she was so close, Zeke could see the green and blue and yellow flecks in the brown irises. “I know,” she said, but the huskiness in her voice betrayed her.
Below their dangling feet, the water rushed merrily over the rocks. Birds twittered and cheeped. A soft breeze, smelling of all the best of the outdoors, swept a lock of her hair over her forehead. Zeke let his fingers trace her upper arm and fall into the hollow of her elbow, tracing the path his fingers took with his eyes. An abrupt and insistent heat spread through his groin.
It would be so easy to disarm her, he thought. She was ready to fall right now. All he had to do was lean forward and press his mouth someplace that would surprise her—the sensitive hollow below her ear, the edge of her shoulder, her palm.
She swayed just a little toward him, and the motion brought Zeke to his senses. Alarmed, he snatched his hand away and swore softly.
He’d done it again.
In one day, this soft little mouse of a woman had tempted him into all kinds of thoughts he didn’t let himself have. He shook his head. Just hungry, he guessed. A man couldn’t go without forever, after all. Obviously, he was getting to the end of his celibacy.
But it would be a mistake to let himself go with this woman. A big mistake.
“I gotta go.”
He turned and scrambled down the rock, skinning his heel in his haste to get away from her.
“Zeke?” She climbed down after him, running a little to catch up. “Wait a minute.”
He steeled himself and spun around, pasting an annoyed look on his face to discourage anything sweet coming from her.
It worked. A little bit, anyway. She stopped a foot away, her bare feet sunk to the ankles in silvery water. She was still too close. He could smell her shampoo and see a gleam of that innocent hunger in her big brown eyes as she stared up at him. Way, way up, because she wasn’t real tall and Zeke didn’t meet many men bigger than he was.
Bad Boy Heroes Boxed Set Page 103