by Sabrina York
“Awesome. You eat those bagels. Hanna and I have croissants.”
The twin’s eyes lit up, but Logan growled. “They’re ours,” he snapped. “Go into town and get your own. In fact, just go into town.”
Rafe batted his lashes. “We didn’t interrupt anything, did we?”
“Of course not—”
“Because you seem pretty grumpy.”
“I am not grumpy.”
“He seems pretty grumpy.”
“Damn near took my head off.”
“And here we went and brought him breakfast and all.”
“Bagels, even!”
“All polite-like and everything.”
“What would your mother say?”
“Shame, shame, shame.”
Hanna couldn’t help it. Amusement rose within her and erupted in a bubble of laughter. It was ludicrous. It was adorable. It was frustrating as hell. She could feel Logan’s irritation coming off him in waves. But they were his brothers. They’d probably be around a lot. They’d just better get used to it.
She shook her head and patted Logan on the shoulder. “You all have a nice chat,” she said. “I’m going to fix, um, I am going back to work. I have a mural to finish.” And even though a chorus of dissent swelled behind her, she went back to her corner and surveyed the smudged mess she and Logan had made of her sketch.
It should have annoyed her. It had taken an hour to do. But as she studied it, she saw in it something primal and profound, this swirl of chalk and smudges. An eddy, a whorl of passion there against the wall.
And she decided to keep it.
Chapter Twenty-three
The first day in Red Oak formed the pattern for the days to come. And the first night replayed itself as well. Although all the Wilders did not descend each evening. Sometimes it was just the brothers. Occasionally Sam and Diane came by with Louisa in tow, but most nights, it was just them.
Just Logan and Hanna. Together. Alone.
The mural began to take form. Once the sketch was finished, she began to block in the colors. Each day, she returned to the little bungalow after work, covered in whatever hue she’d been exploring.
The work wouldn’t match the painting, she found, but it was an echo of it, like a call down a canyon. Sometimes receding and sometimes swelling in a great crescendo of resonance. Her daytime world became those walls, but her nights belonged to Logan.
When the mural was close enough she could bear to share it, she invited Sidney, Porsche, Amy, and her parents to come down and check it out. While her mom wandered through the cavernous great room wondering aloud when they would be heading home, her father, sister, and friends oohed and ahhed over the beauty of her work.
“Baby girl,” Daddy said, pulling her into a warm hug. “I’m so proud of you.”
“It’s a damn shame,” Amy added, “that I can’t put this in the gallery.”
Porsche and Sidney were equally effusive.
“They loved it,” Logan said to her after they’d all left. He kissed her forehead.
“Of course they loved it,” Hanna said. “They have to love it. They’re my family and friends.”
He gaped at her, his only response a snort.
“It’s true.”
“You’re crazy, you know.” He tugged her close.
“I am not.”
“You’re amazingly talented. Haven’t you noticed how all the workmen are coming in here for lunch now?”
“It’s air-conditioned in here.”
He growled. “It’s heaven in here. Look at that.” He swept his hand along the length of her work, the purple and plum fading to violet to blue as dawn broke on the wall. “Heaven.”
“You’re biased.”
“I know. I am. But that doesn’t change the fact that you have real talent.”
He shook a finger at her when she opened her mouth to respond. She intended to say “thank you,” but he didn’t allow it.
“No sass, missy,” he insisted with that look in his eye. “It would be a shame if I had to give you a spanking for back talk.”
“Mmm.” She nodded and glanced away, back at the mural she’d created, a smile tugging at her lips. A shame, indeed.
***
She finished the mural the next morning, fighting back the swelling regret. Oh, it still needed work, touch-ups and shadings here and there, but the bulk of it was done. She would be leaving soon.
And she didn’t want to go.
She’d come to love her evenings with Logan, even when his brothers were there, egging her into a game of poker or going into raptures over her apple pie. And she loved when Diane and Sam came over—though the conversations were far more sedate and, it had to be said, civilized. Far less belching. But as much as Hanna enjoyed his family, she treasured her time alone with Logan more. She knew they were on a short clock. When this project was finished there would be decisions to be made.
Oh, she knew what she wanted, what she needed, what she craved. There was no doubt in her mind.
More.
All of it.
Everything.
He’d snuck into her heart and nested there and she knew, even if he didn’t feel the same for her, he’d always be there, with her, forever. She missed her home, but that ache had receded, been replaced by one far larger, more all-consuming.
He was always loving, but he’d never said the words.
Then again, neither had she.
She wiped off her hands and stood back, staring at her work with a critical eye, cataloguing all the tweaks and refinements she wanted to make. The mural was exquisite, sweeping from the dark shadows of the bar toward the bright colors on the roll-up wall, which she’d opened to let in the sun. She’d known she’d finish this leg today, but hadn’t expected it to be so soon. Logan hadn’t even returned with their coffee and croissants.
But even as she thought of him, his footfalls sounded on the flagstone entryway and her heart swelled.
“I finished,” she called as she spun around, her arms wide.
And then she froze.
Because it wasn’t Logan.
It wasn’t one of his brothers or a workman or even a curious passerby who’d come in to see what kind of business was opening soon.
It was Zack.
His features were tight, his nostrils pinched. His eyes zeroed in on her like a bullet through the barrel of a gun. “Here you are.” Though it was low and silky, something in his tone sent shivers down her spine.
She tried to contain her cringe. “What are you doing here, Zack?” she asked.
He didn’t answer, merely strode inside like he owned the place and skated an insolent glance around the messy interior. “So this is it? This is where you ran to?”
“I didn’t run.”
He ignored her, taking in the tarps and brushes and the accoutrements of her work. He kicked over a pot of paint. It seeped over the floor like a black tide.
Hanna took a step back. She didn’t want to be here with him, alone like this. She never wanted to be with him, ever again. His menace reached out to her with sharp claws. Her gaze danced around the room, looking for something, a weapon, should she need one. The worktable was littered with her tools. Brushes, clean and dirty, rags, turpentine, a spackle knife. She edged closer.
Where had she left her cell phone? Damn. Over by the window. Too far away. Not that it mattered. If Logan wasn’t close, calling him wouldn’t help. Not if Zack decided to try something. Which seemed like a distinct possibility.
He put his hands on his hips and dropped his head, shaking it slowly. It was the demeanor of a defeated man. Hanna wasn’t fooled. “I told you,” he said, again in a deceptively smooth voice. “You’ll never be free of me. I’ll never let you go.”
A cold shiver trickled down her spine as he fixed her with
a dark look. Something maniacal flared in his eye. “Do you have any idea how long it took me to find you?”
“How-how did you find me, Zack?”
She didn’t care. Really she didn’t. She just needed to play for time until Logan got back. Until someone came.
He snorted a laugh. “I followed your pa. I figured he was comin’ to see you. And I was right. And here you are. This . . . this shit . . . is what has been keeping you from me.”
Annoyance flared inside her. “It’s not shit. It’s art.”
“It’s goddamn shit.” To her horror, he picked up the near-empty can of paint and flung it at the back wall, spattering her exquisite plum sunrise with ugly black spiders.
Oh, that annoyance? It turned into anger pretty damn quick as she stared at the damage to her creation. It boiled in her veins.
“You know what’s wrong with you, Zack Pucey?” she snarled. She knew she shouldn’t do this, but she couldn’t stop herself. Her fury—over years of repression at his hands, at the way he’d manipulated her and cheated her father and nearly ruined her life the way he’d ruined her mural—overcame her common sense. “You’re a small man.”
“What did you say?” His wrath crackled and spat through the room. She did not care.
“You’re a petty tyrant. Nothing more than a bully. And you can go to hell for all I care.”
He lunged at her then, but she was ready for him. She feinted to the right then dove to the left, grabbing the spackle knife. Edging back, she held it before her.
He laughed, a harsh cackle. “Really?” He smirked. “That’s gonna hold me off?”
It was shaped like flat spoon, but it had damn sharp points. Hanna had no doubt, if he rushed her, he’d feel it. Her confidence seemed to infuriate him.
“You know what I’m gonna do with you?” he sneered. When she didn’t answer, he continued on. “I’m going to take you back to Snake Gully and marry you. And then, every day, I am going to thrash the piss and vinegar right out of you. When I’m through, you won’t dare defy me.”
Her belly congealed into a hard ball. No. No. That was not going to happen. She’d kill him first. She’d—
“Beating women now?” The tightness in her chest released, everything released as Logan’s low, lazy tones engulfed her. She wanted to collapse, collapse into his arms, but couldn’t. Not yet. She held the knife higher, ignoring the fact that it shook. Logan came to her side and took it from her with a smile. Then he tipped her chin and kissed her, deliberately. For a long, long time. Until, in fact, Zack started to snarl.
“The fuck!” he howled. “Get your goddamn hands off my woman.”
“She’s not your woman,” Logan said. Clear and calm. His voice echoed in the room.
“Are you sayin’ she’s yours?” Zack spat.
Hanna fully expected him to say, “Yes damn it, she’s mine,” but he didn’t. What he said was even more beautiful.
“She’s her own woman, Pucey. And never forget it. She doesn’t belong to you. She doesn’t belong to anyone.”
Such a concept flabbergasted her erstwhile fiancé. His lips flapped. But not for long.
“Did you say Pucey?” Rafe stepped into the room with Ben and Brandon behind him.
“As in Zack Pucey?” Ben rolled up his sleeves.
Brandon merely practiced making fists.
Hanna had never realized before how tall they all were. Which was: much taller than Zack. At the sight of them, he seemed to shrink.
“Yeah. What of it?”
“The Zack Pucey?” Rafe stepped closer. He had never frightened Hanna before, not once, but now, his expression was chilling. “The Zack Pucey who—along with his big bad football buddies—jumped my brother and put him in the hospital?”
Oh. God.
Hanna glanced at Logan. A muscle worked in his cheek. A flush stained his neck. “He did that to you?” she whispered. He responded. A tight nod.
“Well, lookie here.” Ben picked up a fat dowel and swung it like a baseball bat. “It’s payback time.”
Zack paled. His gaze tracked from one bristling brother to the next. He swallowed heavily and glanced shiftily around the room as he backed away.
When Brandon lunged with a wild whoop and a “Yee haw,” Zack might have soiled himself. That didn’t stop him from sprinting for the side door, ducking through the open roll up and haring into the parking lot.
Brandon and Ben followed him, but only to watch as he hopped in his pickup and spun out of the lot.
“Well, that was fun,” Ben said, slapping the dowel into his hand.
“Could’ve been more fun,” Rafe muttered.
“He can dish it out, but he can’t take it,” Brandon snorted. “Damn coward.”
Hanna swallowed. “You . . . wouldn’t really have beaten him up, would you have?”
The brothers all stared at her with wide, innocent eyes. “Why, no, ma’am.” Rafe said after a too-long pause.
“Of course not, ma’am.”
“We’re not savages, ma’am.”
Hanna snorted. Though she’d only known them for a few weeks, she knew them better than that. They were always lying when they called her ma’am. She turned to Logan, wrapped her arms around him. “I am so sorry.”
“For what?”
“That you had to go through that. Back then.”
“Aw, honey, I’d do it again. In a heartbeat.”
Her brow wrinkled. He’d ended up in the hospital. Why would anyone be willing to go through something that horrific again?
And then it hit her. Ah. Then she knew.
The “fight” he’d mentioned? The one that put him in the hospital? It had been with Zack and his buddies.
He’d interfered the night Zack had accosted her, and Zack had taken his revenge.
Logan had nearly died.
Why hadn’t she seen it before? She’d been so clueless. So self-absorbed. So naïve.
“You saved me,” she said.
“Naw,” he responded. He riffled his fingers through her hair. “You saved me.” He kissed her then. Kissed her long and hard, and she loved it. Didn’t want it to ever end.
Throats cleared. Several times.
She ignored them. So did Logan.
“Well, this is all romantic and shit,” Ben drawled. “But you do realize that asshat is coming back, right?”
Logan lifted his head with a frown. Hanna wanted to pull him back down. Wanted to sink into that bliss again.
“He’s not coming back,” she insisted.
Brandon snorted.
“Guys like Pucey?” Rafe crossed his arms. “They always come back.”
“And keep coming back.” Logan nodded.
“I’m gonna call Grant.” Ben pulled out his phone and tapped in a number.
Hanna glanced at Logan with the question in her eyes.
“Grant’s the sheriff, honey,” he said. His lips brushed her forehead.
“I think it’s time for the two of you to skedaddle,” Rafe suggested. “We can handle this.
Logan’s muscles bunched. “I’m not leaving.”
“I think it’s best if you do.” He nodded meaningfully at Hanna. “Take her to the Double H. We’ll talk to Grant and see what he suggests.”
It took some talking, but his brothers finally convinced Logan it was time to pull up stakes and head for high ground. Their argument was that they were far less emotional about the situation—which Hanna doubted. Their secondary argument was that she was in danger, if and when Zack came back. She didn’t buy that either—she had her spackle knife after all—but that was the argument that convinced Logan.
He bundled her into his truck and, leaving his brothers to the task of coordinating with the law, he took her away.
She’d wanted to clean up the mess on her mural f
irst, but they’d pointed out it was evidence of vandalism, which wasn’t tolerated in these parts.
Ben had chuckled at that, rubbing his hands. “This ain’t Snake Gully,” he’d chortled. “And Zack Pucey don’t own the law.” Hanna had no doubt, if Zack was foolish enough to return, he’d be in no end of trouble—either from the sheriff, or the brothers. She wasn’t sure which would be worse.
Chapter Twenty-four
Logan’s ranch wasn’t far, which was a good thing, because Hanna didn’t really breathe until they passed beneath the swinging heart branded with the entwined letters HH—she kept looking behind them, convinced Zack was following them. He wasn’t.
But even after they passed the main gate, the road stretched on and on.
“It’s not a big ranch,” Logan insisted when she asked, but when he told her the acreage, her eyes widened. The house neared and she sat up in the seat, peering at it curiously. It was smaller than she expected, for this spread of land. Almost a cottage, really.
When they zoomed past it and she protested, Logan chuckled. “That’s the caretaker’s place,” he explained. “There’s the house.” He waved at a structure in the distance and then laughed again as her jaw dropped.
It was enormous. A mansion. Her home back in Snake Gully would fit in it three times. Maybe four. “It’s so big.”
“Too big for one man.” He flicked a look at her as he pulled in and set the brake. “So what do you want to see first? The house . . . or the horses?”
“Oh, the horses.”
So he took her into the stable and introduced her to Lily and Pansy and Petal, the fillies. At the end of the stable a gorgeous stallion poked out his nose and snorted impatiently.
“And this,” he said proudly, “Is my man, Harley.”
Hanna blinked. “You named your horse Harley?”
“Mmm hmm. As a kid, I always wanted to ride a Harley.”
She threw back her head and laughed. Harley butted her with his snout until she patted him and fed him an apple, which was really what he had wanted all along.
Logan put his hands on his hips and glanced around the stable. “I love it here,” he said.
Hanna hooked her arm in his. “I see that.”