Simeon had offered her all the emotional and physical gratification and fulfillment she needed. And for the first time since she had come to Blackstone Farms she had to question whether she might be lucky enough to capture both again.
Chapter Five
Ryan hadn’t realized he had been figuratively holding his breath until Kelly opened her door.
He knew he was staring at her like a star-struck adolescent, but he couldn’t help himself. “You look very nice, Kelly.”
Kelly smiled, opening the door wider. “Thank you, and please come in.”
She knew she looked very different from the woman he’d seen jumping rope earlier that afternoon. Her hair, brushed off her face, was swept up in a twist on her nape. The sleek style was the perfect complement for a black cap-sleeved off-the-shoulder dress ending at her knees. A pair of sling back animal print leather sandals covered her bare feet.
She admitted to herself that he also looked very nice. A chocolate-brown jacket and matching slacks complemented a finely woven beige, banded-collar linen shirt.
His right hand concealed behind his back, Ryan walked into Kelly’s home. The miniature Tiffany-style lamp on a round table cast a warm glow on exquisite antique pieces from another era. An apple-green armchair covered in a watered-silk fabric with a matching footstool was the perfect complement for a lavender-hued sofa dotted with light green sprigs. Classical music played softly from a stereo system hidden from view.
He followed her into the dining area, staring mutely at a table set for two. The crystal, china and silver patterns were exquisite. A multifaceted crystal vase held a bouquet of wispy sweet pea.
Kelly moved closer to Ryan, measuring his stunned expression. “What are you hiding behind your back?”
He blinked several times before handing her a decorative shopping bag. “This is for you.”
Kelly took the bag, peering inside. She walked over to a countertop and removed two bottles of chilled red and white wine and a cellophane-wrapped plant. Nestled in a hand-painted pot was a delicate orchid plant.
“It’s beautiful, Ryan.” Turning, she smiled at him. “Thank you so much.”
Angling his head, he returned her smile. “You’re welcome.”
“We’ll have the white wine because I’m making chicken.” Grasping his hand, she steered him toward the sofa. “Please make yourself comfortable. Everything should be ready in about ten minutes.”
He stopped suddenly, and she lost her balance and bumped into him. They stood motionless, her chest pressed against his arm. Ryan stared down at her under lowered lids. “May I help you with anything?”
Kelly wanted to tell him that he could help assuage the emptiness and loneliness that plagued her whenever she opened the door to the bungalow, or readied herself for bed. Everything that was Ryan Blackstone seeped into her at that moment: his height, the breadth of his shoulders, his penetrating eyes that saw everything, his haunting scent, his deep, drawling baritone voice and the virility that made him so confidently male.
“No, thank you,” she said instead.
He held her gaze. “Are you sure, Kelly?”
She felt as if she were being sucked into a sensual vortex from which there was no escape. Kelly knew at that instant she had made a mistake. She never should’ve invited Ryan to dinner.
She wanted him! It was an awakening realization that left her insides pulsing like the sensations from her erotic dream. And the harder she tried to ignore the truth the more it persisted. She was a normal woman with normal sexual urges.
She had cut herself off from people for two years. At Blackstone Farms she prepared her own meals instead of eating with the other employees in the dining hall. How long, she had to ask herself, was she going to continue to mourn for what was…what would never be again?
It was apparent Ryan was attracted to her—or why else would he have kissed her? And she could honestly admit to herself that she was very attracted to him. Why else would she have invited him to her home?
“Open the wine,” she said as she turned and made her way to the kitchen.
A half-smile curved Ryan’s mouth as he slipped out of his jacket and laid it over the armchair. Kelly wasn’t as composed as she appeared. He had counted the fast beats of her pulse in her delicate throat. He had accepted her invitation because he wanted to spend time alone with her, not frighten her. He had never been one to come on heavy with any woman. If a woman rejected his advances then he retreated honorably.
The only exception was when he’d kissed Kelly in the stable. He’d told himself it was because she had challenged him, but he knew the instant his mouth had covered hers that it was what he’d wanted to do the first time he saw her lush mouth.
Ryan picked up a corkscrew off the countertop while Kelly removed a roasting pan from the oven. The mouthwatering aroma of baked chicken filled the kitchen. “No wonder you don’t eat in the dining hall,” he said, his gaze fixed on a golden-brown chicken surrounded by little cubes of roast potatoes.
He removed the cork from the wine bottle with a minimum of effort, watching as Kelly transferred the chicken to a platter, surrounding it with the potatoes and rosemary sprigs for a garnish. He washed his hands in the stainless steel sink, and dried them on a terry-cloth towel.
“I’ll put that on the table,” he said, taking the platter from her grasp.
Kelly emptied the juices from the chicken into a gravy boat, then removed a bowl of tossed greens, chopped celery, radishes and chives from the refrigerator. Reaching for a bottle of vinaigrette dressing she shook it over the salad.
Ryan took the salad bowl and gravy boat, placing them on the table before he pulled back a chair and seated Kelly. He lingered over her head longer than was necessary, inhaling the fragrance of her perfume. The scent claimed a subtle clean freshness bursting with a warm feminine sensuality.
His mother died after a long illness the year he’d turned fourteen, and although he could recall a lot of things about Julia Blackstone, it was her perfume that he remembered most. There was never a time when she hadn’t smelled wonderful. She would say that just because she lived on a horse farm it didn’t mean she had to smell like a horse. His mother loved the farm while his ex-wife had hated it. Sitting down across from Kelly he wondered whether she would be like Julia or Caroline.
Kelly smiled at Ryan. “Will you please carve the chicken?”
Picking up the carving knife and fork, he cut up the fowl with the skill he demonstrated in surgical procedures. He served her, then himself before filling their glasses with the wine.
Lifting his glass in a toast, he stared at the softness of his dining partner’s lush mouth. “I offer you a very special welcome to Blackstone Farms.”
Kelly lifted her glass, smiling at him over the rim. “And I accept your special welcome.” Putting the glass to her lips, she took a sip. It was excellent. “The wine is wonderful.”
Ryan nodded. After a bit of cajoling, he had gotten Cook to give him a bottle from his private stock. “Now that I’ve seen your home I see why you eat here instead of at the dining hall.” He’d found her bungalow warm, inviting, and intimate.
“I eat here because once I come home and shower I’m usually too relaxed to get up and go out again.”
“Are you tired now?”
She shook her head. “Not the exhausted kind of tired.”
“I know I would be if I spent all day with five energetic kids.”
Blushing, Kelly speared a portion of her salad. “How was your day?”
“Uneventful. And I can assure you that I did not have as much fun as you did.”
After chewing and swallowing a portion of her salad, she said, “Uneventful as in boring?”
Ryan stared at Kelly, his expression impassive. He shook his head. “Do you find living on a horse farm boring?”
“It certainly hasn’t been for me. I found setting up the schoolhouse a challenge, but after meeting the children I’d willingly do it all over again.”r />
“You like teaching?”
“I love it.”
“How about the children?”
“What about them?”
“Do you like children?”
Vertical lines appeared between her dark eyes. “Of course I like children. I love them.”
“Why is it you haven’t had any of your own?”
“I was waiting until I was thirty.”
“How old are you now?” he asked, even though he knew.
“Thirty.” She and Simeon had decided to wait until they’d celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary before starting a family.
Ryan’s hands stilled as his gaze fused with hers. “Have you selected the man who will father your child?”
“Not yet.”
“Are you looking?”
“I wasn’t.”
“And now?”
Kelly took another sip of wine, choosing her words carefully. “Now that I’ve set up the school I’ll have more time for a social life.”
“You expect to find a baby’s daddy at Blackstone Farms?”
“No, Ryan,” she countered in a quiet voice. “If a man fathers my child, whether it is someone here or elsewhere, he will not be my baby’s daddy but my husband.”
He measured her with a cool appraising look, finding everything about her perfect. “Are you looking for candidates?”
Kelly laughed, the sound low, husky, and sensual. “Why, Ryan? Are you applying?”
His gray eyes darkened at the same time he lifted a shoulder. “Maybe.”
She was shocked by the smoldering invitation in the gray pools. There was no doubt he was as physically attracted to her as she was to him. But it had to be more than sex. That she could get from any man. What Kelly wanted was love and passion. She concentrated on the food on the plate in front of her, feeling the heat from Ryan’s gaze monitor her every motion.
“Well, Kelly?”
Her head came up. “Well what, Ryan?”
“Will you consider me as a candidate?”
“Why?” she asked, answering his question with one of her own.
He placed his hands, palms down, on the lace tablecloth. “Why? Because I like you—”
“But you don’t know me,” she said, interrupting him.
“And you don’t know me. I only know what my father has told me about you. I know you’re a widow and a teacher, while I’m a divorced father of a four-year-old son who wouldn’t know his mother if she sat down next to him.
“I’ve never brought a woman around Sean because I know how much he wants a mother like the other kids. I don’t want to give him false hopes that the woman his father is dating will become his new mother.”
“And you’re saying it would be different with us?”
Ryan nodded. “Yes. I could court you without Sean becoming confused about our relationship.”
Kelly held up a hand. “Who said anything about a relationship?”
His eyes crinkled as he smiled. “There will never be a relationship if you won’t let me court you.”
“Why me and not some other woman, Ryan?”
“I don’t know.”
“We may see each other a few times, then decide it’s not going to work,” she argued softly.
“If that’s the case then we’ll remain friends.”
Kelly wanted to tell Ryan that women did not have male friends who looked like him. Either he would be a lover or nothing. What he was proposing sounded like a sterile business arrangement, but then wasn’t that was what marriage was? It was an agreement between two people to love each other forever.
But she and Ryan did not love each other. They hardly knew each other. What she did have was a year in which to get to know him. And if it didn’t work then she would leave Blackstone Farms Day School to teach somewhere else.
“Okay, Ryan. I’m willing to try it.”
Pushing back his chair, he stood up and rounded the table. Curving a hand under Kelly’s elbow, he pulled her gently to her feet. His large hand spanned her waist as he pulled her close.
He studied her upturned face, seeing indecision in her brown eyes. He hadn’t lied to her. He did like her. Unknowingly she had shattered the barrier he had erected after Caroline rejected the child they’d created. Kelly had loved and lost like he had loved and lost. The difference was her loss had been final.
“I promise not to hurt you, Kelly.”
She placed her fingertips over his mouth, while shaking her head. “No promises, Ryan.”
“No promises,” he whispered, repeating her plea. Lowering his head, he brushed his mouth over hers, sealing their agreement.
Kelly felt her breasts grow heavy against the hardness of his chest. If she had been in her right mind she would’ve questioned why she had just agreed to become involved with a man who was a stranger, a man on whose property she would live for the next year, and a man whose son was a student of hers.
All of her common sense dissipated like a puff of smoke as he staked his claim on her mouth and heart. She snuggled closer, leaving an imprint of her body on his. Ryan’s hands moved from her waist to her hips, his splayed fingers pulling her against the solid bulge between his powerful thighs.
Pleasure, pure and explosive shook Kelly, leaving her trembling like a withered leaf in an icy blizzard when his tongue slipped between her lips. Her arms tightened around his neck, making him her willing prisoner.
Returning his kiss with reckless abandon, she moaned softly when he left her mouth to leave a series of light kisses down the column of her neck and over her shoulders. Eyes closed, head thrown back, she moaned again. The pulsing between her legs grew stronger and stronger, and she knew if she did not stop she would beg him to take her to her bed where she would play out her dream in the real world.
Somewhere, somehow she found the strength to pull out of Ryan’s embrace. Her breasts were rising and falling heavily, bringing his gaze to linger on her chest. His head came up, and she bit down on her lower lip to keep from gasping aloud. The passion radiating from Ryan’s eyes caused her knees to weaken. Reaching for her chair, she managed to sit without collapsing to the floor. He did not know her and she did not know him, yet the passion between them was strong and frightening.
Ryan sat down and picked up his wineglass, emptying it with one swallow. The cool liquid bathed his throat and body temporarily. He looked down at the delicious meal Kelly had prepared, unable to finish eating because she had lit a fire in him, a fire only she would be able to extinguish.
He wanted her in his bed, but he was willing to wait for her to come to him. After all, they had time, a lot of time….
Chapter Six
Kelly lay on a cushioned wicker love seat on the porch, her head resting on Ryan’s chest. Raising her right leg, she wiggled her toes. She had left her sandals in the kitchen. She and Ryan had barely touched their dinner after the kiss. He’d helped her clear the table and wash and dry the dishes, and she’d suggested they sit out on the porch where it was safer than remaining indoors.
“What made you decide to become a veterinarian?”
Ryan rested his chin on the top of her head. “I’ve always loved horses and science, and becoming a vet was the logical choice. Also, I knew one day I would inherit the horse farm from my father, as it was with him and his father.”
“You’ll be the third generation Blackstone to run the farm?”
“Yes. And hopefully Sean will become the fourth.”
“What about your brother?”
“Jeremy has no interest in horses. Pop refers to Jeremy as his vagabond progeny. My younger brother would lose his mind if he had to stay here more than a month.”
“How did the Blackstones become horse breeders?”
“My granddaddy was a white tobacco farmer who fell in love with a young black woman who had come to work for him as his cook. They couldn’t marry or live openly as husband and wife because of Virginia’s miscegenation laws. But she did give him a son. When Jame
s Blackstone died he left everything to Sheldon. Grandpa had grown tobacco for about twenty years, but after my grandmother died from lung cancer from a two-pack-a-day cigarette habit, he harvested his last tobacco crop and decided to raise horses.”
“Did he breed them to race?”
“No. He raised working breeds like the Welsh Cob, horses known for their hardiness and strength. He sold them to farmers and for riding. My father brought his first Thoroughbred several years after he’d married my mother. Within ten years he was racing competitively.”
What he did not tell Kelly was that his mother was an only child of a wealthy Charleston, South Carolina black family, and that his parents had used her inheritance to establish the largest and most successful African-American-owned horse farm in the state of Virginia.
“I know nothing about horses or racing,” Kelly admitted. “In fact, I’ve never been to a racetrack.”
Ryan’s forehead furrowed. “You’ve never watched our trainers exercising the horses?”
“No.”
“If you don’t have anything planned for Saturday, then I’ll have Kevin Manning show you how he trains horses for races.”
“Do you go to the races?”
Ryan hesitated. During his short marriage, the only time Caroline had deigned to grace him with her presence was at a horse race. “Yes.”
Shifting slightly, Kelly gazed up at him. A shaft of sunlight hit his face, turning him into a statue of molten gold. Turning his head quickly, he glanced at her and she shuddered noticeably from the intensity of his stare. The large gray eyes glowed with an inner fire that ignited a spark of longing that left her gasping.
Ryan returned his gaze to the sprawling landscape in front of Kelly’s bungalow. The homes for resident employees were constructed far enough apart to allow absolute privacy.
The Blackstone Legacy Page 5