Chinook, Wine and Sink Her. Morgan Q O'Reilly
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Chinook, Wine and Sink Her - Morgan Q O'Reilly страница 10

Название: Chinook, Wine and Sink Her

Автор: Morgan Q O'Reilly

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Короткие любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9780984113224

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ with never before encountered heat, Linnet wrapped her arms around the only solid thing handy. Hard muscles pressed against her body as her fingers sought handholds on his back. His shirt slid over rippling planes of steel and she held tight. Instead of pushing her away, he pulled her closer, his tongue probing deeply into her mouth, one strong arm holding her upright.

      Oh. My. God. The power of the kiss swept her along faster than the current of the river and she gave herself up to it. No kiss had ever touched her like this and it made her head spin. Thankfully, he still held her head or she feared it might have fallen off. If not for his arm around her shoulders and her death grip on his back, she would have fallen when he abruptly broke the kiss.

      “Manley, down,” Creed ordered the dog. His gruff tone cleared enough of the haze surrounding her; she heard the kettle screaming and felt Manley head-butting their legs.

      “The kettle,” she whispered and shook her head. What was wrong with her? Kissing a stranger? Pulling back from Creed, relief and disappointment fought an epic battle in Linnet’s heart when he let her go. Glad she had a task, Linnet turned to the small stove and turned it off. The whistle began to soften immediately and it accompanied the cooling of the lust that had overcome her.

      Out of habit, she reached for her mug and the jar of tea bags on the newly installed shelf over the counter that served as part of the kitchen. Just one of the improvements she’d made over the last few weeks.

      Living alone in the middle of the wilderness left one with plenty of spare time. Always good with her hands, she’d filled the non-working hours by organizing this one little corner of the world. It wasn’t that she’d done anything big—the windows had been her most radical change—really, she’d just taken what was available and rearranged it.

      A few nails, a little wood glue, and old wobbly furniture became solid once more. A thrift-store cushion or two and a mosquito net around her bunk and life couldn’t get much more comfortable out here.

      Creed’s body heat warmed her back when he moved up behind her. She watched as he set his mug next to hers and reached for the glass jar holding packets of cocoa.

      “Good idea to use glass for storage.” His voice was a soft warm rumble in her ear.

      She needed to move away from him, wanted to move away. Couldn’t make her legs react to orders.

      “Keeps the smell in and hopefully the bears out,” she said with a shrug and took the jar from him. Weakness swamped her again when his other hand settled on her shoulder. His thumb stroked her neck as he reached for the kettle.

      Opening the jar to select an envelope of the powdered drink was almost an impossible task. Only with great concentration was she able to open the paper packet and empty the contents into his stainless steel mug. It looked solid and sleek next to her tin mug covered with blue speckled enamel. He poured the steaming water while she closed the jar and returned it to the shelf. Teabag followed water into her mug and that jar returned to its home.

      “Spoons?” His breath whispered over her ear and a shiver followed.

      Not trusting her voice she pointed. Another series of glass jars held mismatched flatware.

      Without releasing her, he selected a spoon to stir his cocoa. “Do you need one?”

      She shook her head and lifted her mug. Already the fruity fragrance of blueberries perfumed the steam.

      “Shall we go sit at the table?” Creed suggested and nodded to where she’d arranged what looked like an old, scarred, dining table under the front window. Furniture polish had cleaned the wood and made it shine like a fine antique. Mismatched woven placemats protected the top while showing off the wood beneath.

      “Sure.” She moved to her favorite seat. The best place to view the river, the spot was marked by her laptop and a stack of notebooks. Pencils and pens stood in a paper cup and further defined her workspace.

      Creed pulled out the chair for her and then sat down next to her.

      “Thanks.” The automatic word popped from her lips before she could find something else to say. He acknowledged it with a smile.

      “Quite the little office here,” he teased her.

      “Beats one in town.”

      “Good point.”

      Now what? What was there to say without babbling? The more she thought about it, the more the kiss scared her. Staring out the window she held the cup of tea before her and blew across the surface. A masculine groan made her look back at Creed.

      “Women have no idea how their most innocent movements and gestures affect a man,” he chuckled.

      Linnet set her cup down on the table and folded her hands in her lap.

      “I didn’t mean to make you feel self-conscious.” His hand settled gently over the back of her neck and she felt trapped.

      She’d walked into this one all by herself. Cornered by the cabin and the furniture, she found herself blocked from her escape route by Creed. Stupid, Linnet, just plain stupid. Always placing herself in the corner was a bad habit. Hell, even the bunk she’d chosen was in the corner. Dumb, dumb, dumb! She never left herself an escape route.

      Clearing her throat she decided to avoid topics that could easily grow too personal. “You were going to tell me your history,” she reminded him. “How did you come to own this place? Is it a family homestead?”

      His deep chuckle told her the redirection effort was obvious. “I’d rather keep doing what we were doing when the kettle whistled. It illustrated our condition rather well.”

      Linnet closed her eyes and turned her head toward the window. Maybe she should make this one open and screen it as well? The breeze from the river would feel great on her scorched face right about now. She never blushed! What was going on here?

      Beside her, Creed sighed. “Right. Moving too fast. Sorry, was a long stretch on the Slope this time. Guess I was lonelier than I thought.”

      Linnet pursed her lips and turned her head even further. Great, just great. Probably looked good because she was the first civilized woman he’d seen in how many weeks? She knew women worked up in oilfields, mostly in the offices, but if he had any kind of ethics at all he didn’t mix with them socially. The oil companies frowned on that sort of fraternization in the camps.

      “Uh, that didn’t come out right.” His attempt to laugh it off didn’t do much to convince her of his sincerity.

      “Don’t worry about it.” She pushed her chair back and would have stood, but his hand gripped her arm.

      “I’m sorry. I really am. I don’t spend much time around women and was never the best student when it came to social graces.”

      She still refused to look at him. “Well, maybe you can dig up some of those old lessons. I’m going to get my evening bath.” Shaking off his arm, she stood. His arm around her waist stopped her again and he pulled her close, until his head rested against her stomach and both arms held her gently.

      Heart beating wildly again, she curled her hands to keep from using violence to push him away. He wasn’t actually threatening her, wasn’t hurting her and she could have stepped away СКАЧАТЬ