Give Me A Texas Ranger. Jodi Thomas
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Название: Give Me A Texas Ranger

Автор: Jodi Thomas

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Исторические любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781420119374

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ moving in a dream.

      She kept moving, trying not to think. Maybe she’d get lucky and they wouldn’t make the ridge, and the outlaws would shoot them down. At least then she wouldn’t have to face him. Never, never, never had she allowed a man to touch her the way he had. The only other kiss she’d truly received had been at her wedding. There had been no time or privacy for more.

      She thought of how hard the Ranger’s face had looked, even when he’d slept in the stagecoach, chiseled like weathered granite. How cold his eyes were.

      How demanding his kiss. How bold his hands. She mentally slapped herself for letting her mind wander.

      He’d advanced so fast she hadn’t been able to think about how to reject him. This was all his fault. She should have nothing to be ashamed of.

      If the man would slow down now, Annalane swore she would kill him. What right did he think he had to kiss her like that? To touch her. To wake her up to something she told herself she had been perfectly happy not knowing about.

      Her anger stewed as she climbed. She barely noticed the eastern sky lighten. They were at the ridge by the time dawn washed over the rocks.

      McCord jumped down off a rock and turned, lifting his arms to catch her. He swung her around. “We made it.”

      A smile lit his face, making him look younger—closer to thirty, not forty as she’d first guessed. Despite her anger and exhaustion, she smiled. They were safe, at least for now.

      He set her on her feet, took her hand as if he’d done so a thousand times, and started down the shadowy side of the hill.

      Halfway down, he stopped to allow her to catch her breath. While she rested against a cold rock, he searched the valley below.

      “The driver told me you were going to meet your brother at Camp Supply.”

      She nodded as she fought exhaustion.

      “He’ll know the stage didn’t make it in last night, and I’m guessing troops will be headed this way. If I’d been waiting for you, I’d be an hour in the saddle by now, maybe more.”

      If Devin hadn’t planned to introduce her at dinner last night, she doubted he’d even notice she was missing. He was more likely to wait and blame her for being late than come after her, but Annalane didn’t want to admit that to McCord.

      The Ranger kept watching. “On horseback they could cut some time off the stage trail and be here in an hour, two at the most.”

      Annalane closed her eyes, wishing the driver hadn’t been so nosy, but a woman traveling alone was a rare sight in these parts, and she thought it would help if he knew she had someone waiting to meet her. It might make her sound not quite so like an old maid. At least she hadn’t told the driver more. She never told anyone the truth. What would people say, or believe, if she told them that her brother never contacted her unless he needed something from her? She swore that ever since he could talk he’d manipulated everyone around him. Life was some kind of game and people just cards to play to him.

      She sniffed, thinking she was really pathetic. Even knowing what he was like, she’d traveled half a continent hoping that this time he’d act like a real brother. Maybe for once he was thinking of her, alone in Washington, and not just himself.

      I will not cry, she silently vowed. I will not cry.

      McCord startled her when he stomped back to where she stood. All she could manage was to glare at him when he cleared his throat.

      “About last night…” he started, forcing out the words as if he were reading his own obituary.

      “I don’t want to talk about last night,” she hissed through her teeth to keep from screaming.

      “Good.” He slapped his gloves against his hand. “’Cause I don’t want to hear you talk about it. Never could tolerate the Northern accent. How about we just agree to talk as little as possible.”

      She didn’t need a weapon, she decided. She’d kill him with her bare hands. She’d just grab his throat and bite him, then she’d watch the blood pump out of his long, hard body and say sweetly, in her most proper Northern accent, that she was wrong about not having the killer instinct. It appeared she did.

      Before she could pounce, he plopped his hat on her head and dropped his gloves in her hand. “Put these on, Anna. There’s brush the rest of the way down that’ll cut you if you grab for a handhold, and the sun’s going to turn hot enough to put that blush permanently on those cheeks.”

      He’d never know how close he came to dying, she thought. She’d let him live awhile longer. Not because he’d said something nice to her. A nice word would probably choke the man. But he had shown a degree of thoughtfulness. The dirty hat and the worn gloves couldn’t make her look worse.

      She sniffed again, deciding that on top of everything else, she’d caught a cold. The only silver lining to it lay in the hope that she’d passed it along to the Ranger while he’d kissed her.

      “You getting sick?” he asked, already ten feet ahead of her.

      “No.” She picked up her bag and followed.

      “Well, then hurry up. We want to be off this hill by the time they ride by here.”

      She almost laughed. Her brother was probably having his second cup of coffee and telling everyone about how his sister couldn’t manage to do anything right, including get to him.

      Two hours later, when they were almost to the trail that served as the stage road, she collapsed. Her legs simply folded. Three days with nothing to eat and little to drink. More hours than she could count without sleep. Like a clock running down, she stopped.

      As she lay in the dirt, she heard the Ranger backtracking to her. She half expected him to yell at her to get up, but he simply leaned down, picked up his hat and her bag, then lifted her into his arms.

      Without a word, he began walking, carrying her like she was a child and not a woman almost his height.

      Annalane closed her eyes. She’d have to kill him later. Right now all she wanted to do was sleep.

      Chapter 4

      McCord walked half a mile before he found an old cottonwood tree with branches almost touching the ground. He pulled Anna into the cool shade where roots bowed from the earth, making a natural cradle for her.

      Anna’s eyes fluttered open. She watched him, a mixture of fear and panic in her exhausted gaze, but she didn’t say a word.

      “You all right?” he asked, feeling her face to see if she had a fever. “We about froze last night in the rain, and now it’s hot. I swear, Texas is the only place I know of where you can experience all four seasons within twenty-four hours.”

      She didn’t act like she could hear him. McCord pulled his leather coat off her shoulders and spread it out on the ground, saying, “You’ll be safe in no time, Anna. I promise.” He tugged her arm, leaning her down atop his coat, with her head on her bag for her pillow. She didn’t fight him, but the stiffness in her movements told him she didn’t believe him.

      “That’s СКАЧАТЬ