Printer In Petticoats. Lynna Banning
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Название: Printer In Petticoats

Автор: Lynna Banning

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Вестерны

Серия: Mills & Boon Historical

isbn: 9781474042369

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ The urge to feel her skin brush against his was overpowering.

      Move toward me, Jessamine. Touch me.

      Shoot, he was going nuts. Another hour of this would make him crazier than a wolf in heat. He sidled away from her, and tried to control his hammering heartbeat.

      What he couldn’t control was his groin swelling into an ache. He wanted to toss her over his shoulder and take her...where?

      He suppressed a groan. To bed.

      Oh, God.

      That night he didn’t sleep at all.

       Chapter Six

      Jessamine headed across the street, her footsteps crunching against the frost-painted boardwalk; it was so slick she had to concentrate to keep her balance. Mercy, it was cold this morning! She saw no sign of life at the Lark office, so she bent and carefully laid the Wednesday edition of her Sentinel against Cole Sanders’s door.

      Back in her own office, she turned her backside to the potbellied stove in the corner and rubbed her frozen hands together.

      “Cold out, huh, Jess?”

      “You know it is, Eli. The temperature outside is below freezing.”

      “Gonna be a lot hotter when Sanders wakes up and reads yer editorial.”

      She ducked her head to hide her smile. “Cole Sanders is a grown man, Eli. Sticks and stones and so on.”

      “Yep, reckon so. Names ain’t never hurt you, huh?”

      Jess sobered instantly. Names had hurt her. When she was young and just starting out to help her papa and Miles on the newspaper, her schoolmates had teased her mercilessly about her ambition to be a journalist. “What d’ya wanna do that for? Too ugly to get a husband? Boys don’t like brainy girls, smarty-pants!”

      And it was names in an editorial her brother had printed that had cost him his life; that had hurt even worse. After Papa died, she and her older brother had moved out West and Miles had taken her under his wing.

      She had been just a young girl, but he had begun teaching her about operating a newspaper, things her father had never let her do such as cleaning the ink off the rollers and setting type. Miles had also let her try her hand at writing stories, and he instructed her in the basics of journalism—being accurate and objective.

      Then Miles had been killed, and now she was struggling to carry on the newspaper he had established in Smoke River.

      Jess didn’t really think Cole Sanders would shoot her for writing an inflammatory editorial. But she would wager he might want to. She bit the inside of her cheek. This morning she couldn’t help wondering what the no-nonsense editor of the Lake County Lark would do about the editorial she’d published.

      She kept one eye on the front windows of the Lark office across the street and set about planning her Saturday issue. She’d write a feature story about the new choir Ellie Johnson would be directing, and another article on the children’s rhythm band the music school director, Winifred Dougherty, was starting, together with the director’s plea for a violin teacher. Maybe she’d add an interview with the sheriff’s wife, Maddie Silver; what it was like being the mother of twin boys while also a Pinkerton agent?

      Across the street the front door of the Lark office banged open and Jess caught her breath. Then just as suddenly it slammed shut. Cole had picked up her newspaper and retreated inside. She waited, her heart pounding.

      Eli held up the flask of “medicinal” whiskey he kept under the counter. “Want a snort?”

      “Certainly not.” She tried not to watch the front door of the Lark office, and then suddenly it flew open again. She gasped and held her hand out to Eli. “Well, maybe just a sip.”

      Cole Sanders started across the street toward her, his head down, his hands jammed into the pockets of his jeans, and a copy of her newspaper stuffed under his arm. Jess uncorked Eli’s whiskey bottle and glugged down a double swallow.

      Cole marched straight for her office, his face stern, his boots pounding the muddy street. Jess bit her lip, stiffened her spine and laid her hand on the doorknob. She would do her best to smile and graciously welcome him inside.

      But she glimpsed his brown sheepskin jacket moving past her front window and on down the boardwalk.

      The air in her lungs whooshed out. What on earth? Didn’t he want to yell at her about her editorial? She’d used the word insidious more than once, and nasty at least twice. And her new favorite word, larcenous; she’d used that one three times. She really relished larcenous. She’d even put it in boldface type.

      Wasn’t Mr. Sanders livid with fury?

      She couldn’t stand the suspense. She grabbed her heavy wool coat and knitted green scarf off the hook by the door.

      “Hey, Jess,” Eli yelled. “Where are ya...?” She blotted out his voice and sped down the frost-slick sidewalk.

      Then her steps slowed. Drat. If Cole stopped at the Golden Partridge she couldn’t follow him. No lady entered a saloon.

      But he strode past the Golden Partridge and entered the restaurant nearby. Thank the Lord. She could unobtrusively steal inside, sit in one corner sipping a cup of tea and watch his face while he read her editorial.

      She tiptoed inside the deserted restaurant, shed her coat and scarf and hung them on the maple coat tree in the corner. “Hot tea, please, Rita,” she whispered.

      Cole sat with his back to her, calmly sipping a mug of steaming coffee. But he wasn’t reading her newspaper. He was gazing out the front window. And humming! She recognized the tune, “The Blue-Tail Fly.”

      Rita brought her a ceramic pot of tea, plunked it down and tipped her gray-bunned head toward the front table. “Kinda odd, you two settin’ in the same room but not havin’ breakfast together.”

      “Oh, Mr. Sanders and I are not together.”

      The waitress blinked. “No? Shoot, I thought—”

      “Sure we’re together,” Cole said without turning around.

      Jess jumped. The man must have ears like a foxhound.

      “You misspelled larcenous,” he called.

      “What? I thought you hadn’t read my editorial yet.”

      He maneuvered his chair around to face her. “Oh, I’ve read it all right. Like I said, you misspelled—”

      “I heard you the first time,” she retorted.

      “Never figured you for a sloppy writer, Miss Lassiter.”

      “I never figured you for a schoolmarm, Mr. Sanders.”

      “Point taken.” He rose and came across the room to her table. “Scrambled eggs?”

      “No, СКАЧАТЬ