McKettricks of Texas: Austin (10 page)

Read McKettricks of Texas: Austin Online

Authors: Linda Lael Miller

BOOK: McKettricks of Texas: Austin
5.13Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Folks came out of stores and shops on both sides of the road, though, to watch the show.

So Austin ran.

Paige chased him in the golf cart.

Chief Mott jumped into his patrol car, heretofore parked in front of Willard's Bakery, where he bought three bear claws and a cup of strong coffee every morning of his working life, and switched on the lights and the siren. Used his bullhorn to order Paige to “Pull over, dammit.”

If she heard the chief at all, she gave no sign of it.

Austin, a ranch kid in good shape, could have run all day. Might have kept the game going a lot longer if he hadn't known Chief Mott so well. Alternately bored with his job and miffed because in his view nobody accorded him the proper respect, the man had no sense of humor. He'd probably throw the book at Paige just for something to do and, besides, what if
she
got hurt?

Austin had led Paige on a merry chase through the middle of town, then sprinted up onto the courthouse steps and bent double, laughing.

Paige tried to drive right up there after him, but the front wheels of the golf cart bumped against the bottom step and then the motor died.

The cart's puffing, red-faced owner got to her at the same time as Chief Mott leaped out of his squad car and waddled over to yank the keys from the ignition.

“I want to press charges!” Clem had yelled, waving his arms around.

“Now, Clem,” Chief Mott had said, “calm down before you have a heart attack.”

Paige just sat there, on the seat of that golf cart, glar
ing up at him. Tears left zigzagging tracks in the dust covering her face.

The memory found a soft spot in Austin's middle and ached like a fresh bruise. Brought him back to the present with a jolt.

Dark barn. Faithful dog. Pissed-off woman.

By the time Austin had squared himself with these realities, Paige had pulled free of his grip on the back of her jeans, and she was studying him like she hoped to read his mind.

“Is your disposition still as bad as it used to be?” he asked, looking around for his boots. He didn't want to risk another spasm by pulling them on, so he decided to leave them behind and cross to the house in his stocking feet, but Paige followed his gaze and grabbed them up. Shoved the pair into his chest and looked up at him with narrowed eyes.

“What is
that
supposed to mean?” She started toward the barn door, and Austin followed.

“Just what you
think
it means,” he answered. “As I recollect,
Nurse
Remington, you once tried to do me serious bodily harm with a golf cart. If that isn't an indication of antisocial tendencies, I don't know what is—”

Paige strode out into the yard, hugging herself against the chill. “You know damn well I wouldn't have run you over,” she said, still on the move. Was that regret he heard in her voice? A little humility, maybe?

Nah.

Austin took off his battered denim jacket and draped it over her shoulders.

Shep trotted along at his side, tail whipping back and forth.

“I know,” Austin admitted.

Paige stopped, pulling the jacket tighter around her shoulders. Moonlight caught in her eyes as she looked up at him. “You do?” she asked.

“Yeah,” he confirmed. “I do.” Mindful that he was bootless, and he'd given Paige his coat, Austin took her hand and kept walking. The ground was hard and the cold bit right through the soles of his socks. “Still, it
was
a pretty dramatic way of making your point.”

Paige didn't answer. She walked fast, and wouldn't look at Austin again.

Once they were inside the kitchen, Shep included, he shut and locked the door.

He wanted to kiss Paige again, but since she'd pushed him away the last time, he didn't give in to the urge. No, siree, for once in his life, good judgment prevailed.

“Good night, Paige,” he said. He started for his private set of stairs, and couldn't even make the first step because his lower back locked up again.

Gritting his teeth, Austin wrapped one arm around the newel post and steeled himself to wait it out.

 

A
USTIN HAD ONE FOOT ON THE FIRST STAIR
and one on the floor, and Paige actually saw the bunching of the muscles in his back, even through the fabric of his shirt.

She hesitated, then climbed to the third step, so she could look directly into his anguished face. Although she felt a deep pang, seeing him like this—Austin was an intensely
physical
man, a cowboy, an athlete, practically a legend on the rodeo circuit, suddenly unable to lift a dog or a child or climb a set of stairs—Paige didn't let her sympathy show.

“How about a swim?” she said.

Their noses were almost touching.

And his eyes were
so
blue.

He'd kissed her, out there in the barn, and dammit, she could still feel the buzz, all the way down to her toes. Thank God she'd come to her senses and put a stop to it before things went any further.

She had a personal point of no return when it came to Austin, and when he'd kissed her—the
way
he'd kissed her—she'd come perilously close to—well—
whatever.

He blinked, clearly confused. Whatever Austin had expected her to say or do, it hadn't been this. “Huh?”

“A swim,” Paige repeated, grasping the rail for support because she suddenly felt as though she might tumble headfirst into those sky-blue eyes and never be seen or heard from again. “Some exercise might loosen you up a little. Make it easier to sleep.”

A smile settled into his eyes and slowly made its way down to the corners of his mouth. He let go of the newel post and rested his hands on either side of Paige's waist, and for one beautiful, horrible, heartbreaking moment, she thought he was about to kiss her again.

This time, she wasn't sure she had the strength to resist.

He
didn't
kiss her, though.

He didn't move, either, except to slide his palms up her sides; she felt the sides of his fingers under her breasts.

“It would be great,” he drawled, in a husky rumble, “to loosen up.”

Paige's cheeks ached with sudden color.

His gaze focused on her mouth—just her mouth—searing her flesh with ice-blue heat.

Somehow, she scrounged up the presence of mind to sidestep Austin and retreat to the bottom of the stairs.

Austin stayed where he was for a long moment, then sighed and turned around to face her. Stepped down.

“What about you, Paige?” he asked. “Do
you
need to loosen up?”

She swallowed. Brazened it out by plastering on a smile. “I wouldn't mind swimming a few laps,” she said. “If that's what you're asking.”

He looked her over. Took in her jeans, the clingy sweater, the borrowed jacket she was still wearing. “I'll take what I can get,” he said. “You have a suit?”

“I borrowed one of Julie's a few days ago,” Paige replied, “and I haven't returned it yet.”

Again, that insufferable grin, the one that made her reel on the inside. “Damn,” Austin said in a purring growl. “I was hoping you'd have to go naked.”

The words sent hot shivers rushing through her, but she could think of no good reason for letting him know that, if it could be avoided.

“Well, you're out of luck this time, cowboy,” Paige answered blithely.

She walked away then, headed for the guest quarters. The one-piece Julie had loaned her was still dangling from the showerhead where she'd hung it up to dry a few days before.

Once she was out of the kitchen, and thus out of Austin's sight, Paige picked up speed, in such a hurry to change that she practically skipped along the corridor.

Reaching the bathroom, she took the swimsuit off the showerhead, tossed it onto the counter. Then, telling herself to slow down—did she want Austin to think she was
eager?
—Paige turned on the spigots, stripped out of her clothes, took a hasty shower, dried off and wriggled into the suit. She combed her wet hair straight back from
her face and studied her image in the full-length mirror bolted to the inside of the door.

The one-piece was more revealing than she remembered.

Plus
it was a wild floral print, made up of screaming pinks, oranges and yellows.

Paige tugged at the shoulder straps, sucked in her stomach, turned sideways. Her butt cheeks were sticking out, so she tugged some more.

She squinted at her reflection.

Too bad her own modest, sensible black suit was in storage, along with most of her other clothes.

Resigned, Paige grabbed a towel, wrapped it around her waist like a skirt, jammed her bare feet into flip-flops from the drugstore and made her way back through the house.

There were a few lights on in the kitchen, so she was in no danger of stubbing a toe or barking a shin, and Shep was there to meet her, tail in perpetual motion, as usual.

She had to smile, and smiling relaxed her a little.

She proceeded bravely into the room where the enormous swimming pool gleamed like a giant turquoise jewel. The area around it was dimly lit, though, creating a cozy ambience.

Austin was treading water in the deep end. She had an overwhelming awareness of…
skin.
A lot of it. His upper body was tanned, muscular, glistening with moisture, full of controlled power. The rest of him was wrapped in shifting blue shadows.

Paige froze there on the tiled edge of that magnificent pool, keeping her towel in place with a death grip. She'd been so worried about the fit of the swimsuit that
she hadn't considered what Austin might—or might
not
—wear.

Dear God. Was he naked?

Austin watched her in silence for a long moment. Then he threw back his head and gave a low bark of laughter.

Paige forced herself to walk—casually, she hoped—to the steps dipping into the shallow end of the pool, but she held fast to the towel. Her face felt hot, and she was very careful not to look in his direction again.

It was a challenge for the man to put on his own boots.

A few minutes ago, he hadn't been able to climb the stairs to his bed.

Obviously, though, he'd managed to divest himself of at least
some
of his clothes while she was showering and wiggling into Julie's tropical nightmare of a suit. She sat on the top step, swished her feet around in the water.

Austin drew a little closer; Paige felt the shift in the atmosphere even before she caught the subtle motion at the far periphery of her vision.

“What's the matter, Paige?” he drawled, and there was a teasing note in his voice. “You didn't used to be so shy.”

“I'm not shy.”

“Then get into the water,” Austin suggested reasonably. He cleared his throat. “Might loosen you up,” he added.

“I'm not the one in need of loosening up,” Paige pointed out, somewhat stiffly.

Again, that gruff chuckle. “I reckon that's a matter of opinion,” he said, exaggerating the words and the accent to the verbal equivalent of sweet molasses.

Paige locked eyes with Austin then, just so he wouldn't think she was rattled.

Even if she was. A little.

Austin was much nearer now. The water lapped almost imperceptibly at his navel.

Instinctively, Paige's gaze traveled over his muscular chest, caught briefly on the surgical scars on his right shoulder, doubled back to his washboard belly, and sent the message zipping back to her brain: he was wearing boxers.

Of course he saw her looking, and it made him laugh again.

“You were right,” he said very quietly, holding out a hand. “The water feels good.”

Paige let him take her hand, loosening the towel and let it drop from her as he pulled her gently down the pool steps until she was facing him. “You should be moving around,” she said nervously. “That's the whole point. Working the muscles in your lower back.”

He rested his hands on her shoulders, dripping turquoise light onto her skin. “I can think of a few variations on that theme,” he murmured.

Their proximity—not to mention the images popping like fireworks in her brain—made Paige crave full-frontal contact in every treacherous cell of her body. She didn't move forward, but she didn't step back, either.

She just stood there.

Austin curled a finger under her chin, then lifted it. His breath tingled on her mouth.

He kissed her.

His lips were soft on hers—at first.

Paige felt the pool tilt crazily to one side, then the other. She pressed her palms against his chest for a moment, then slid them up, interlaced her fingers behind his neck.

The kiss intensified.

Paige felt breathless, then dizzy, then wildly exhilarated.

By the time Austin tore his mouth from hers, she was as dazed as if she'd been catapulted right past the retractable glass roof above their heads and out into the stars.

Breathing deeply and slowly, Paige let her forehead rest against his chest. She could feel the strong, rapid beat of his heart through her skin. “Well,” she said, sighing the word.

“Well,” he agreed gruffly, propping his chin on the crown of her head. His arms rested loosely around her waist.

They just stood there for a while, neither one speaking. Paige's emotions were complicated, hard to separate from the sensations pulsing in her flesh; being kissed by Austin McKettrick, being held in his arms, especially in those surreal surroundings, felt like a homecoming to her body.

But her reason had a different take on things, and so did her pride.

She found the strength to pull back—it was only a few inches, but far enough that she could breathe. Far enough that she could
think.

This was Austin. Her first love. Her
only
love, though there had been men in her life since their breakup, some of them almost special.

Other books

Judge Dredd by Neal Barrett
Being Amber by Sylvia Ryan
Sin and Desire by Swan, Carol
The Revelation of Louisa May by Michaela MacColl
Fly Me to the Moon by Alyson Noel
My Soul to Lose by Rachel Vincent
Clam Wake by Mary Daheim