Read The Maverick Meets His Match Online

Authors: Anne Carrole

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Western, #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary Fiction, #Westerns

The Maverick Meets His Match (18 page)

She bit her lip and tried to hold in the shrieks climbing up her throat.

She yelped just as the plane bucked, and her stomach roiled.

“I’m going to be sick,” she managed to gasp out.

“Bag’s under the seat.”

She fumbled, finding it and a square cushion, which she left on the floor.

“You have a parachute with this?” She placed the opened bag under her chin.

“That’s a floatation device. Besides, no way you’re shooting out of a plane at this altitude, honey. We’ll be fine. Trust me.”

Trust might be easy to request—but hard to grant as they tossed about.

The plane dipped, then rose again as the pelting rain sent rivulets of water down the glass windshield. No sense looking out the window. She couldn’t see anything but the eerie gray darkness of a huge abyss.

“Just a few more miles of this. Hang in there,” Ty said.

He was flipping this and that switch on the panel. Did he really know what he was doing? The plane shuddered, and the queasiness in Mandy’s stomach ended up in the bag.

The rain ceased as abruptly as it had begun. The shuddering stopped, and with the tick of a clock, they were flying once again through settled clouds and aqua-blue skies.

“You okay?” Ty said, a grin on his face as he peered at her bag.

She crumpled the top closed, hoping it didn’t smell too bad. “I will be.” It was mortifying enough to have lost her lunch while Ty had remained the model of calmness. She’d never get used to flying in these little planes, she realized. Just like she’d never get used to being with Ty Martin. And yet here she was.

“Good. We’re almost home.”

Home? Where was that now? The ranch house she couldn’t face? Her mother’s house, where she no longer lived? Ty’s hotel suite, where she’d merely be a guest in a man’s room?

Mandy headed for the airport’s lounge as soon as she disembarked the plane so she could fix her makeup, do a quick brush of her teeth, rinse her mouth, and try to calm the wings still flapping in her stomach. As she exited the bathroom, however, the queasiness she felt from the plane ride lurched into downright nausea as she watched a willowy blonde tap her high heels across the ragged linoleum floor and fling her arms around Ty’s neck as he stood talking to the man behind the counter. Mandy stopped in midstride when the blonde, who looked like the one in the picture on Ty’s phone, planted a long, full-mouth kiss on Ty’s lips.

“Surprised?” The blonde giggled, her curvy body still wrapped around Ty’s. “When you said you were working on a special project and too busy to see me, I thought I’d come down here for the weekend and see if I couldn’t coax you into a little time off. But when you weren’t at your hotel room this morning, I figured the next best place to find you either coming or going was to check on your plane—and I was right!” She squealed the last words.

Now that was a woman who obviously was used to getting what she wanted. And given the way she was put together, tall, thin, and with a bust measurement unnaturally out of proportion to her narrow hips, she probably wasn’t insecure enough to think a man might not be pleased to see her. Dressed in spiked white heels, tight white skinny jeans, and a sleeveless, strapless pink top, even Mandy had to admit she looked like a female version of a sugary confection.

Irritation spiked in her. Not that Mandy was jealous. How could she be jealous when Ty meant nothing to her? But still, the woman had nerve. Legally, Ty was her husband, and they had both agreed to be faithful to their vows for the six months. Miss Sugar was not part of the deal.

Finding her legs, Mandy strode forward. She knew the exact minute Ty spotted her, because his face colored crimson.

“You going to introduce me, Ty?” Mandy said as she drew alongside the two. The man behind the counter had made himself scarce.

Miss Sugar turned her blond head to look at Mandy. Big blue eyes stared at her from over a perfect little nose. A frown creased the woman’s once-smooth brow. The pointed chin rose. “Yes, Ty, introduce us,” she drawled. She didn’t move an inch from her spot melded to Ty’s side.

With some awkwardness, Ty set Miss Sugar away from him. “Mandy, this is Kendall Parker. Kendall, this is Mandy…Martin. My wife.” He practically choked on the last words.

She would have admitted those words sounded odd to her too, except she was too caught up in gauging Miss Parker’s reaction to the news.

“Your wife?” Kendall said the words with obvious skepticism, as if someone were playing a bad joke. “Honey, you don’t believe in marriage.” She shifted her gaze to Ty.

He held up his hands. “She’s my wife, Kendall. We were married a few days ago.”

Kendall looked Mandy up and down, obviously trying to gauge what Mandy had that Kendall didn’t. The scowl on Kendall’s face said she hadn’t come up with anything.

Annoyed, Mandy stepped to Ty and twined her arm in his, like the loving couple they weren’t.

“I don’t understand,” Kendall said. “You said you were working on a project, not marrying some strange woman. Did you get drunk in Vegas or something?”

“Mandy. Her name is Mandy. We’ve known each other for ten years.” The twitch in Ty’s jaw belied the steadiness in his voice. He rubbed a hand down his face.

Kendall’s eyebrows arched. “Just when were you going to tell me?”

“Yes, Ty, when were you going to tell her?”

If eyes could spark fire, Ty’s would have burned a hole right through her. “Mandy, I’d like to have a few words with Kendall.”

Mandy arched her brows but didn’t move. She’d no reason to make this easy for him.

“Alone.”

She forced a smile. “Fine. And when you’re done, you can have a few words with me. Alone.”

Mandy stepped away, crossed her arms, and watched from a distance as her husband tried to explain things to a woman far more beautiful than she was.

Ty could tell by the resolute way Mandy walked to the car that he was in for it.

“So I’m a business project? I thought you were going to tell her we were married.”

Ty searched his mind for an explanation she would buy. He came up empty.

“What would I say? I’m married but not really married, so check back with me in six months?” Ty had also texted the same message to the other women in his life. As far as everyone knew, he was on a special project.

“So you intend to go back with her when this is over?”

He shrugged. “I left the door open. She’s nice enough.” Kendall didn’t ask much from a man other than good sex and a nice gift once in a while. Her preference was jewelry.

Mandy’s mouth had flatlined. “And that’s all you require.”

It had been. “I suppose.” Although being with Mandy, he’d come to enjoy matching wits with her—business-wise and otherwise. Too bad she was so much work. Kendall was no work at all.

“And will she…be around after six months?”

Kendall had not taken the news well. And he hadn’t offered any explanation for this change in his circumstances, because there was none he felt anyone would believe, not to mention it was complicated. “Doubtful.”

“Well, I’m sorry. I guess.”

“No need to be.” He’d never had a problem finding willing women.

But was that all he required? Someone who didn’t demand anything from him? Who just wanted sex and a gift now and again?

He glanced over at Mandy. She walked with her arms crossed and her body rigid. Could she be upset by Kendall? Could it matter to her? That was an intriguing thought.

* * *

“You’ve got to put some clothes on,” Mandy said as she turned toward the wall to avoid the sight of a naked Ty, towel drying his hair, fresh from the shower. The man apparently had no shame…and a very nice body.

They were ensconced in his hotel suite, the room with just one California king bed. She’d been so distraught over the prospect of staying again in her grandfather’s house, she’d failed to ask if they’d have to share a bed if they stayed in his suite. This was the price she paid for that mistake.

Of course, being a mere hotel room, there was no space for her collection of boots or most of her clothes. She’d have to keep her stuff at her mother’s and live out of a suitcase. Sounded as temporary as her marriage.

“No, I don’t.”

“Then I can’t stay here. I can’t sleep in the same bed.”

The wall was decorated with a curlicue patterned paper, and she began to trace the design in her mind to distract her from the hammering of her heart.

“Your choice. But you void the terms of the will and then…well, what was the point of getting hitched?”

She let out a deep breath. That was a question she’d asked herself every day since. “Wrap a towel around yourself then.”

“No need. I’m all dried off. What’s the big deal? You’ve seen my junk before.” He had the nerve to chuckle.

Yes, she’d seen it that night in Abilene and had tried ever since to avoid seeing it. Because he had nice junk. Very nice junk.

“But I wasn’t sleeping next to it. In the same bed.” The wallpaper repeated the curlicue pattern every foot or so.

“I’m under the covers. You can turn around.”

She turned around and there he was, bare chested, a thin sheet barely covering the lower half of his body, with a wide, mischievous grin covering his face. Lordy. It was like finding a fantasy man in your bed—all muscle and sinew.

“I’d be fine if you decided to go to bed nude.” His grin turned cocky.

“Not happening.” Though she was wearing a baggy T-shirt, a memento from one of their rodeos, she still felt overexposed looking into those smoldering, coal-dark eyes of his.

She lifted the covers, careful not to disturb the sheet covering his body, and slid into bed. Tucking the blankets around her, she hoped to create some barrier between them. Unfortunately, there was no barrier that could prevent the pheromones wrapping around her. Her heart was beating fast, and she felt warm, very warm. So warm she wanted to throw the covers right off her.

This was such a bad idea. She couldn’t have chosen a better way to torture herself. She closed her eyes, felt a movement on the bed, and opened them only to stare right into his handsome face and those dark eyes. He’d rolled next to her, propping his head on his hand. Gratefully, the sheet still covered the essentials, but that left a lot of flesh and muscle still exposed. Rippling muscle. Tanned flesh. Heaven help her.

“I don’t know what you’re afraid of, Mandy Martin, but you needn’t be. We have an end date, clear terms, and, evidently, your grandfather’s consent. I say let’s go for it.”

That’s what scared her. This was merely a distraction for him. She wasn’t sure what it would be for her.

“I’m not interested.” Her voice sounded thin, reedy, and unconvincing.

He slid up, almost relieving the sheet of its duty. At the last minute he tugged it up, but not before she caught a glimpse.

Every night of their trip, in the intimacy of their hotel room, he’d told her he wanted her. She’d had other men tell her they wanted to have sex with her. But they weren’t men she’d once fallen in love with. They weren’t men who were willing to steal her company. They weren’t men who might also steal her heart.

He stroked his finger down her cheek, sending a little tremor through her. “I can get you interested.” His breath puffed against her cheek, and her belly tingled.

She turned her face toward him, realizing too late the mistake she made as he gently cupped her chin. The kiss started sweet but quickly turned hot, very hot. His slick tongue stroked hers, cracking her pitiful attempt at resistance. She wanted him. And he knew it. His passion sent an earthquake-worthy tremor through her and she hung on. Sliding her hands up his neck, she burrowed her fingers in his hair and held him so she could feast on his mouth. He tasted good. He kissed even better.

She felt his warm hand slip under the hem of her T-shirt and slide up her cool flesh to her breast while he pressed his tongue deeper into her mouth. A moan escaped from somewhere in her throat. Her nipples peaked, and her mind turned fuzzy. He kissed her like he was going to devour her, and she wanted to be devoured.

It would just be sex. Just mindless sex. No one would know.

The word
liar
popped into her head. She was lying. To herself. It would never be just sex with Ty. For reasons that at the moment eluded her, he meant something more to her, however mistaken those feelings were. However much she didn’t want to own up to them.

It took more willpower than she thought she possessed, but she pulled back. He stared at her through lowered lids, regret in his eyes.

“No,” she managed to say.

“It’s gonna happen sometime. And soon. You can take that to the bank,” he said, his voice husky and his smile assured.

Chapter 11

The following morning, she called Libby and Cat to squeeze in coffee at the café before the dreaded late-morning flight to the Washington rodeo. She hoped Cat and Libby had some good advice to strengthen her quickly fading resolve, because she surely didn’t know what to do.

It was a few minutes past ten when Mandy, dressed in a Prescott rodeo T-shirt, jeans, and barn boots, walked into the café, her two friends already situated in a booth and waiting for her. At the last minute, one of Prescott’s best broncs had pulled up lame, but it turned out to be only a pebble caught in the hoof. Something Kyle should have checked for before sounding the alarm, but he was still learning.

Mandy slid into the booth just ahead of the waitress heading for their table. It was the same perky blonde from the other night, and they gave her their order before saying their hellos. Not quite ready to talk about herself, Mandy addressed Libby, who was wearing a cute blue-and-white maternity top with her jeans now that she was beginning to show. “So how are you feeling?”

“Good. The second trimester is a lot easier than the first, thank goodness.” The woman was beaming, and Mandy felt an odd sense of emptiness at the thought of never having children. Clearly Libby had found the right man. She wondered if she ever would.

“And, Cat, how are things going with that adverse-possession claim?” Mandy asked.

Cat was dressed in a white tailored shirt, skintight jeans, and a shiny pair of undoubtedly new cowgirl boots. She looked like she stepped out of a fashion magazine rather than a ranch pickup. Cat had always been the girly-girly type when they were growing up, while Mandy had been all tomboy. How her friend was going to run a huge ranch now that her stubborn father had passed away was beyond Mandy, but one thing she could say about Cat, she was determined—a trait they both shared.

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