Ruth Jean Dale - Something About Ewe

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Something About Ewe: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Animal Passions!Something About Ewe by Ruth Jean DaleCounting sheep only made her nights more restless…Oh-so-serious Thalia Mitchell is back in Shepherd's Pass, pretending she hadn't tried to seduce animal crusader Luke Dalton the last time she'd seen him…wrapped in a plastic shower curtain. But Luke hasn't forgotten. And he's no longer the sheepish boy next door. He's all grown up now, breathtakingly handsome and determined to take up exactly where the two of them left off!The Purrfect Man by Ruth Jean DaleOnce bitten, twice shyCat person Emily Patton doesn't like trendy lawyer Michael Forbes and his perfect good looks. She doesn't like his ugly dog, either. So how she ended up with the mutt in her backyard and Michael as a permanent dinner guest is still a mystery to her. Emily has to do something–quickly–before man and beast get the wrong idea…. Or is it the right one?

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“Thalia!”

“Emily!”

The two met in the middle of the store, between the buttons and the cash register. They hugged, they squealed, they hugged again. Finally Thalia drew back.

“What a welcome!”

“I’ve missed you,” Emily said. “I’m so glad you’re here. I saw your mom a day or two ago and she told me—”

“Emily, dear.” One of the shopping ladies had made her choice. “Can you ring these notions up for me?”

“Sure, Mrs. Adams.” Emily walked behind the counter and began tapping at the cash register keys. “You remember Thalia Myers, don’t you?”

“Mitchell now.” Thalia smiled at the woman. “Nice to see you, Mrs. Adams.”

“Nice to see you, dear. I’ll tell Angeline you’re back.”

Emily made change and thanked the woman with a smile before turning eagerly to Thalia. “You’ve got to tell me everything! It’s been years since we had a good—”

“Bye-bye, Emily.” Another woman waved from the front of the store. “I don’t see what I’m after so I’ll drop by again next week.”

“Fine, Mrs. Weller. See you then. Remember, I can special-order anything you want.” Emily came out from behind the counter, grabbed Thalia’s hand and drew her over to the small sitting area near the coffee service. “Gosh, Thalia, you look wonderful.”

Thalia didn’t feel wonderful. Next to Emily with her long black hair and sparkling blue eyes, her lace-frosted denim dress with all its hand-crafted details, Thalia felt brittle and…and foreign.

But she just said, “Thank you. So do you. And in answer to your question, I’m fine.” Bored with life, but fine.

Emily’s smooth face creased in a frown. “I hate to ask but…the divorce…?”

“Wasn’t as bad as it might have been.” Thalia accepted the foam cup of coffee Emily offered. “Don and I parted amicably. Even so…”

“Yes, even so.” Emily sat down on the wicker footstool. “Poor Thalia.”

Thalia frowned. “Why poor me?”

“I know you, Thalia. I’m sure you take the divorce as a personal failure.”

“It is a personal failure.”

Emily pursed her lips. “Of course, it isn’t. The marriage was obviously a mistake. Everybody makes mistakes, but that doesn’t mean they’ve failed.”

Thalia had to smile at that one. “Em, you’ve always had the most convoluted reasoning. You should have been a lawyer.”

“God forbid!” Emily looked honestly appalled. “I can’t abide lawyers. The thing is, I know you, Thalia Myers Mitchell. You do take everything too seriously.”

“Few things are more serious than a marriage.”

“Oh, piffle!” Emily wrinkled her nose. “Don’t forget, I knew you when.”

“That’s for sure.” Thalia had to grin. “But I was just a kid then.”

“Are you saying you’ve changed?”

“Well…” After serious consideration, Thalia added, “No.”

“Last I heard, you wanted a serious husband, two serious children and a serious career. At least, that’s what you kept saying.”

“I got the career,” Thalia said a bit lamely, thinking that was the least important item on her wish list. “Considering how the marriage ended, I’m grateful we didn’t have children.” She gritted her teeth, then burst out, “I really hate failure! Now it’s start-over time and I’m not looking forward to it.”

“But you’re home,” Emily reasoned. “It’ll be easy, much easier than starting over in California. It’ll be like old times.” She frowned. “And you’re nodding your head no because…?”

“I’m only here temporarily, or didn’t Mother mention that? My company has merged with a larger company and—”

Emily interrupted with a dismissive groan. “Insurance, I understand?” She wrinkled her nose with distaste.

“An honorable endeavor,” Thalia pointed out.

“And certainly serious.” Emily’s blue eyes gleamed with mischief.

Thalia made a face. “Can I finish what I started to say? The two companies are merging. As a result, I’ve taken leave during the transition. When Mother heard, she insisted I come home. Otherwise, I would have stayed out there and…and…”

“And what? Doesn’t sound as if all those ands would have been much fun.”

“I have friends,” Thalia said defensively, “and fun is not the point of life. I could certainly have kept busy. But since I hadn’t been home in so long, I decided to come to make Mother happy.” She grinned. “And if you won’t tell anyone, I’ll even admit that I wanted to renew acquaintances with old friends.”

“Who’ve you seen so far?”

“You. You were my best friend, after all.”

Emily looked smug. “What a nice thing to say.” A dimple appeared at the corner of her mouth. “Flattering, too. I thought you might have gone to see Lucas first.” She dragged it out. “Lu-cas.”

Thalia hoped her cheeks weren’t too red. “Certainly not. Why would I go see Luke Dalton?”

“Because you’re on the rebound and interested in old flames as well as old friends?”

“I am not on the rebound and Lucas is not an old flame.”

“You wanted him to be your first flame,” Emily teased. “Aren’t you the least bit curious about him?” Her eyes widened. “You did know he’s back in Shepherd’s Pass and in practice with Doc Miller?”

“Mother…might have mentioned it.”

“Oh, really. Did she also mention that he’s even better looking than he was before?”

“You’ve got to be kidding. I didn’t think that was possible.”

“There!” Emily sounded delighted. “That’s my old pal, Thalia. I’m glad you’re home! We’re going to have so much fun that you’ll never leave.”

The bell above the front door tinkled and Emily frowned. “Drat. I’ll have to see who that is.” She rose. “Maybe whoever it is will leave without buying anything—and come back later, of course.”

Thalia relaxed back against the cushions to wait. It was wonderful seeing Emily again, but she felt as out of place here as she had in California. Emily belonged because she had never left. Her grandmother had owned this store for decades. When she’d retired two or three years ago and moved to warmer climes, she’d left her favorite granddaughter in charge.

It was no surprise that Emily had taken hold with such enthusiasm. A whiz with a sewing machine since childhood, she was doing what she loved. Thalia, by contrast, was doing something valuable, but she didn’t love it.

Sighing, she looked down at her conservative brown skirt and beige silk blouse. She should have worn jeans and mountain boots. In her California clothes, she even looked like a foreigner, no matter how nicely everyone treated her. All she wanted to do was blend in, make her mother happy, and flee back to the coast at the earliest opportunity.

She heard footsteps but didn’t turn. “That didn’t take long,” she said. “Was it anyone I know?”

Hands covered her eyes and a deeply masculine voice said in her ear, “That all depends on the meaning of the word know.”

She caught her breath, then covered his hands with hers and tried without success to drag them away from her eyes. “Luke! Turn me loose!”

“Shoot,” he said, promptly releasing her. “You guessed. How’s it goin’, Thalia?”

Leaning her head back, she looked up into his smiling face. Even upside down, he looked wonderful, especially with that lock of sun-bleached hair spilling over his forehead.

“It’s going fine,” she said. Looking at him this way made her dizzy. She straightened selfconsciously. “I see you haven’t changed one bit, Lucas Dalton.”

“Why would I want to change?” He rounded the settee and took a seat across from her in the wicker chair.

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