Mary Forbes - The Man From Montana
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- Название:The Man From Montana
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They entered a deep kitchen sporting a horde of knotty pine cupboards, an ample work island in its center and a Sub-Zero refrigerator. To the right, a rectangular oak table stood gleaming with light flooding in from floor-to-ceiling windows that faced snowy evergreens. And everywhere, photographs of a red-haired woman. Upon the antique phone table, upon whatever wall space remained unclaimed by cupboards.
Susie, the wife who left Ash McKee widowed.
Without a coat or hat, he waited by a back door sheltered in a small alcove next to the pantry. On his feet, his work boots remained unlaced.
He held open the door as Rachel and Charlie stepped into the cold morning. The wind stung their faces while they followed Ash down a wooden walkway toward a tiny cottage looming thirty yards ahead amidst a snowy stand of pine and birch.
Opening the guesthouse door, Ash waited for her and Charlie to step inside.
It was a dollhouse. Three miniature rooms with lace curtains pulled back with bows, a tiny state-of-the-art kitchen. Cozy living room with a round rug and cushiony furniture in earthy tones. Santa Fe prints on the walls. Dried hydrangeas in a tall vase on the coffee table. Above the stone fireplace hung a wooden, hand-painted sign: Welcome to Flying Bar T Ranch.
No portraits of red-haired women.
Ash wiped his boots on the welcome mat, then walked toward the kitchen situated in the far right corner. “The stove is gas.” He slanted her a look. “Ever cooked with gas?”
“Yes. The place is lovely, Ash. Thank you.” She meant it.
“Not me you should thank, it’s Tom.”
She understood. It was Tom’s ranch, after all. If Ash had his way, she wouldn’t be here. “I will. And thank you for not mentioning the series I’m writing.”
“How do you know I haven’t?”
“Because I doubt he would’ve let us in the door, and he wouldn’t have invited me to see this house.”
“You’re right. He wouldn’t.”
Ruefully, she turned away, surveyed the room again. No matter that the McKees lived solitary lives. They were good people. She did not want to hurt them, if she could help it in any way. Her father was wrong when he’d told her to “do anything to get a story.”
Ash said, “Upstairs are a couple bedrooms and the bathroom. If you want to use the fireplace I’ll haul in a few logs from the main house.”
“Thanks. This is…fine. We won’t need the fireplace.” She didn’t want him doing anything extra, not when his cold eyes and implacable jaw said he would rather she lived someplace else. Like the North Pole. Still, she couldn’t help wondering, “Do you usually rent out the guesthouse in the winter months?”
In town, she’d heard about his wife’s trail riding business—the one he’d packed away after she died.
Suddenly, his eyes changed, gentled, and she wondered how it would feel to see them soften because of her. Then the emotion retreated and the dark, icy stare settled back in place. “This is a working ranch. We don’t have time for tourists and the like during our busy months.”
And the like. City folk, out for a quick joyride on a ranch. Curiosity seekers. People of her ilk.
She tried blunt honesty. “Ash…I know you wish I hadn’t come into your life, but—”
“You know nothing of what I wish, lady.”
“Rachel,” she said quietly. “My name is Rachel. Can we call a truce? At least until I talk to Tom again about the interviews?”
“When do you plan on telling him? Or are you hoping to move in here first?”
In other words, execute a con job.
She lifted her chin. She may be a newswoman but, whether he believed it or not, she had a smidgen of propriety, of decency. She was not entirely her father’s daughter, but her mother’s child. “I’ll explain the minute we return to the main house.”
“It’s cold in here, Mom,” Charlie whispered, swinging her attention away from the man across the room. “Is it gonna be freezing when we live here?”
“No, baby.” She righted his eyewear perched at the end of his pug nose. “There’s a heating system same as in the other places we’ve lived.”
Ash strode to a gauge on the wall beside the coat closet. A flick of his finger and she heard the furnace kick in. A couple more adjustments and he’d set the daily program. Done, he walked back to where she and Charlie stood on the welcome mat.
“Trail riding,” he said, “was my wife’s business.”
In other words, apart from the ranch.
“She decorated this building, did the booking.” He looked around. “No one’s stayed here in fifty-five months.”
Since she died. Rachel would be the first. A woman he didn’t want on his ranch, a woman he certainly didn’t want sleeping in his wife’s dollhouse.
Rachel wanted to say “I’m sorry” but in light of why she was here, the words felt phony. Story be damned, this cottage was exactly what her son needed. “Charlie,” she said, “wait for me at the main house, okay?”
“Why?”
“Because I need to speak with Mr. Ash a moment.”
Her son darted a look at the man, worry in his blue eyes. “You gonna be long?”
“No.” She fiddled with his wool hat, tucked the tiny ’Vette into his pocket. “A minute. Now go on. I’ll be right behind you.”
She waited until her son slipped out the door, then turned to the man with his hands on his hips. “I don’t know what happened in the accident that took your wife’s life and I can only imagine the loss you suffered. But I assure you I won’t change or damage anything in this building or on your ranch. And I will continue looking in town for a more permanent place. As soon as I find one, we’ll be gone.”
“Don’t you mean once you’ve finished interviewing Tom?”
For a moment, silence. “Why didn’t you warn him?”
“That you’re here because of a Vietnam kick?”
“I’m here because my son needs a decent place to live.”
One brow rose slowly. “You going maternal on me, Ms. Brant?”
“It’s the truth.”
He laughed softly. “Now there’s an interesting word coming from a reporter.”
She wouldn’t back down. “You haven’t answered my question.”
“Tom handles his own battles.”
In other words, handicaps did not make a man less a man.
She sighed. “I’m unsure why you dislike me so much. Is it because I work for a newspaper, or is it me personally?”
“Who said I dislike you?”
His hot tea eyes speared her heart, ran a current down her thighs. She saw his desire, saw him fight the emotion.
Her nerves smoothed. Whether he liked it or not, his attraction to her was as true as the air they breathed.
Linear brows lowering, he moved closer. “Cat got your tongue?”
She stepped back. “I think I should go.”
Remaining alone with him hadn’t been a good idea. Rough Montana terrain, fifteen-hundred-pound horses and thousand-pound cows had crafted his body.
But she had observed his expression with his daughter, when he thought of his wife.
Something in her eyes had him suddenly turning for the door. “Inez, our housekeeper, will clean the place over the next few days. I’ll call you when it’s ready.”
“Ash…”
Head down, back to her, he waited. In that second, she wanted to touch him. Just a touch. A palm to his spine, easing the stress she sensed churning under his skin.
“You’re a kind man. I’m very—Thank you. For everything.”
His shoulders heaved a sigh. “Best get back to your boy.” Opening the door, he strode into a thick, lazy snowfall.
Tom was at the kitchen table with Daisy and Charlie, drinking hot cocoa, when Ash returned from the cottage, Rachel in tow. Seeing his stepfather in that chair, so mangled…and then for her to head back to town without a hint, without honesty…. Ash frowned. It wasn’t right.
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