HER COWBOY DEFENDER
Excerpt
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CHAPTER ONE
This can’t be happening. Piper
stared in disbelief at the black smoke billowing from the engine of the rental
car. She’d barely managed to pull over
to the side of the road before the giant plume erupted from beneath the hood,
along with a crackling she suspected might be outright fire. Any hope the car would manage to keep running
long enough to make it to her destination evaporated into the air much faster
than the smoke. She
shot a glance at the clock on the dashboard.
The digits glared back, relentless, unforgiving. Thirty-four
minutes. She had thirty-four minutes to
be at the rendezvous point. If she
wasn’t— No. She cut off the
thought before it could form. She
couldn’t afford to think about that, couldn’t think about anything but what she
was going to do now, how she was going to make the rendezvous. But when she
tried to come up with a solution to this latest hurdle, her mind remained
stubbornly blank except for the words that had been running through her head
nonstop for the past two days. This
can’t be happening. The
words raced together in a constant loop, picking up speed along with her pulse,
her heart pounding so fast and so hard in her chest she found it tougher and tougher to breathe. It
couldn’t end like this. She couldn’t
come this close only to fail. This
can’t be happening. Beneath the
shock clouding her brain, some preservation instinct forced her limbs into
motion, recognizing the fact that it wasn’t safe to remain in the car. For all she knew, the engine could be explode
at any moment. She had to get out of
there. Numbly,
she shut off the engine, then grabbed for her bag and the map. Lurching from the vehicle, she slammed the
door shut behind her. It was all she
could do not to give the door an angry kick.
She’d known as soon as the engine started making a knocking sound some
time ago that something was wrong, but couldn’t stop. Even if time wasn’t an issue, she knew
nothing about cars. She had no choice
but to keep pushing on and hope the car made it to her destination. So
much for that. Which
just left what she was going to do now. The
sun beat down from directly overhead, her fair skin already beginning to tingle
from its unrelenting beams. Raising a
hand to shade her eyes, she glanced around herself. The desert road stretched endlessly in either
direction, disappearing into the horizon on both sides with no indication where
it stopped. She had no idea where she
was, other than that it was somewhere in New She
checked her watch, already knowing what it would show, painfully aware of how
quickly time was slipping away. Thirty-two
minutes. The
back of her eyes began to burn, and she immediately squeezed her eyelids
together to keep the tears that threatened from falling. She wasn’t going to cry. She refused to. She hadn’t one bit since this ordeal had
begun. She hadn’t cried when she’d
learned of Pam’s accident. She hadn’t
cried when she’d received the horrible call two days ago. She hadn’t cried during the long journey,
even knowing what awaited her at the end.
But
never had she been as close to giving in to the tears as she was right
now. A
sob rose in her throat. This
can’t be happening. With
her eyes shut, it was the sound of an engine that reached her first, the sound
so faint she didn’t immediately recognize it.
When she did, she froze in disbelief, afraid to open her eyes, afraid
she was hallucinating. It seemed too
much to hope for, too much to believe possible, that a vehicle could pass by at
this particular moment when she needed it most.
Her
heart pounding anew, she slowly opened her eyes and turned toward the sound. The
vehicle was still far enough away she could barely make it out, its shape
shimmering in the sun, almost like a mirage.
She held her breath as it approached, gradually gaining enough substance
to confirm that it was very real. It was
a pickup truck. Red, she guessed, though
it hardly mattered. All that did was
that it was here. The
black cloud rising from the hood made her car pretty hard to ignore, but she
still stepped out into the road, waving her arms above her head to grab the
driver’s attention. She couldn’t risk
that the driver was the kind of person to ignore someone in trouble. A breath of relief worked its way from her
lungs when the truck began to slow long before it reached her, easing onto the
shoulder behind the rental car. Now
she just had to figure out what to do. Thinking
quickly, she watched as the driver’s door slowly opened. Moments later, two boots hit the dirt beneath
the bottom edge of the door, one after the other. Then a hat appeared as the driver ducked his
head out of the truck. It was a Stetson,
the shape unmistakable and instantly recognizable. It
was a cowboy. A genuine cowboy. A near-hysterical laugh bubbled in her
throat. She didn’t exactly come across
too many of them back in A
truck. Her
eyes slid past him, narrowing on his vehicle, the burst of humor instantly
forgotten. Cold,
hard resolve settled over her, and she slowly lowered her hand into her bag,
closing her fingers around the object there. And
suddenly she knew exactly what she had to do.
CADE MCCLAIN SWALLOWED an
impatient sigh as he climbed out of the cab of the truck. He really didn’t have time for this. The trip to But
as soon as he’d spotted the smoke on the road up ahead and seen the car, he’d
known he would have to pull over. Even
if the woman hadn’t flagged him down, he couldn’t have simply driven past a
smoking car without stopping. Not only
would it have been a lousy thing to do, but there was no telling when someone
else might have come along to help. This
desert road didn’t see much traffic. He
wondered how long she’d been here, or what she was even doing here for that
matter. She’d
moved out of the road to stand behind her car. He gave her a quick glance-over. She was a slim woman with short black hair,
dressed in a T-shirt and jeans. She
carried a bag of some kind, the strap slung crosswise over her body from one
shoulder to the opposite hip so the bag itself was almost entirely out of
view. She didn’t look familiar. Probably just a lost tourist who’d made a
wrong turn somewhere and ended up far down a road she had no business being on. He
did his best to keep his annoyance from showing. It wasn’t her fault she was having car
trouble. It had to be a lot tougher on
her than it was on him. “You
okay?” he called, stepping around the door without closing it. After
a moment, she gave her head a shaky nod.
“Yeah, I’m fine. I don’t know
what happened. The engine started making
this noise, and then all this smoke started coming out of it…” Her
voice quivered, almost like she was about to start crying or something, and he
nearly groaned. Oh,
God. Please don’t let her burst into
tears. The car he might be able to
handle, but the last thing he knew how to deal with was a crying female. He
took a deep breath, hoping if he remained calm his coolness would have an
effect on her. “Do you have a
phone? Did you call anybody?” “N-no,”
she said slowly, taking a step toward him.
“My battery’s dead.” She
chuckled, the sound ringing false. “Just
my luck.” “Well,
you can borrow mine. Let me get it out
of the cab.” He turned away to do just
that. “I
have a better idea.” Her
tone immediately put him on edge, the hardness in her voice completely
different from how she’d sounded just moments before. He froze, knowing before he looked at her
that something was wrong. He
slowly turned back to face her. She
was standing in exactly the same place. Except
now she held a pistol in her hands.
Copyright © 2012 by Kerry Connor. All Rights Reserved. |
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