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Synopsis
TEXAS TOMBOY When feisty Dallas Durango couldn't bear the stuffy Boston girls' school a minute longer, she fled as far West as her money would take her: to St. Joe, Missouri. There the runaway heiress discovered that women earned mere pennies and, dressing herself as a boy, signed on with the Pony Express. But what the defiant female never counted on was meeting horse breeder Quint Randolph, whose glance made her want to shuck her disguise. . .and whose touch made her want to beg for more! KENTUCKY GENT Feeling guilty over his wife's death the year before, handsome Quint Randolph had sworn off women and now pursued only stallions that could improve his thoroughbreds. But when he first gazed at the tall, slender Pony Express rider, he knew right away that was no lanky lad. . .and his virile body responded as never before. Hating her for making him break his vow, loving her for reawakening his desire, Quint chased her along the dangerous strail, intent on making her share his bedroll during the long, hot Nevada Nights.
Release date: May 16, 2014
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 429
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Nevada Nights
Georgina Gentry
Dallas already had plenty of trouble of her own when she left work at dark during a sudden snowstorm and found the handsome, well-dressed drunk freezing to death on the doorstep of the Godey’s Lady’s Book building.
For a long moment after she locked the door and almost stumbled over the man sitting on the step, the tall girl only pulled her forest green coat more tightly about her against the chill wind that whipped her long ebony hair around her face. Then she blinked in disbelief.
The hatless man grinned up at her. “Seem to have mislaid both the address and my overcoat,” he drawled and then hiccoughed, confusion evident in his hazel eyes. “Tell me, is there a big-stakes card game here tonight?”
Dallas shook her head. “Mister, you’re so drunk, you couldn’t hit the ground with your hat in three tries if you were wearing one, much less gamble all night!”
“I dispute that.” He swayed to his feet, tall, broad-shouldered, and attempted to make a sweeping bow. “No Kentucky gentleman, particularly Quint Randolph, is ever that drunk!”
Off balance, he stumbled and draped a muscular arm around her to keep from falling. “But on the other hand, angel, you might be right.” He winked down at her. “I’ll tell you what, you help me find that card game, and I’ll pay your usual fee for taking your time.”
“What?” Dallas felt her face flush hotly in the chill night. Evidently, the rake had mistaken her for a lady of the evening out looking for customers. Respectable girls were seldom on the street alone after dark, but she’d lost track of time as she’d worked on the fashion writeup and hadn’t realized how late it was.
His arm felt warm on her shoulders, and his face came close enough for her to catch the scent of brandy. Abruptly, his lips came down on hers, hot and tasting of spirits, intoxicating her for a split second. She seemed powerless to stop him from pulling her hard against the fine fabric of his suit. And in that moment, she was not sure whether the rhythmic beating was her heart or his.
“You sidewinder!” Dallas jerked out of his grasp and pushed him. “You may be from Kentucky, but you’re no gentleman!”
Quint Randolph collapsed on the doorstep again, looking up at her in astonishment. He rubbed his right hand through his brown hair, a big gold signet ring reflecting the dim street light as he brushed away snowflakes.
In a fury she backed away, unsure whether to be angry with him or herself. If only old Josh, the janitor, hadn’t taken sick and left early, leaving her alone at the magazine office. Now there wasn’t anyone to help her.
“I reckon I ought to call the police,” she blustered, looking up and down the deserted street, and knowing she didn’t dare. The authorities all over the East were no doubt on the lookout for the runaway daughter of a big Texas rancher.
The big man smiled sadly, regretfully, looking suddenly much older, although she doubted there was as much as ten years difference in their ages. Something about his handsome face mirrored deep tragedy. “Please don’t do that, dark angel. Your virtue is safe, although I forgot myself for a moment. I–I can’t . . . that is, I’m no threat to any woman in that way.”
Dallas blinked her dark eyes, realization dawning as she took in the humiliation on his face. Was this virile specimen of a man telling her he was impotent?
She flushed again. How would she know what he hinted at? After all, she was an eighteen-year-old virgin. What little she knew came from breeding fine horses and cattle on her father’s big Triple D ranch down near Austin.
Texas. A wave of homesickness washed over her, and tears came to her eyes. The bluebonnets would be in bloom right now, and scarlet Indian paintbrush blossoms would make the vast prairie look like a wildfire. . . .
“Ma’am,” the drunk said softly, “I sure didn’t mean to say anything to make you cry.”
“Horsefeathers.” Dallas gulped and wiped at her eyes. “It wasn’t anything you said.” She looked up and down the street uncertainly. The chill wind had driven everyone inside. The drunk wasn’t her responsibility. She turned to go, paused. “Mister, will you be all right?”
He sighed, looking a bit sad. “If I can find the card game–”
“Well, it isn’t here,” she snapped, absently pulling at one of her lavender pearl earrings. “You’d better check the address again.” She whirled and started down the street.
Behind her, the man called, “Thank you, angel.”
She stopped uncertainly, looking behind her. “Are you sure you’ll be all right?”
He shivered now on the step, looking sad, weary. “I’ll just sit here another minute or so and try to get my bearings. Maybe I’ll remember where the game is.”
“Don’t sit there too long,” Dallas scolded. “You might go to sleep and never wake up.”
He laughed, but there was no humor in it. “There’ve been nights this past year when that would have been very tempting.”
Well, she’d done her best. There wasn’t anyone on the deserted street to help her and after all, he wasn’t her responsibility. Dallas walked away, the wind whipping her daffodil yellow hoop skirt around her legs, snow blowing thick enough now to blind her. Cowboys back home called a storm like this a blue norther. It blew in suddenly out of a gray northern sky, sending temperatures plummeting.
She listened for footsteps behind her, heard none, turned around again. The tragic man still sat on the doorstep. Even at this distance, she saw his wide shoulders shiver. “Hey, mister,” she called, “you can’t stay there; you’ll freeze to death.”
She retraced her path, stood staring down at him.
“Can’t freeze to death, he murmured thickly, ”got too much alcohol in me for that.”
“I reckon we agree on that! You sure cut the wolf loose tonight, didn’t you?”
“What?” His hazel eyes looked at her blankly.
Dallas shrugged. “It’s just something Texas cowboys say when they go on a drunk.” She felt both annoyed and angry that she’d been the one to find the elegant gentleman. Suppose she left him here and he went to sleep on the steps? She pictured coming to work at the magazine in the morning, finding him still slumped in the same spot, all covered with snow and frozen to death.
Horsefeathers. What to do now? She already had more trouble than she needed after having run away from Mrs. Priddy’s Female Academy. She’d taken the first train out of the Boston station and had ended up here, hoping to hide out until Papa cooled down and would listen to reason. Dallas didn’t want to be turned into a lady; she wanted to go back to the wide open spaces she loved.
Quint Randolph hiccoughed, bringing her back to her dilemma. What she should do was get him on his feet, head him back to his family or even his card game, whichever was closest.
Dallas reached out a hand to him. “Look, I’ll help you find a carriage, and you give the driver your home address. Your wife is probably waiting dinner and is worried sick about you.”
He stared into space. “She won’t worry ever again,” he mumbled drunkenly, “Melanie …”
“Oh, here, let me help you up.”
He reached out and took her hand, his big one completely enveloping hers. “Good Lord, you’ve got small hands. Can I go home with you, dark angel?”
Dallas laughed in spite of herself. “Not hardly, I live in a strict boardinghouse.”
“Then why don’t you go home with me?” He hauled himself to his feet, almost pulling her off balance as he did so. She found herself in his arms as she struggled for balance, trying to keep him on his feet. He was as heavy as a side of beef, but the heat of him against her felt good.
She struggled to straighten up and tried to pull her long hair out of her eyes when the wind whipped it. There wasn’t any point in arguing with him. She’d help him until she spotted a policeman or a carriage for hire, then she’d be on her way back to her lonely boardinghouse room.
. “You need to go home and sleep it off,” she scolded, as she would chide any cowboy on her father’s ranch who had tied one on. “It must be nearly eight o’clock.” “Morning or evening?”
She started to laugh, then realized from his eyes that he wasn’t joking. “Mr. Randolph, how long has it been since you’ve been completely sober?”
He swayed a little. “I think maybe several days ago when I arrived from Kentucky.”
“You’re in worse shape than I thought.” Dallas sighed and took his arm, draped it over her shoulders. “Maybe I could find you a carriage.”
She started walking, helping the tall man along the sidewalk.
“If we don’t find the card game, we could go to the Golden Slipper or the Queen of Hearts and have some champagne.” He smiled crookedly as they stumbled through the chill darkness.
“Have you been trying to drink this town dry?”
He shivered against her. “I’ve given it serious thought,” he said solemnly. “Should have stayed with my thoroughbreds but Sister insisted I come or else!”
Dallas swayed under his weight as they stumbled along. The cold wind took her breath away as it whipped at her skirt and blew icy needles of snow against her face. At least she had a coat. The man shivered again. Dallas looked up at him in concern. “If I don’t get you inside, you’ll catch your death,” she said.
“What I need is a warm brandy.” He smiled down at her.
“You’ve had too much brandy already,” she snapped. “If you got near an open flame, your breath would catch fire!”
“For an angel of the streets, you are the most outspoken hussy I ever met! You won’t keep any customers if you aren’t more charming to them.”
Dallas resisted the urge to drop him right on the sidewalk and leave. After all, he was so drunk he didn’t know what he was saying. Tomorrow, he’d probably have a splitting headache and a blank memory.
There didn’t seem to be any carriages for hire along the street. The darkness and the cold had driven all of them back to the barns.
Quint Randolph said, “I’m not feeling very well.”
“That’s no surprise,” Dallas said, bending under his weight as he leaned on her and they stumbled along. “Just don’t get sick right now, you hear?”
He stopped, drew himself up proudly. “I’m a Southern gentleman and, as such, I’ll have you know I can hold my liquor.”
“That’s the problem,” Dallas snapped, “you’re holding too much, just keep walking.” She moved doggedly forward.
“Funny accent, but I like your voice, angel,” he said. “Deep and throaty like velvet, what we used to call a ‘whiskey’ voice. Don’t you sing at the Golden Slipper?”
“Where I’m from, Texas, they’d think anyone east of the Mississippi has a funny accent, and no, I don’t sing at the Golden Slipper.”
“Maybe that was Pearl,” he said thoughtfully as they walked, “or maybe that redhead, Tasha, or maybe–”
“Look, Mr. Randolph, I’m not any of your saloon canaries, comprende?” She was getting angrier by the minute as they walked. Her shoulders ached from half supporting his weight even though she was taller and stronger than the average girl, and she had worked on big roundups. What was it about this rich drunk that had ever made her think he was sad and sensitive?
She glanced up at him. He shivered uncontrollably, his teeth chattering. In spite of all his conversation, he was very, very drunk. Tomorrow he would wake up with a splitting headache and probably little memory of what had happened tonight. He might even think he’d gone to his card game. No doubt there was some simpering genteel lady sitting on some Kentucky plantation, with a houseful of children, waiting for her erring husband to come back from his business trip in Philadelphia.
She heard the clop of hooves on the cobblestones and sighed with relief as a bay horse appeared out of the mist, pulling a carriage. “Thank God! I was beginning to wonder what I was going to do! Hey, cabbie!”
She waved frantically, propping up the drunken rake. The ragged carriage kept moving. She suddenly realized that they must make a tragic or comical sight, standing under the flickering street lamp in the blowing snow.
The cabbie seemed half-asleep, and Dallas realized as the cab didn’t slow down that he hadn’t seen her or didn’t intend to stop. What would she do if he went on past and left her standing in the street with a half-frozen drunk and no one to help her?
On sudden impulse, she stepped out in front of the carriage, dragging the man with her.
The horse whinnied and half reared in its harness, sending the fat driver almost falling from the seat. “Hey you, girlie! Get outa the street!” He waved her away with one fat fist. “You and your customer find another place to cross! You almost caused an accident!”
If she weren’t so desperate, Dallas would have given him a real tongue lashing, but this was no time for taking offense. “I need a cab to get him home.”
“Naw.” The driver shook his head, pulled his coat collar up. “I’m headin’ in. No business to speak of and not a fit night out for man nor beast!”
Quint Randolph seemed to come to momentarily. “The lady and I want to go to the Golden Slipper for some champagne,” he demanded. “She’s the singing star there.”
I don’t care if she’s the president’s lady,“ the man shot back. ”Now get out of me way.”
Dallas didn’t move. “I’ll pay double,” she shouted. She wondered suddenly if the rake had that kind of money on him? If she’d had sufficient funds, she wouldn’t have taken the job at the lady’s fashion magazine, although the editor, Mrs. Hale, was nice enough.
But before the cabbie could answer, Quint Randolph drew himself up proudly. “I resent his tone,” he drawled to Dallas. “We’ll walk until we find another carriage.”
Then he promptly slumped to his knees, almost taking Dallas with him.
The fat driver peered down at them from his seat, but he didn’t move as Dallas struggled with Quint’s weight. “Girlie, did you say double?”
“Yes! You ... you bandit, you! Now give me a hand!” How had she gotten herself into this mess? Suppose the Kentuckian wasn’t as wealthy as he appeared to be? She certainly didn’t have the fare. But this was an emergency. She’d worry about that when they were on the way.
The driver climbed down, stared curiously at them, his hands in his pockets. “Drunk as a lord!”
“Idiot, I can see that!” Dallas retorted. “Just give me some help with him.”
The driver looked her over critically, and she felt herself flush at the disapproval on his fat face. “He’s a big one, ain’t he?”
“Do you charge by the pound? Are you gonna help me?” Dallas lost her temper and screamed at him.
It took the combined efforts of both of them to drag the unconscious man into the carriage. Dallas finally sat next to him, exhausted and breathless, but glad to be out of the wind.
The fat driver peered in at her, stamping his feet. “Well, where to, girlie? You think I got all the damned night to stand out here in the cold?”
“With all that fat,” Dallas snapped, “you aren’t in any danger of freezing, although I’m concerned about your poor horse!” She began going through Quint’s pockets, wishing she had thought to ask for an address during their discussion. She had the most overpowering urge to have the driver dump him out at the Golden Slipper, wherever that was.
The cabbie looked at her knowingly. “When you get through robbin’ him, girlie, leave enough for the fare.”
“Robbing him?” Dallas fairly shook with anger; then she realized what it must look like. She found a key in Quint’s silk vest. “The Claremore Arms,” she said, “and I’ll see that he gets there so you won’t rob him while he’s out.”
The cabbie winked. “Girlie, we could split his money. Who’d know but us?” He gestured toward the unconscious man. “He don’t look like he’d wake up for Judgment Day.”
Dallas had to fight to control her temper. “Get back up on that seat!” she hissed through clenched teeth, “And take us to the Claremore Arms!”
“All right! All right! You don’t have to get huffy about it!” The driver shrugged and slammed the carriage door shut.
Dallas waited for the squeak of the springs as he climbed up. When he clucked to the horse, she leaned back against the worn seat with a tired sigh. Young ladies of good family, even in Texas, didn’t go out after dark unescorted, and certainly the mess she’d gotten herself into was unthinkable. In the spotty illumination from the street lights they drove past, she looked at Quint Randolph’s handsome, aristocratic face, his fine clothes. There was something tragic, almost haunting about him.
Without meaning to, she reached over and brushed his wind-blown hair from his forehead. He moaned softly and she wondered at the torment in his tone. As she would have comforted a sick child, Dallas patted his hand, the one with the gold-crested ring. His hand fumbled for her fingers, found them, gripped them tightly as if he never intended to let her go.
Now what? She’d really intended to have the cabbie drop her off at her own boardinghouse, then take the rake on to his hotel. She thought about it a minute, frowning. That cabbie was as crooked as a dog’s hind leg, as they say in Texas. If he were to rob the unconscious man, throw him out in an alley to freeze to death before morning, who’d ever know? She felt suddenly protective. The least she could do was see to it that the gentleman from Kentucky made it to the safety of his warm room.
When Quint slumped sideways, she reached out automatically, settled him against her to keep him from falling onto the carriage floor. She felt him shiver and smelled the scent of brandy.
“Yes sir, you really cut the wolf loose tonight,” she whispered, “Melanie must be some memory you’re trying to drown.”
She had never had a man feel that way about her, and she brushed his hair back a little wistfully. Oh, a cowboy or two may have made calf eyes at her, but her papa and her big brother, Trace, would have taken a quirt to any man who tried to get too close to her. Even Mama, who was more understanding, would not be happy with an eighteen-year-old daughter who had gotten herself into such a mess.
Finally the cab stopped. Dallas peered out at a small, select hotel as the driver clambered down and came around to open the creaking door. “Still out cold?”
Dallas decided to ignore the man as she struggled to extract her fingers from Quint Randolph’s strong grip.
“He caught you with your hand in his pocket, did he?”
Dallas gave the grinning man a cold, lofty stare. “You polecat! Help me get him out.”
The two of them struggled to get Quint Randolph onto the icy sidewalk.
Then the driver held out one dirty hand. “Now pay me, girlie.”
She had a sudden vision of the man taking the money, climbing back up on the seat, and driving away. “Uh-uh.” She shook her head. “Not until you help me get him up to his room.”
He looked sheepish as if she’d guessed what he had intended. “You drive a hard bargain, lady.”
“I’m from Texas and I’ve done a little horse trading in my time,” she drawled, “Now give me a hand with him. Let’s go around to the back entry so we won’t be seen.”
The driver shrugged, then shouldered half of Quint’s weight and started dragging him around the side of the building.
“Be careful, you’ll hurt him!”
“Girlie, you’re breaking my heart!”
They got him through the back door and down the hall. Dallas peered at the number on the key, found the door. What would she do if Pearl from the Golden Slipper or, worse yet, a respectable and outraged wife waited on the other side of that door?
She shrugged. Horsefeathers. Her family had fought Comanches to hold their land. She reckoned she had enough spunk to hold her own if it came to a hair pulling with some saloon hussy.
Dallas fumbled with the key, opened the door. In the darkness, she stumbled over to the bureau, found an oil lamp, lit it. With a sigh of relief, she realized there was no one else in the pleasant, small room.
“Whatta I do with him?” The driver grumbled, Quint hanging unconscious off his shoulder.
“Put him on the bed, of course!” She watched the cabbie unceremoniously dump Quint on the bed. Then he turned, held out his hand. “I’m leavin’ town tomorrow,” he said. “Going back to New York.”
“So?” She counted out Quint’s money into the dirty hand.
“So if a gentleman goes to the police tomorrow, complaining that a pretty, black-haired girl robbed him tonight, he won’t have any witnesses, if you know what I mean.”
“Get out of here,” Dallas snarled. “Get out of here!”
He flew backward from her fury, stumbling over furniture in making his escape. Dallas slammed the door behind him, locked it and then leaned against it, suddenly realizing she was shivering.
The inebriated man raised his head up when the door slammed, and he looked around, almost seeming to panic when he saw Dallas. “Angel, now whatever I promised you, I didn’t mean it. I mean, I can’t–”
“I think we both need something to warm us,” she broke in wearily.
He raised up on his elbows, brightened. “Good idea! There’s brandy in the cabinet by the fireplace.”
“You’ve had enough brandy to float the whole city,” Dallas declared. “What I meant was a roaring fire and some coffee.”
He watched her, shivering a little as she went over, built a fire, and got it crackling merrily.
She wrapped her arms around herself, waiting for the room to warm, but seeing a tin of coffee, she put on water to boil. “The coffee will take awhile.”
“Are we going back out then, to the Golden Slipper?”
She turned and looked at him. “The gambling tables will have to make do without your money tonight, sport. You started in a little too early to make it through the evening.”
“It was kind of you to go to all this trouble.” He looked a little sheepish and embarrassed.
“Think nothing of it,” Dallas shrugged. Still shivering, she searched out the brandy. “Papa says I make a hobby of picking up strays.”
“That’s what I am, I reckon.” He sounded bitter.
Dallas poured herself a slug of liquor, drank it fast, then gasped and coughed.
“Don’t I get any of that? It’s my brandy.”
“You get coffee,” she said firmly, and poured herself another drink. The warmth of the liquor began to spread through her. She didn’t know when she’d been so tired and cold. Just then wind picked up outside, rattling the window and sending white flakes swirling past the glass.
Damn! Why hadn’t she had the cabbie wait and take her on back to her boardinghouse? Because she’d been afraid to be alone with him, that was why. How was she going to get home now? Probably all the cabs had left the streets. Maybe her landlady wouldn’t check her room and find her missing, but if her absence caused a scandal, she would be looking for a new place to live on the morrow. Well, she couldn’t worry about that now.
Dallas leaned against the window and sipped the brandy, feeling sad and cold. She knew she shouldn’t be drinking on an empty stomach, but as the warmth spread through her, she didn’t feel too cautious. She poured herself another shot, drank it.
The coffee sent a delicious aroma through the room, and Dallas wobbled a little as she crossed over to it, feeling a little dizzy. “Now, sport, I’ll get you warm and sober.”
But Quint Randolph had lain back on his pillow. He was out cold.
Horsefeathers. Now what? He was shivering uncontrollably and she went over, looked down at him. Hesitantly, she reached out, felt his coat. Of course, it was damp from the blowing snow. “Mister, tomorrow you’ll have a headache so big it wouldn’t fit into a horse corral.”
She really had to get him out of those damp clothes and under some warm blankets. She hesitated. The Kentuckian shivered again. Who was to know?
Big as he was, it took some doing to get him out of the wet clothing. She tried not to stare at his lithe, virile body as she stripped him, but she was enthralled by the heavy hair on his chest. Without thinking, she reached out and ran a hand over that thick mat. How would it feel against her bare breasts? She decided to leave his drawers on, but she stared at the bulge between his thighs. What on earth was getting into her? Quickly she covered him up, but he shivered noticeably.
What to do? She looked around for more blankets, but there weren’t any. Though she poked up the fire, the room was still so chilly with the late spring storm howling outside that she had some more brandy in an attempt to warm herself. Her own clothes weren’t too dry.
Having finished her brandy, she hugged herself as she stared into the flames, wondering what to do next. She was in a fix all right, she admitted ruefully. One of the other girls at the boardinghouse would put pillows under her blankets to keep the landlady from realizing she hadn’t come in, but that didn’t solve anything at this end.
Looking at the man on the bed, Dallas realized he was probably out until morning. She took off her damp coat. Then she discovered the hem of her yellow wool dress was wet from dragging in the snow. Who was to know? She took it off, too.
So, in petticoats and camisole, she plopped down on the one hard chair, incredibly tired, hungry, and cold. The gentleman from Kentucky must take all his meals out. There wasn’t anything but coffee and liquor in the cabinet, and somehow the brandy tasted better.
Dallas had another drink while she tried to decide what to do. First, she would wait for her coat and dress to dry; she’d placed them before the fire. And after that? Would she be able to find a cab on such a night and on this out-of-the-way street? It was too cold and too far to walk back to her boardinghouse.
Quint Randolph moaned aloud, apparently in the midst of some bad dream. “Sorry, Melanie,” he muttered. “I didn’t mean it . . . if only I could change it . . .” Whatever else he said was lost in sobs.
Dallas sighed, then went over and looked down at him in the dim lamplight. There were tears on his cheeks. Whatever he had done to Melanie lay heavily on his soul, the anguish on his face told her that. She felt both sympathy and a twinge of jealousy. No man cared so much for her.
“It’s all right, Quint,” she said, patting his face and realizing she was slightly drunk herself. “It’s all right now. Don’t you know the two saddest words in any language are if only’ because no one can change what’s past?”
The lines in his face smoothed out, and on an impulse, she leaned over and gently kissed his lips, tasting the warm hint of brandy. She looked over at the other side of the big bed. She was tired and cold, and it looked so inviting. Drunk as he was, he’d never know it if she lay down on top of the covers for a few minutes while her clothes dried out.
Giddy with the brandy and her own daring, Dallas tiptoed over, blew out the lamp, and went back to the bed. Except for the flickering firelight, the room was dark as the windswept night outside the window.
Cautiously, she lay down on top of the blankets on the very edge of her side of the bed. Oh, that felt so good! But why was her head whirling so? She must remember not to doze off. Sometime soon, she was going to have to brave the night, try to walk through the blowing snow back to her boardinghouse.
She lay very still, her head spinning slightly, listening to Quint Randolph’s heavy breathing. She was cold. She lay there, drunk and shivering, on top of the covers. What difference would it make if she crawled under them? After all, he was past knowing the difference.
She slid under the blankets, very aware that only a few inches away was a handsome man clad in nothing but his drawers. If Papa or Trace were here, there’d be big trouble. She said a little prayer of thanksgiving that they weren’t, and was immediately swept up in a wave of homesickness for the ranch life she’d always known and loved. Her mother, the beautiful Cheyenne, Velvet Eyes, had been opposed to sending Dallas off to school, but Papa had been stubborn as only Don Diego de Durango could be. He had wanted her to stay with his rich friends, the Peabodys, in Boston, and learn to be a lady.
A lady. Dallas lay staring at the ceiling and almost laughed aloud. It was incredible, yet here she was, an innocent runaway schoolgirl in a drunken rake’s bed. If her Papa or her big brother knew about this, Quint Randolph would be forced to marry her or face the Texans’ deadly pistols.
Would Quint marry her to keep from being shot? She played out the scene in her head, imagining Papa bursting into the room, furious at this smirch on his family’s honor. She turned her head and studied Quint’s aristocratic profile in the firelight. He was so very handsome, and so tragic.
Shivering again, he thrashed in his sleep and rolled over so that his arm flopped across her, one big hand on her breast.
Dallas held her breath, keenly aware of the heat of his fingers through the fabric of her sheer camisole. Her heart thumped so loudly, she was afraid the pounding against his palm might cause him to awaken. But his hand only cupped her small breast.
Now what could she do? If she tried to move, he might wake up. She tried to think clearly but the brandy made her dizzy.
“Mel
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