Firewolf. Jenna Kernan

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Firewolf - Jenna Kernan Mills & Boon Intrigue

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deploy, he’d said. She needed to get one of these Jiffy Pop thingies. “You fight wildfires,” she said, more to herself than to him.

      “Yes.”

      “Dylan?”

      “Hmm?”

      She wished she could look at him, see his handsome face, those dark eyes and the clean line of his jaw, but he was so close that his nose was pressed to her ear and he lay half across her.

      “Can you...talk to me? You know? Take my mind off...”

      “What about?”

      “Tell me about yourself.”

      “Well, I told you my name. I’m from the Turquoise Canyon Apache tribe. We are Tonto Apache. I live up there on the reservation between Antelope Lake and Darabee in the mountains.”

      His voice was like a song with a lyrical quality that calmed her. She felt the panic easing away as he continued.

      “If I met you there I would say to you, ‘Hello, I am Bear, born of Butterfly, and my father’s name is Jonathan Tehauno. My mother’s name is Dorothy Florez. They named me Dylan.’ It’s more important there to know your parents and clans. Your name comes after all that or sometimes not at all. So when I say, ‘Bear, born of Butterfly,’ you know my father’s clan is Bear and my mother’s clan is Butterfly.”

      “I live in Phoenix. I am Wrangler, born of Theron and Lupe. My mother’s name was Cortez.”

      He chuckled and she felt herself smile.

      “Tell me more.” She felt herself relaxing, her weary muscles twitching from the tension that now eased away into the hot earth.

      “I live in the community of Koun’nde in tribal housing. My friends make fun of me because my home has so many books.”

      She chuckled because she had stopped reading the minute she realized no one could make her do anything.

      “I own a truck, nearly, and have five horses in the community herd. Well, I did own a truck.” He sighed and then coughed. After a moment he kept talking, his breath cool against her face. “I like to ride. I’ve won some endurance races on horses and on foot. After high school, I joined the US Marines. I was honorably discharged after two tours. Decided not to reenlist. I missed home. It’s cool up on the mountain. Not like down here in Flagstaff or over in the Sandbox. That’s what we called Iraq.”

      His voice hummed in her ear, a deep, resonant song. She closed her watering eyes.

      “Let’s see. I’m a member of a medicine society, the Turquoise Guardians. We dance at festivals and perform ceremonies. I sing in a drum circle.”

      She didn’t know what any of that meant, but she wanted him to keep talking.

      “The people say I have a good voice.”

      Meadow agreed with that, though she had not heard him sing. She wanted to ask him, but it was so hard for her just to breathe, she didn’t have the heart.

      “I’ve been trying to get some of my friends to join me in August to go up to Rapid City for the Indian Relay Races. We’d need four good horses and a four-man team. One rider and each horse runs one mile with the same rider.”

      She tried to picture that, one man leaping from one horse to another.

      “I keep telling Jack that he was born to be a catcher and Ray and Carter could hold the mounts. I’d like to ride, but if they’re faster I’d let them go, instead. Only now Carter’s in witness protection. So we need a fourth. I suggested Carter’s brother Kurt. He’s smaller but strong. Jack said he’d think about it. Jack Bear Den is a detective on our tribal police. His brother Carter and my friend Ray Strong are hotshots. Turquoise Canyon Hotshots. That’s us. Kurt Bear Den is a paramedic with the air ambulance. I’ve been a hotshot since I came home but it’s only six months, the fire season. So I need more work. I was supposed to meet Cheney Williams.”

      Her eyes popped open. “I know him.”

      “You do?”

      “He works with my dad. He’s a financial guy for the documentaries. Contracts, I think. Something. I’m not really sure. He’s around a lot.” Meadow felt a rumble in Dylan’s chest, like a growl.

      “I was told that he’s an attorney in environmental law. Working to stop that house.”

      “You haven’t met him?”

      “No. My shaman recommended me.”

      She lifted her chin. It was easier to breathe. “Was he up there?”

      The rough stubble on his chin brushed her temple. “Probably. He was meeting me there.”

      “Do you think he got out?”

      Silence was her answer.

      “Who would do this?”

      His body tensed. “I’m planning to find that out.”

      “The whole ridge exploded. The rocks were flying everywhere. I can’t believe they didn’t hit me.” She told him everything. About how she was filming and the red fireball and the house collapsing and the trees ablaze.

      “You filmed the whole thing?”

      “Yes.”

      “Why were you here today?”

      “I’ve been here several times during the construction. My father sent me. He has a shooting schedule.” She didn’t say that her dad hadn’t used any of the footage she’d shot. That she was beginning to think her assignment was a snipe hunt, designed to be rid of her, keep her busy and out of the clubs. That last headline had embarrassed them. Too much attention, her mother had said.

      Too much was better than none at all, she thought, and she lowered her head.

      “Your father sent you here. Today.”

      She didn’t like the way he said that.

      “Well, he couldn’t have known this would happen.”

      His silence was her only answer. Meadow frowned. She didn’t like that silence. There was something sinister and judgmental about it.

      “My father is a saint. He’s spent his whole life raising awareness of really important issues with his films.”

      Still no reply.

      “What are you implying?” she asked.

      “Heck of a coincidence.”

      “I could say the same for you.”

      “Yes. That occurred to me,” he said.

      The hairs on her neck lifted. She felt the need to fill the silence.

      “Lucky you were here,” she said.

      “Yeah.”

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