A Baby in the Bunkhouse. Cathy Thacker Gillen
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“We’re going to talk about this in the morning,” Eli warned.
Rafferty imagined they would. But not now. Not when he had so many unwanted memories trying to crowd their way back in.
“’Night, Dad.” Rafferty gave his dad a brief, one-armed hug and headed down the hall that ran the length of the seven-thousand-square-foot ranch house.
It was only when he reached his room that the loss hit him like a fist in the center of his chest.
But instead of the image of his own family in his mind’s eye, as he stripped down to his T-shirt and boxers and went to brush his teeth, he saw the trespasser he had encountered in the pouring rain.
She had glossy brown hair, a shade or two darker than his, that framed her face with sexy bangs and fell around her slender shoulders like a dark silky cloud. If only her allure had ended there, he thought resentfully. It hadn’t. He’d been held captive by a lively gaze, framed with thick lashes and dark expressive brows.
Everything about the woman, from the feisty set of her chin and the fact she was stranded late at night, pregnant and alone, to the way she carried herself, said she was independent past the point of all common sense.
Thank God she’d be leaving in the morning, as soon as he could get her station wagon out of the muck, Rafferty thought as he got into bed.
The sooner she left, the sooner he could stop thinking about Jacey Lambert’s merry smile and soft green eyes.
Now all it had to do was stop raining.
Chapter Two
Jacey woke at dawn, her body aching the way it always did when she’d spent too long behind the wheel of a car, her stomach rumbling with hunger.
She opened her eyes, and for a second as she looked around the rustically appointed room, she had trouble recalling where she was.
Then she remembered the rain—which was still pounding torrentially on the roof overhead—the jagged slash of lightning across the dark night sky, thunder so loud it shook the ground beneath her. And a man in a black hat and a long yellow rain slicker coming to her rescue.
Jacey closed her eyes against the image of that ruggedly handsome face and tall, muscular frame.
She didn’t know what it was about Rafferty Evans. She’d seen plenty of men with soft, touchable brown hair and stunning blue eyes. Taken item by item, there’d been nothing all that remarkable about his straight nose and even features. So what if every inch of him had been unerringly masculine and he’d been six foot three inches of strength and confidence? Just because his shoulders and chest had looked broad enough to shelter her from even the fiercest storm was no reason to tingle all over just remembering the sight of him, or the gentle, deferential way he’d helped her out of her car.
But she was. And that, Jacey decided, was not good.
She had a Volvo station wagon that was still stuck in the mud. And a baby inside her needing nourishment.
Padding barefoot to the private bathroom where she’d taken a warm shower the evening before, she slipped inside and began to dress in the long, pine-green maternity skirt and cream-colored sweater. Needing to feel a lot more put together than she had the evening before, she took the time to apply makeup and sweep her hair into a bouncy ponytail high on the back of her head.
She slipped her feet back into a pair of soft brown leather stack-heeled shoes that were going to be woefully inadequate for the conditions and repacked her overnight case. Leaving it on the bed for the moment, she opened the door to the main cabin of the bunkhouse and stared at what she saw.
Five genuine cowpunchers of varying sizes and ages, all staring at her. Waiting, it seemed. “Hi. I’m Jacey Lambert.” Awkwardly, she held out her hand.
The beanpole-thin cowpoke who was nearly seven feet tall was first to clasp her hand. “Stretch.”
Jacey could see why he was named that.
“I’m Curly.” A mid-twentyish man with golden curls and bedroom eyes was second in line.
Obviously, Jacey thought, as they clasped palms a bit too long, he was the self-proclaimed lady-killer of the bunch.
“Everyone calls me Red,” said a third.
The youngest cowhand couldn’t have been more than nineteen, Jacey figured, and had bright red hair and freckles.
“I’m Hoss,” said a big fellow with a round belly and a receding hairline.
So named because of his striking resemblance, Jacey figured, to a character on the old Bonanza television show that still played on cable in Texas.
“And I’m Gabby,” said the last.
Jacey estimated the forty-something man’s scraggly beard to be at least five days old, if not more.
“We are so glad to see you,” Gabby continued, pumping Jacey’s hand enthusiastically.
“Yeah, after what happened with Biscuits, we didn’t think we were going to get anyone else in here, but we’re starving.”
“Actually,” Jacey said, not sure what they were talking about, “so am I.”
“We, uh, know you just got here,” Stretch said, patting his concave belly, “but could you take mercy on us and cook us some breakfast?”
Jacey blinked. “Right now?”
“Yeah.” The group shrugged in consensus. “If you wouldn’t mind.”
Jacey figured she had to repay the ranch’s hospitality somehow. “Sure.” She smiled. “I’d be glad to.”
HOPING AGAINST WHAT he knew the situation likely to be, Rafferty nixed a visit to the bunkhouse—where their unexpected guest was likely still sleeping the morning away—and drove down to the river. Or as close as he could get to the low water crossing; the concrete bridge was now buried under several feet of fast-moving water. With the rain still pouring down there was no way it would recede. Not until the precipitation stopped, and even then, probably not for another twenty-four to thirty-six hours.
Realizing what this meant, Rafferty stomped back to his pickup. En route back to the ranch he passed the red station wagon. It was still half off the berm of the lonely dead-end road that led to the ranch, its right wheels buried up past the hubcaps in the muddy ditch.
Worse, it looked as if it was packed to the gills with everything from clothes to kitchenware to what appeared to be a baby stroller and infant car seat. They’d have an easier time getting the vehicle out of the mud if it weren’t so weighted down with belongings, but the thought of having to unpack all those belongings, only to repack them again made him scowl all the more.