Jared's Runaway Woman. Judith Stacy
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Arms circled her waist from behind and hauled her back into the room before she could let out a scream. The door slammed shut and she was dropped crossways on the bed. She bounced on the soft mattress and looked up to find Jared Mason towering over her.
Kinsey launched herself off the bed but he caught her again. Their feet tangled and he fell down on the mattress with her.
Her heart pounded as Jared lay on top of her, pinning her to the bed, one of his legs between her knees. She took a swing at him but he caught her wrists and pressed them down, inches from her head. His weight, the heat of his body, soaked into her.
Another few seconds passed before Kinsey realized that he looked as startled as she. His face, hovering just above hers, was taut. His breath quickened. His body tensed.
Then a little smile quirked his lips. “I figured you’d do anything to keep Clark’s son, but I never counted on this.”
Her cheeks flamed, bringing on a wave of anger. “Oh! You think I came here to—! How dare you!”
He raised an eyebrow. “That’s not why you’re here?”
“Of course not! Get off of me!” Kinsey struggled, trying to free her arms and kick her feet, but he held her easily.
“I’ll scream,” she threatened.
“Go ahead,” he said. “Scream all you want. We’ll get the sheriff up here and you can explain to him—and the whole town, who’ll hear about it before noon—why you’re in my room.”
Kinsey pressed her lips together, the gravity of her circumstances weighing more heavily than Jared atop her. She tried another tack.
“Would you please let me up?” she asked.
He held her, still, just to show her that he could, she suspected.
“You’re hurting me,” she told him.
Jared released her so quickly it startled her. For a man so big he moved with incredible speed, even grace, pushing himself off her and to his feet in an instant.
Kinsey sat up on the bed, yanked her skirt down and straightened her blouse, attempting to do so with a modicum of dignity and self-respect. But when she tried to get to her feet, Jared stepped close again, keeping her in place.
“What are you doing in my room?” He nodded to the dressing screen. “I saw you hiding back there.”
Heat filled her cheeks again, but she pushed up her chin and glared at him. “I came to find out exactly who you are.”
That seemed to surprised him. Obviously, as a member of the powerful Mason family, Jared wasn’t used to having his word questioned.
“I wasn’t about to let you anywhere near Sam without knowing if you were who you claimed to be,” Kinsey told him.
His surprise turned into something else—respect, maybe?—and he nodded slowly.
“Did you find out what you wanted to know?” he asked.
“Yes.” Kinsey sighed. “Unfortunately.”
“So you’re ready to talk about you and Sam coming back home with me,” he concluded.
The notion of living in the Mason’s New York home, the confines of the hotel room, and Jared’s great height towering over Kinsey caused everything in her to rebel.
She glared up at him. “Move out of my way.”
The words came out in her sternest “mommy voice,” the one that stopped Sam—and any other children with him—in his tracks. It had that effect on Jared, too, because he stepped back, more a reflex than anything.
Kinsey got to her feet and rubbed her wrists where he’d held her on the bed.
“I have to go to work,” she told him, her tone suggesting that she didn’t have leisurely hours to while away, as he did. “We’ll talk later.”
“When?”
“After dark when Sam goes to bed.”
He studied her for a moment, as if he wanted to protest, but he didn’t. Kinsey moved around him toward the door, but he blocked her path.
“I didn’t mean to hurt you,” he said softly.
Jared lifted her hand and pulled back the cuff of her sleeve to reveal her wrist. He did the same with the other wrist, holding them both in front of him.
He gazed at her and the moment seemed to stretch into forever. Jared leaned forward and brushed a kiss on one wrist, then the other. A firestorm ignited in Kinsey, threatening to consume her, but holding her in front of him.
Jared seemed unable to move either. He eased closer. So did Kinsey. She rose on her toes, until their faces hovered just inches apart and she felt his hot breath against her lips.
Then he pulled away. Kinsey’s cheeks warmed, from embarrassment this time. She darted out of the room.
* * *
How embarrassing.
Jared yanked the window of his hotel room open farther, hoping for a breeze to cool the place—and him. He stood there gazing down at Main Street, and rested his thumbs on the buckle of his gun belt.
Damn pistol. He’d forgotten it again this morning when he’d headed out for breakfast, and this time made it all the way to the restaurant before he realized it. He’d had to turn around and come back for the thing.
Embarrassing, all right. And hardly a good way to fit in on the streets of Crystal Springs. The sheriff had seen him leaving the hotel and had stopped on the street and eyed him hard. Under ordinary circumstances Jared wouldn’t have cared what the lawman thought of him, but Jared didn’t want to arouse suspicion—any more than he already had, that is. After the incident with Kinsey in the alley, he knew the sheriff was watching him.
Another plume of warmth rose in Jared at the memory of kissing Kinsey in the alley. It was a thought he couldn’t get out of his mind. And it didn’t help any that he’d found her hiding in his hotel room this morning.
When he’d come back for the gun and caught a reflection in the washstand mirror, he’d known right away that the bottom he saw in the air was Kinsey’s. No question about it. He’d made a study of her backside each time he saw her.
Or maybe it was her scent hanging in the room that had alerted him to her presence. Sweet and pure, fresh.
The smell of her still wound through the room, and through him, driving his desire for her a little higher. It was a feeling that troubled him. She had been, after all, his brother’s wife.
To distract himself, Jared shoved his belongings back into his satchel. He didn’t bother to count the money; in his heart he knew Kinsey wouldn’t have taken any of it. Clark wouldn’t have married that sort of woman.