The Rancher's Best Gift. Stella Bagwell
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Her chin thrust forward. “I am home. Red Bluff is Hollister range, too, you know.”
Yeah, he knew. Just like he knew that she was like a piece of dynamite. Jostle her too much and she might just explode in his face.
“So, what are you afraid of, Matthew?” she tossed the question at him. “Getting burned again by another piece of fluff like Renee?”
Compared to the heat of the day, the kitchen was cool. So why did he feel a sheen of sweat collecting beneath the collar of his shirt?
“I’ve learned about women since Renee,” he said, his gaze fixed firmly on the food in front of him.
He heard her let out a long sigh.
“I’ve learned about men since Graham, too,” she said, then reached over and gave his forearm a gentle squeeze.
“Ouch! Damn!”
She jerked her hand back and stared at him in comical confusion. “Oh! I guess I don’t know my own strength. Sorry if I hurt you.”
He shook his head. “It’s not you—I was in a lot of thorns and cacti today. I think some are still stuck in my arms.”
Concern wiped the humor from her face and she quickly rose to her feet. “Finish eating,” she instructed. “And don’t get up until I get back.”
She was bossier than Blake ever thought about being, Matthew thought. But what the hell, giving in was easier than trying to argue with her.
A few minutes later, as he shoveled in the last bite of food from his plate, Camille returned carrying a large straw basket.
She placed it on the table and then, pushing his dirty plate aside, ordered him to roll up his sleeves.
Seeing the basket was full of first aid items, he let out a loud groan.
“No! I don’t need doctoring! Forget it!”
Her pretty lips formed a tight line as she stared at him. “I’m not forgetting anything. And I’m not going to hurt you! So quit being a big baby.”
“The guys that rode with me today also got thorns and stickers. Are you going to go out to the bunkhouse and treat them, too?” he demanded.
“No. The men in the bunkhouse can help each other. You only have me.”
She began to lay out an assortment of cotton swabs, ointment, peroxide and a pair of tweezers. Matthew bit back a groan, and rolled up the sleeves of his denim shirt past his elbows.
“Hell, Camille, you act like I’ve never been stuck with a thorn before,” he muttered. “This happens all the time.”
“Maybe it does. But I happen to know that mesquite thorns are poisonous to humans. If you don’t get them out and disinfect the spot, it will become infected.”
“I know all that. I told the men to be careful.”
“Humph. Guess you think your hide is so tough you’re immune,” she said.
She sat down and reached for the arm nearest to her. Matthew tried to ignore the feel of her hands on his bare flesh, but it was impossible to do, and after a moment, he decided to quit fighting the sensation and simply enjoy it.
Bending her head, she carefully studied the back of his forearm. “This is awful. It’s no wonder you yelled when I squeezed your arm. I see three, maybe four thorns still stuck in the flesh.”
“We rode through thick brush today.”
“Guess you were wearing your chaps.” She picked up the tweezers and, after disinfecting them, attempted to pull out one of the longer thorns.
He said, “I don’t leave home without them.”
“Good thing. Otherwise your legs would be full of these things.”
And Matthew couldn’t imagine her hands touching his legs. No. That would be more than he could handle.
“This is probably going to hurt,” she warned. “I’m going to have to probe with a needle.”
“Go ahead. You’re a long distance from my heart.”
She lifted her head and their gazes locked.
“Really?” she asked. “I never believed you had one of those things.”
He had one, all right, Matthew thought. And at the moment it was banging against his ribs with the desperation of a trapped bird.
“You think I’m a rock—or something?”
Her gaze fell to his lips and for a crazy second he thought she was going to lean forward and kiss him. But his thinking must have been dead wrong because all of a sudden she dropped her gaze back to his arm.
“Or something,” she murmured. “Except for Daddy, I always thought you never felt much about anyone or thing.”
A hollow sensation spread through his chest and made his voice stilted when he spoke. “Joel was the first man who ever treated me like I was more than a doormat. He taught me that I was just as worthy as the next man and just as capable if I wanted to be. He changed my life.”
She stopped the probing and, clasping her hands warmly over his arm, she lifted her gaze to his. “Daddy was special like that. But I—I’m missing something, Matthew. What about the uncle who raised you?”
He grimaced. “I’m surprised you knew about him.”
“I don’t. I mean, I remember Daddy saying you came from Gila Bend and that an uncle had raised you. That’s all I ever knew.”
“Odin Waggoner was a bastard and his brother, my father, was no better.”
Her eyes were full of questions as she studied his face, and Matthew wanted to tell her that he didn’t talk to anyone about his growing-up years. But that wasn’t entirely right. He used to talk to Joel about them. Because he knew the big-hearted rancher had understood and never looked down on him for being raised in a dysfunctional family.
“Well, guess you couldn’t put your feelings about them any plainer than that.”
The questions in her eyes were now shadowed with something like sorrow. That wasn’t what Matthew wanted or needed from her.
“No use trying to make something ugly sound pretty. When I was just a little boy, my father would leave for months at a time, to work in the copper mines, or so my mother would say. He supposedly would send money to her to keep me and my older sister fed and clothed and a roof over our heads. But if he did, it was very little. My mother worked cleaning houses for the more well-to-do families around Gila Bend. That’s how we actually survived.”
Shaking her head, she asked, “How did you end up with your uncle?”
He let out a long sigh. “Well, Mom eventually saw the writing on the wall