Christmas Cowboy Duet. Marie Ferrarella
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“She’s kidding, right?” Whitney asked in a hushed whisper.
Because she had turned her head away from Miss Joan and whispered her question to him, Liam felt Whitney’s warm breath feathering along the side of his neck. It caused various internal parts of him to go temporarily haywire before he was able to summon a greater degree of control. When he finally did, it allowed him to shut down the momentary aberration and function normally again.
But for just a second, it had been touch and go.
“You’ll know when Miss Joan is kidding,” he promised Whitney.
“Let me show you to a table,” Miss Joan offered. The words stopped short of being an order.
Miss Joan brought them over to a table on the side that was relatively out of the way of general foot traffic.
Once they were seated, the owner of the diner looked from Liam to his companion, as if to make a further assessment, and then asked, “So, what can I get for the hero and the rescuee?”
“I’m not a hero, Miss Joan.”
“No point in denying what everybody’s thinking, boy,” Miss Joan said. Then, looking at the young woman at the table, she confided, “He’s always been a little on the shy side, downplaying things he’s done.” Her thin lips stretched out in a smile. “But you’ll get to see that for yourself if you stay around here long enough.”
“I’m sure I would,” Whitney replied, thinking she might as well be polite and play along with what this woman was saying. “If I were staying, but I’m not. I’m just killing a little time here before I get back on the road.”
Miss Joan smiled knowingly. “You go right ahead and do that, dear. You do that.” Her tone of voice made it clear that she knew more about the situation than either the young woman or Liam. Amber eyes shifted to Liam. “Want your usual?”
Liam grinned and nodded. He viewed the meal as comfort food. He was about due for some comfort, he thought. “Yes, please.”
“And you, honey?” Miss Joan asked, turning her gaze to Whitney.
“I’ll have a cheeseburger and fries,” she told the older woman.
“Coming right up,” Miss Joan promised as she withdrew from the table.
Whitney noted that the woman hadn’t written down either order. Lowering her voice, Whitney leaned in closer to the man who had brought her here in the first place.
“Is she always like that?” she asked once Miss Joan had withdrawn.
“Like what?” Liam asked, curious. As far as he was concerned, it was business as usual for the owner of the diner.
“Invasive,” Whitney finally said after spending a moment hunting for the right word to describe what she’d felt.
Liam turned the word over in his head, then shrugged. “I suppose so. That’s just Miss Joan being Miss Joan,” he said, then assured her, “I’ll tell you one thing. There’s nobody better to have on your side when you’ve got a problem or need a friend than Miss Joan.”
Whitney glanced over her shoulder toward the older woman. The latter was behind the counter, engaging one of her customers in conversation as she refilled his coffee cup.
Aside from the fact that the woman seemed nosy, Whitney saw nothing overly remarkable about Miss Joan. The woman certainly didn’t strike her as someone people would turn to in an emergency.
“Her? Really?” she asked Liam.
“Her. Really,” he confirmed with a hint of an amused grin.
Whitney shook her head. “I’m afraid I just can’t see it.”
“Well, you’re still an outsider so that’s understandable. You’ll have to experience it for yourself.”
Whitney laughed shortly, waving the idea away.
“I’ll pass on that, thanks. The second my car is back on solid ground, I’m out of here.” She glanced at her watch and frowned. She was really behind schedule. “I should already be on my way.”
“Maybe you should call whoever you’re going to see and let them know that you’re being held up,” Liam suggested.
Her eyes widened as she looked at him warily. “Held up?”
“Delayed,” Liam amended.
“Oh.”
Whitney chewed on her lower lip, thinking. She really didn’t want to call to say she’d be late, but she had to grudgingly admit that the cowboy had a point. With that, she shrugged his jacket off, letting it rest against the back of her chair, and dug into her pocket for her phone.
Pulling it out, she began to tap out the phone number of the band she was on her way to audition. When nothing happened, she tried the number again—with the same result. Frustrated, she took a closer look at her phone and realized that it was completely dormant. The light hadn’t really come on.
Why was it acting as if it was drained? “I just charged the battery,” she complained.
Liam leaned over and placed his hand over hers, turning her phone so that he could get a better look at it. The diagnosis was quick and succinct.
“I think it’s dead.”
“Dead?” Whitney echoed. “How can it be dead?” she challenged.
He had an answer for that, as well. “That’s not a waterproof case, is it?” He’d phrased it in the form of a question, but he already knew the answer.
“No,” Whitney snapped. And then she remembered something. “But you dived in to pull me out of the water and you had your phone in your pocket,” she recalled. “I saw you take it out to call that mechanic and whoever sent over that cherry picker.”
Rather than say anything, Liam took out his phone and held it up to let her see the difference between his and the one she had in her hand.
“Mine’s sealed in a waterproof case,” he told her. She looked as if she was about to protest, so he explained rather matter-of-factly, “Things happen out here. All you can do is try to stay as prepared as possible.”
Of course, he thought, he definitely wasn’t prepared to be as strongly attracted to this woman as he was. But then, he’d never saved anyone from drowning before and maybe that had a lot to do with it.
Whitney was torn between actually liking the fact that he was this prepared and resenting the fact that he was taking charge like this while she couldn’t. What was even worse was that she was having all sorts of feelings about this man that had absolutely nothing to do with any of this—except that he had saved her.
“Like a Boy Scout,” she commented.
“Something like