His Defender. Stella Bagwell

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His Defender - Stella Bagwell Mills & Boon Vintage Cherish

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love to.” Rising to her feet, Alona walked over to the sink full of dirty dishes. “I’ll finish up here while you’re getting ready.”

      Isabella started out of the kitchen, then paused at the door to look thoughtfully back at her mother. “Do you think we should call and warn her that we’re coming?”

      Alona laughed. “Knowing Naomi, she’s already sensed that we’re headed her way.”

      Isabella’s godmother considered herself a medicine woman. And at seventy-five, she wasn’t going to hear differently from Isabella. Besides, she loved hearing the older woman’s stories and chants. A godmother was a very important role model to a young Apache girl and Naomi had always been there to give Isabella support and advice. She’d been the primary attendant at Isabella’s Sunrise Ceremony, an arduous four days of prayers, chants and dancing that young Apache girls go through as they enter womanhood. Since then, Naomi had taught her about many things, especially courage and tenacity—two things she fully expected to need when she dealt with Ross Ketchum.

      The next afternoon Ross was in the T Bar K study, growling into the phone as he waited for his new attorney to arrive. “Neal, if I had one good excuse to drive into town, I would. Just to kick your ass.”

      Laughter came back in Ross’s ear. “You might try it, buddy. But I doubt you’d get it done.”

      Ross chuckled as he leaned back in the chair and propped his boots on one corner of the polished oak desk.

      “You’d have a hell of a time stopping me,” he told his friend.

      “So what are you all revved up about this afternoon?” Neal asked. “You should be out selling cattle instead of sitting inside on the telephone.”

      Normally, Ross was never inside the ranch house at this time of day. There were always plenty of things to be done at the barns or out on the range. It was spring and Linc was working overtime breeding the broodmares. His cousin could have used his help this afternoon. Instead, he was here in the study waiting on Isabella Corrales.

      “Oh, I don’t expect you have any idea what I’m doing, do you?” he drawled sarcastically. “You’re the one who sicced Ms. Corrales on me yesterday.”

      There was a long pause before Neal said, “You told me you were going to get rid of her.”

      “Damn it! I tried.”

      “Apparently you didn’t try hard enough.”

      The smile he heard in Neal’s voice galled Ross to no end. “She insisted that I need her,” Ross muttered. “I need her like I need a new pair of spurs!”

      “Running low on spurs, are you?”

      Ross lifted his green eyes to the beamed ceiling of the study. “Hell, no! I’ve got at least twenty pairs.”

      “About the same amount as you have women,” Neal mused aloud. “Well, one more shouldn’t hurt you.”

      Jerking his boots off the desk, Ross shot straight up in the chair. “Don’t clump Ms. Corrales with my women,” he warned.

      “I wouldn’t dream of it,” Neal countered. “She’s much too nice for the likes of you, old buddy.”

      Nice? Surely a woman who was that beautiful and sexy couldn’t be nice, too. Could she?

      Curiosity suddenly replaced his irritation. “What’s the story on her anyway?”

      “What do you mean?”

      “You know. Is she married? And what is she doing up here in this neck of the woods?”

      “Why Ross, you must be slipping,” Neal said dryly. “I assumed you’d already gotten all that information from her yesterday.”

      Ross had spent the past twenty-four hours trying to forget yesterday and his meeting with Isabella. But so far he’d not forgotten anything about his new attorney. “Ms. Corrales and I had words. But not that kind.”

      “Okay, I’ll take pity on you,” Neal told him. “She’s not married. Never has been. And she’s in the area because she’s going home to the reservation.”

      “Which reservation?”

      “The Jicarilla.”

      Ross frowned with disbelief. “Surely not to practice law.”

      “Why not?”

      “Because there’s nothing there!” Ross exclaimed.

      Neal chuckled. “I think you’d better take that debate up with Isabella.”

      There were plenty more questions Ross would have liked to ask his friend about Isabella Corrales, but he noticed Marina had suddenly appeared in the doorway of the study.

      Placing his hand over the receiver’s mouthpiece, he looked at the woman who’d worked as the Ketchums’ cook, housekeeper and nanny for the past forty years.

      “Señorita Corrales is here,” she announced. “In the living room.”

      “Show her back here, Marina. And when you’re finished, would you make us a fresh pot of coffee? And bring some cookies or something sweet with it.”

      “The señorita might not like coffee.”

      Ross’s nostrils flared. “But you know that I like it,” he said with exaggerated patience. “You can ask the señorita—I mean, Ms. Corrales—what she’d like to drink.”

      Nodding, the older woman turned and disappeared into the hallway. Ross directed his attention back to Neal, still waiting on the other end of the phone.

      “Sorry, Neal. My visitor has arrived. I’ve got to go.”

      “Bella isn’t your visitor. She’s your attorney. And you’d do well to remember that, amigo.”

      “Don’t worry, Neal. That’s something I’m in no danger of forgetting.”

      He hung up the telephone and leaned back in the chair to wait. Hardly enough time had passed to twiddle his thumbs before Isabella entered the room.

      The moment Ross laid eyes on her, he felt a swift, hard blow to his gut. He’d thought she was beautiful yesterday, but today she was even more lovely. A powder-blue dress of some soft, gauzy material draped her breasts and hips, while the hem fluttered against her slim calves. Her glossy black hair was braided into a thick coronet atop her head. Hammered silver in the shape of small crescent moons swung from her ears, while dusky pink hues on her cheeks and lips added to her already vibrant face.

      As he rose to his feet to greet her, the sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach worsened.

      “Good afternoon, Bella,” he said as he extended his hand to hers.

      The contact of his callused hand was like grabbing hold of a hot branding iron. Isabella tried to hide the sudden jolt with a wide smile.

      “I’m glad you decided to meet

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