The Ryders: Jared, Royce and Stephanie. Barbara Dunlop

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The Ryders: Jared, Royce and Stephanie - Barbara Dunlop Mills & Boon By Request

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body, and a warning sparked in his brain. “Why?”

      She drew back, obviously reacting to his expression.

      “You planning to flirt with him?” Jarred pressed. He shouldn’t have let his guard down. He didn’t know anything about this woman.

      She emphatically shook her head. “He likes to travel. I like to travel.” Her words came faster. “I was thinking you could be right. Maybe I should find a real job and save up some money. I mean, seeing America is fun and all, but it might be fun to see some of the rest of the world—”

      “In my brother’s jet?”

      “No. No.” She smoothed her hair back again. “I’m not going to flirt with your brother. I just thought …”

      Jared waited. He truly did want to know what she thought.

      She let go of the fence rail and took a step forward. “I thought he might be a lot like you. Smart and interesting.”

      He stared down as she moved closer. “I can’t believe you’re doing this.” But what he really couldn’t believe was that it was working. She was flirting with him, using her pretty face and killer body to gain an advantage. And it was working.

      He was pathetic.

      “You misunderstood,” she told him in a soft voice. “I have no designs on Royce. I don’t even know Royce. And if my mission was to land myself a rich man, do you think I’d be scooping horse poop on a ranch in Montana? No offense, Jared, but Manhattan is a whole lot closer to Gary, and their per capita count of rich eligible men is pretty darn high.”

      Jared watched her soft lips as they formed words, took in her feathery hair lifting in the light breeze, her bottomless green eyes, almost a turquoise, like the newly melted water of a glacial lake. She was stunningly gorgeous and intriguingly intelligent.

      “So how stupid do you think I am?” Her voice dropped off into silence. The thuds of Tango’s footfalls echoed around them.

      “I don’t think you’re stupid at all,” Jared admitted. “That’s the problem.”

      Melissa had overplayed her hand.

      Sitting at the end of a long table in the quiet cookhouse, spooning her way through a flavorful soup, she knew she’d made Jared suspicious. She should never have asked to meet Royce. And she should have been content to let him think she was slow-witted.

      Her enthusiasm for getting the story, along with her stupid ego, had both gotten in the way. She’d just had to show off her knowledge of Bosoniga and Tappee. Like some schoolkid trying to impress the teacher. “Bosoniga has a stable monarchy,” she mocked under her breath. Why didn’t she just wave her university degree under his nose and challenge him to guess why she was out on the road playing vagabond?

      She dropped the spoon into her soup.

      Was she trying to sabotage the story?

      “Melissa?” Someone slid into the chair next to her, and Melissa looked over to see Stephanie set a white stonewear cup on the table.

      At two in the afternoon, the cookhouse had grown quiet. Faint voices could be heard from the pass-through to the kitchen. Coffee, biscuits and oatmeal cookies were still available on the sideboard in case anyone needed a snack. And a helper was setting the three empty tables for dinner.

      “Hello,” Melissa greeted Stephanie politely.

      The younger woman’s auburn hair was pulled back in her signature ponytail. She’d removed her riding helmet, but still wore the white blouse, tight jodhpurs and high boots that were the uniform of a show jumper.

      Stephanie grinned happily. There was a freshness about her, Melissa thought. Maybe it was the freckles or maybe it was the complete lack of cosmetics. Or it could have been the perky upturned nose. But Stephanie looked young, carefree, almost mischievous.

      “I saw Jared helping you with Tango,” she began, her expression friendly and open as she turned the cup handle to face the right direction.

      Melissa nodded, even while her stomach tightened with guilt. She couldn’t help but like Stephanie, and she was sorry the woman was caught up in her charade.

      “It was very nice of him,” Melissa acknowledged. Then she paused, choosing her words carefully. “My horse skills are …” She let out a sigh, feeling like a heel for lying to Stephanie in the first place. “I guess, I, uh, exaggerated my skill level when I first talked to you.” She cringed, waiting for the reaction.

      But to her surprise, Stephanie waved a dismissive hand. “Whatever.”

      Melissa gazed at her. “But—”

      “It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to shovel manure.”

      “You’re not mad?”

      “Nah.” Stephanie lifted the stonewear mug and took a sip of the steaming coffee. “I imagine people exaggerate on their résumés all the time.”

      “I guess they do,” Melissa agreed, relieved—yet again—that she wasn’t about to get fired.

      “So what do you think of him?”

      “Tango?” Was Stephanie going to try to get her to ride the horse?

      “No, Jared.”

      “Oh.” Melissa caught the speculative expression in Stephanie’s eyes.

       Oh.

      Oh, no.

      This could not be good.

      “He seems, well, nice enough,” Melissa offered carefully. Truth was, she thought Jared was demanding and sarcastic. Okay, in an intriguing, compelling, sexy kind of way.

      Stephanie nodded cheerily. “He’s a great guy. Lots of women seem attracted to him. I mean, it’s hard for me to tell, being his sister, but I imagine he’s pretty hot.”

      Melissa turned her attention back to her soup. “He’s a very attractive man.”

      “You should have seen the woman he dated last weekend. They had their picture in the paper in Chicago. She was a knockout. A lawyer.”

      Melissa spooned up a bit of soup. She was not going to be jealous of some smart knockout lawyer in Chicago. Who Jared dated was absolutely none of her business.

      “I told him he should see her again. But he’s not interested.” Stephanie gave a shrug. “So, really, he’s not committed in any way, shape or form.”

      Melissa fought a smile. Again, there was an endearing quality to Stephanie. She was probably only four or five years younger than Melissa, but she seemed so innocent and untarnished. Maybe it was from living in the protected world of rural Montana.

      “Honestly, Stephanie, I think I frustrate your brother.”

      Stephanie shook her head. “We can change that.”

      “I’m

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