Courtship, Montana Style. Charlotte Maclay

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Courtship, Montana Style - Charlotte Maclay Mills & Boon American Romance

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to you. So if someone could show me to my quarters?”

      She was going to stay? Good God, things were going from bad to worse. And why did she avoid looking him in the eye, her gaze darting away every few seconds like a truant caught out of school? Something was definitely not right here.

      “Well, now,” Speed drawled, “I’d say that’s mighty generous of your employer.”

      “Can I carry the baby?” Scotty asked. “I’ll be real careful.”

      “Of course.” The youngster received another one of her smiles.

      “Have you got suitcases and stuff?” Fridge asked. “I can carry them—”

      “Wait!” Walker bellowed again. “I guess I didn’t make myself clear. We don’t need a housekeeper or a baby—”

      The baby in question added her own objection, startled awake by Walker’s shouting. Speed, all three boys and Miss Thomas hastened to soothe the infant, losing interest in what Walker had to say. In contrast, Bandit retreated to the side of the house, running at a crouch.

      Scotty picked the baby up out of the car seat, holding her to his shoulder and patting her on the back with considerable expertise. Meanwhile Lizzie began directing her remaining devotees to her luggage in the BMW’s trunk and the baby’s supplies in the back seat.

      Walker stood in the driveway with about as much animation as a tree stump, having no idea how things had gotten so far out of hand. In a matter of minutes, Lizzie Thomas had bewitched his foreman and his boys. And if the truth were known, she’d come close to doing the same to Walker. That slow, sexy smile of hers and her bluesy voice were enough to make any man rethink the merits of extended celibacy.

      Except her story didn’t make any sense. Housekeepers didn’t simply show up at a man’s front door willing to work for nothing. Not when he had adolescent boys in the house who were allergic to baths and cleaning up after themselves.

      Nope. Something was screwy about Lizzie Thomas’s story. It would be downright interesting to know why she, or someone else, had gone to so much trouble to set up this cockamamy scheme.

      For the moment, Walker figured he didn’t have much choice but to follow everyone else into the house. Soon enough he’d discover what Lizzie was up to.

      And then she’d be gone in a hurry.

      As he pulled open the screen door, he caught the lingering scent of a sultry perfume, feminine and inviting, and a little bit tropical. Not the boys. And sure as hell not Speed.

      At some gut level, Walker sensed that if Lizzie stuck around very long, the Double O would never be the same.

      For the life of him, he couldn’t be sure whether that was a good thing—or a bad one.

      ELIZABETH STIFLED A SIGH of relief as she entered the house. Never in her life had she been so brazen. Lied so blatantly. Or been so rude. But she had managed to get past the first obstacle, which had turned out to be Walker Oakes himself.

      The magazine article had been deceiving. From the photo of Walker wearing a Stetson pulled down low on his forehead and a weather-aged sheepskin jacket, she had assumed he’d be a much older man. Not midthirties with saddle-brown hair, an arresting face that squint lines had filled with character and a rugged physique snugged into skintight jeans. She might well have given up her plan if she’d known what a formidable opponent he’d be. Nothing like the men in her life who wore dark suits and ties to work and designer polo shirts on the golf course.

      “Ms. Lizzie, where do you want me to put your stuff?” Fridge asked.

      She shuddered at the nickname she’d given herself. Her mother would have a fit if she knew, much preferring the formal version.

      “Perhaps we should ask Mr. Oakes his preference?” She tipped her head back to look up at him with the sweetest expression she could manage. Given his height, a woman dancing with him would find his shoulder a perfect spot to rest her head—and she wondered wherever that thought had come from.

      Skeptical bronze eyes snared her. “I think you know my preference.”

      “Yes, well…” She swallowed hard. He was not going to be an easy man to fool. “I suppose I could drive back into town—”

      “Now don’t you go troubling yourself about driving anywhere,” Speed said. “This here house has got more bedrooms than you can shake a stick at.”

      “She could stay in the bunkhouse with us,” Bean Pole volunteered.

      Instantly rejecting the idea, Walker told the boy, “Not on your life.”

      Ignoring the exchange, Speed continued. “Seems to me the big ’un across from the boss’s would do you just fine. And this here wee little tike—” he stuck his finger out for the baby to grab “—she’d be fine in the old sewing room Mrs. Oakes used.”

      Elizabeth shot Walker a look. “Mrs. Oakes?”

      “My father’s wife. She’s been gone from the ranch a long time.”

      “Oh.” A tiny surge of relief skipped through her awareness. The article hadn’t, after all, said anything about Walker being married. But it could have been an oversight. And a woman would have seen through her scheme immediately. She’d have recognized Elizabeth didn’t know thing one about being a housekeeper.

      “I’m sure the sewing room will be perfect for Suzanne,” she said.

      “I’ll jest go on upstairs, see to it the room ain’t too much of a mess.” The antithesis of his name, Speed strolled toward the stairway at a pace that would get him to the second floor along about next Tuesday.

      “Wait. We haven’t got a crib or anything for the baby to sleep in,” Walker protested.

      “That’s not a problem,” Elizabeth assured him. “I brought a portable playpen along. It’s still in the car.” One of several purchases she’d made in Reno with the cash she’d withdrawn from the bank. She’d then made a side trip to a junkyard where she’d switched license plates with a Jeep that had been totaled, a little trick she’d learned from reading mysteries. With luck, no one would even notice or be able to trace her.

      “I’ll get the playpen,” Scotty volunteered.

      “No, I will,” Fridge insisted. He dropped the suitcase he’d carried in only minutes ago.

      “Hold the baby a sec, boss.” The boy thrust Suzanne into Walker’s hands. “Fridge doesn’t know squat how to put a playpen together. He’ll probably bust it.”

      Both boys went running out the door to the car, Bean Pole traipsing along at a slower pace, leaving Walker standing there, the baby in his big hands, and looking as though Scotty had handed him a bomb that was about to go off.

      “Well, hello there, Miss Susie-Q,” he said, eyeing the baby with apprehension.

      “Here, I’ll take her,” Elizabeth said.

      “Yeah, it might be better if you—”

      Suzanne gurgled a happy sound and smiled up

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