High Country Hero. Lynna Banning

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High Country Hero - Lynna Banning Mills & Boon Historical

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a bush. He began to wonder about that split-up-the-front skirt she wore. Did it unbutton between her legs? Or did she have to pull it down and drop her drawers? Anatomically, women were at a disadvantage.

      The songbird stopped abruptly, after which he heard nothing but the occasional spark popping from the fire. What in blazes was going on behind that huckleberry bush? Nobody took half an hour to pee.

      “Sage?” He stood up. “Dr. West? I’m coming over.” His boots crunched through the bracken, managing to stop just before he tripped over her.

      She lay curled up on her side, her hat squashed into the pine needles. Cord knelt beside her, checked her breathing.

      Sound asleep. He suppressed a chuckle. Just one tuckered out, ladyfied lady. He’d bet she’d pulled up her drawers and then just fallen over.

      Oh, boy. He’d have to wake her up for supper.

      He strode back to camp, untied her bedroll and spread it out by the fire. He mixed up some biscuits, then opened a tin of beans and set it on a flat rock. Over it, close to the heat, he placed the tin pan with six lumps of sticky biscuit dough arranged in a circle, and one in the middle. No fresh water up here, so they’d make do with what was left in the canteens.

      And whiskey. His mouth watered at the thought. He wouldn’t get drunk, just smooth out the rough places. It had been a long time since he’d felt this edgy.

      She was still asleep when he went to get her. “Doc?” He nudged her shoulder with the toe of his boot. “Wake up. Supper’s ready.”

      She groaned and pulled her knees up closer to her chin.

      “Doc?” Aw, the devil with it. He went down on one knee, slid his arms under her and stood up. She weighed no more than a sack of sugar. Her long legs swung as he moved, but she didn’t wake up.

      He laid her out on her bedroll and she opened her eyes and looked up at him. “Just what do you think you are doing, manhandling my person?”

      Man, did she wake up fast! Her voice was clear as a cold creek.

      “You fell asleep. I lugged you out of the woods for supper.”

      She sat up. “Supper?”

      “Beans and biscuits.” And whiskey.

      “Oh?” She smiled and her whole face lit up, especially her eyes. In the firelight they looked like the purple pansies Nita used to grow. Big and velvety.

      “You haven’t answered my question,” Sage said.

      “Huh? What question?”

      “Who is following us?”

      Cord sent her a sharp look. A more single-minded female he’d never encountered. He thought he’d sidestepped the issue hours ago. “Nobody’s following us,” he said quickly.

      “I don’t believe you.”

      He leaned back and stared at her. “You know, I had a dog like you once. Used to get his teeth into something and wouldn’t let go.”

      “I had a dog like you once, too,” she said with a sideways look. “He used to drop a ham bone at my feet and then bite me if I picked it up.”

      Cord sat back on his heels and studied her. High cheekbones. Three or four freckles. A generous mouth, still rosy from sleep. Kind of an English nose. And those eyes. She was pretty, but too smart for her own good.

      He switched tactics. “You like venison in your beans?”

      “Is your real name Cordell?”

      “What’s that got to do with it?”

      She gave him a tired smile. “Nothing. I just wanted you to know I could do it, too.”

      “Do what, cook?”

      “No.” She looked straight into his eyes. “Change subjects when I need to.”

      Oh, yeah. Sand and then some.

      Sage eyed the pocketknife he slipped out of his jeans. He snapped it open with a flick of his long fingers, and she caught her breath. It looked as sharp as any scalpel she’d ever picked up, and when he pulled a leathery-looking strip of dried jerky from a dingy flour sack and carved off two-bit-size rounds, she began to breathe again. He grinned at her as if he knew what she’d been thinking and dropped them into the tin of bubbling beans.

      “Is that knife really clean?” she said without thinking.

      “Clean enough,” he responded.

      “But we’re going to eat that! What about bacteria? Germs?”

      “What about ’em? The heat’ll kill the puny ones, and this—” he dribbled in a healthy splash of whiskey “—will make the survivors happy.”

      “I wasn’t thinking about the survivors. I was thinking about the ingesters.” She used the word on purpose.

      “We’ll live.”

      “And the germs won’t.”

      “Life’s like that. Germ eat germ, so to speak. What are you so touchy about, Doc? You’re gettin’ your supper cooked, your toes toasted by the fire I built, everything but tucked in with a bedtime story.”

      “I know.” She sighed. “I am grateful, Mr. Lawson. Tomorrow I won’t be so worn-out.”

      “Sure you won’t,” he said dryly. “Here. Eat up.” He handed her a fork and a tin plate swimming with hot beans, topped by two over-browned biscuits. She stabbed one with her fork, but it slid sideways. She grabbed it with her fingers and bit into a corner. Or tried to.

      “Who in the world taught you how to make biscuits?”

      He shoveled a load of beans into his mouth. “Zack Beeler.”

      Her fork clattered onto the plate. “The Zack Beeler?”

      Cord’s black eyebrows rose a fraction of an inch. “You heard of him?”

      “Everyone’s heard of him. He’s an outlaw! A bank robber and a murderer. I saw his poster in my uncle’s office when I was just a girl.”

      “He’s also a fine trail cook. He taught me to make biscuits when I was seven.”

      Sage stared at Cord. Just what kind of man was he? “Mr. Lawson, what is it you do for a living?”

      “I’m a bounty hunter.”

      Oh. Oh. “Is the individual who needs a doctor, um…wanted?

      “You could say that.” He dribbled a tablespoon of whiskey over his beans. “In a manner of speaking.”

      Speechless, Sage watched him smash up his biscuits with the fork tines and scoop beans over them. An outlaw. She was struggling up this trail to treat

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