The Maverick's Virgin Mistress / Lone Star Seduction. Jennifer Lewis
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“What?” Alicia wondered if she was dreaming. “Our ranch is fine.”
Still, fear pricked through her and she slid out of bed onto the cool wood floor. “Hold on, let me look out the window.” She hurried across the room and pulled back the thick curtains.
“Oh, my God.” Her hand flew to her mouth. An orange glow pierced the darkness.
The flashing lights of emergency vehicles moved along the drive through the ranch, and even through the insulated glass she heard the throb of a helicopter circling overhead.
“It’s on fire! The barn! Oh, no, the animals are in there—” She darted across the dark room to the closet.
“I’m coming over.”
“No, please don’t.” Panic flashed through her as she tugged on jeans under her nightshirt. “Whatever’s going on, you coming here will make it worse. I have to find Alex. The calves…” She struggled to pull on a pair of boots. “I’ve got to go.”
“Please, let me come.”
“No, Rick. Not now. I’ll call you as soon as I can.” She hung up the phone.
“Alex!” She called out into the hallway of the big ranch house.
A light shone downstairs, and Alex’s bedroom door stood open. “Alex, are you here?”
No answer.
She dashed down the stairs two at a time and ran to the front door. She opened it to the smell of smoke and the wail of sirens.
A mass of heaving flame engulfed the barn roof and lit the darkness all the way to the house. “Alex!”
Alicia took off running across the lawn that separated the house from the barn. She could see figures moving, running in the eerie glow from the fire. Shouting mingled with the roar of flames crackling, wood splintering and water gushing from hoses.
“Alex, where are you?” Fear made her voice crack.
Alex was always at the center of everything. She knew with every cell of her body that he was inside that burning barn.
Heart pounding, she raced toward the fire. He might be bossy and overbearing, but he was also the best brother and the warmest, most caring man in the world.
He’d raised her since their parents died and managed to scrape and struggle to provide a good life for them—a wonderful life, now that he was so successful.
A figure rushed up to her in the dark and she recognized one of the ranch hands. “Diego, have you seen Alex?”
“He sent me to wake you. He said to make sure you stay inside the house until he comes.”
“He’s okay?”
Diego hesitated. “He’s trying to rescue the calves.”
“Oh, no! I knew he was in there. We have to get him out.” She started running to the barn.
Diego grabbed her sleeve. “Miss Alicia, please. Alex wouldn’t want you near the fire.”
“I don’t care what that stubborn fool wants. I’ve got to get him out of there.”
She wrenched her arm free and took off running again. She wasn’t the Our Lady of Fatima senior track champion for nothing.
She heard Diego behind her, pleading for her to stop, protesting that Alex had personally entrusted him with her safety and that if he found out—
“There he is!” She saw him emerge from the vast doorway on one side of the barn, driving a herd of calves in front of him.
The young cows were confused and ran in all directions—even trying to get back into the burning barn—as the workers tried to shove them out into the safety of the darkness.
Alicia ran into their midst and grabbed hold of the collar of the calf nearest her. “Come on, princess, you don’t want to go back in there.” She tugged it away from the doorway.
The hot glow of flame brightened the inside of the barn and seared her skin like noonday sun. Cinders whirled in the smoky air, and ash pricked at her eyes. Every instinct told her to run far, far away.
But she turned to see Alex heading back inside. She gave the calf a slap on the rump to drive it out and plunged for the doorway, toward Alex.
“Alejandro Montoya! You get out of that burning barn or I’ll—”
Alex wheeled around. “Alicia, you shouldn’t be here. I told Diego—”
“I know what you told Diego, but I’m here now and you need to get out of this barn before the roof collapses. The whole ridgeline is on fire!”
He frowned and glanced back into the barn. “I’ll just check to make sure they’re all out.”
“No!” She grabbed the front of his shirt. His face was almost black with soot but his dark eyes gleamed with purpose.
Desperation made tears spring to her eyes. “Don’t risk your life!”
“We’ve got them all out!” A voice shouted from the darkness. “I counted. All forty-five calves are safe.”
“Thank God.” Alex grabbed Alicia and threw her over his shoulder in a fireman’s lift that knocked the breath from her lungs.
Alicia fought the urge to kick and protest his overbearing reaction. But he was running from the barn, so at least she’d got him heading in the right direction.
“You need to get back in the house and stay there until I come for you!” he shouted as he set her down on her feet a safe distance from the barn.
“I’m not a child, Alex. I can help.”
“Nothing’s going to help save the barn.” Alex winced as a sidewall gave way and the roof started to lean to one side, like a ship keeling over in rough seas.
“It was here before the house. It’s over a hundred years old. It’s been home and shelter to thousands of animals, and now…” He shook his head.
Alicia bit her lip. She knew how much every inch of this ranch meant to her brother. He’d sweated and saved and worked so hard for it.
Buying El Diablo had been a crowning moment in both of their lives. The proof that despite all the odds stacked against them, they’d made it and were going to be fine.
She looked back at the barn, now a heaving mass of bright flame. “What happened?”
“We don’t know. The fire came out of nowhere. Thank heaven we have smoke alarms that woke Dave and Manny in the apartment above it. They called the fire department, but the building was already going up by the time the first truck arrived.”