Cathy Gillen Thacker

A Baby in the Bunkhouse


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      The cowboy seemed to have no such reservations. “What choice do you have? Besides sleeping in the car?”

      And they could both see, with the most necessary belongings of her life taking up every available inch of space in the car, there was definitely no room for that.

      It was only as Jacey was grabbing her purse and the small overnight bag she had planned to take with her into the lodge that she realized he hadn’t told her his name.

      As soon as she got her bearings after working her way out of the car, she thrust out her hand. “I’m Jacey Lambert,” she said with a smile.

      He reached out to swallow her palm in a warm, strong grip, and his gaze fell to her rounded belly. His polite but remote smile faded. “You’re pregnant.”

      “You just now noticed?” Jacey was approximately two weeks away from actually delivering her baby. She felt large as a cow.

      Irritation tautened his lips. “I wasn’t looking.”

      “Guess not.”

      They stared at each other in the pouring rain.

      He had a rain slicker on. She did not. And the water pouring down from the heavens was quickly drenching her hair and clothing.

      Evidently realizing that, at long last, he put an arm around her shoulders and hustled her toward his truck.

      “I hope you’re better at backing up a vehicle than I was,” she joked as he shifted his large capable hands to her waist and lifted her into the cab.

      He shot her a level look, a grimness that seemed to go soul deep in his eyes.

      “I don’t think I’ll have any problem,” he said as he climbed behind the wheel.

      “You still haven’t told me your name,” Jacey said after he successfully steered the truck past her car, and they proceeded rapidly toward the entrance of Lost Mountain Ranch.

      “Rafferty Evans.”

      “Nice to meet you, Rafferty.”

      Her greeting was met with silence.

      His mood was even more remote as he parked at a group of sprawling adobe buildings. They got out and walked the short distance across the pavement in the pouring rain—this time beneath a wide umbrella he’d plucked from behind the driver’s seat. When they reached the portal of the bunkhouse, he shook the umbrella out, closed it and set it just beside the door.

      Looking over at her, he said, “The hired hands are asleep. So if you could be as quiet as possible…”

      She nodded, incredibly grateful now that safety was upon her. She didn’t care if this handsome stranger had wanted to rescue her and her unborn child or not—he had.

      “No problem,” she told him just as quietly.

      The bunkhouse was a large, square building, built in the same pueblo style as the main ranch house.

      He held the front door for her and motioned her inside. She walked into a spacious great room, with a long wooden table and chairs on one side, a huge stone hearth in the middle—with a dying fire—and a grouping of overstuffed chairs, sofa and large-screen television on the other side. There were three closed doors on each side of the large gathering room that looked like the entrance to private bedrooms or quarters. All was dark and quiet.

      “Kitchen’s to the rear if you need anything. Help yourself,” Rafferty Evans leaned down to whisper in her ear.

      Taking her by the elbow, he guided her toward a door. Just as she had suspected, it opened onto a nice-size bedroom, with dresser, chair and private bath. A stack of clean linens sat on the end of the unmade bed.

      “I’ll see you first thing tomorrow morning,” he said.

      Then he turned on his heel and left.

      ELI WAS WAITING for Rafferty when he walked back in the ranch house. “Get everything all taken care of?”

      Rafferty exhaled, not surprised his dad had not gone on to bed, as directed.

      He hung his wet hat and slicker on one of the hooks on the wall and stalked into the kitchen. “Not exactly.” He got a beer out of the fridge, twisted off the cap and flipped it into the trash.

      He took a long pull of the golden brew before continuing, “The bridge is underwater—which, thanks to the fog, we weren’t able to see until we got right up on it. When we were backing up, the woman got her car stuck in the mud, so we’ll have that to look forward to in the morning.”

      Eli paused to take this all in. “Where is she?” he asked eventually, brows furrowing.

       As far away from me as possible under the circumstances.

      Rafferty took another pull on his beer, trying not to think how incredibly beautiful the woman was. “Cook’s quarters in the bunkhouse.”

      Eli did a double take and surveyed his son with a critical eye. “You put a lady in the bunkhouse?”

      Worse than that, Rafferty thought, he put a pregnant lady in there.

      Figuring his father didn’t need to know that part of the equation yet, Rafferty shrugged and ambled back to the fridge. He rummaged around for something to eat, trying hard not to think of Jacey Lambert’s ripe madonna-like figure and drenched state.

      The bunkhouse was plenty warm. She had two blankets, a stack of sheets and towels, a warm shower if she wanted it and an overnight case that undoubtedly held dry clothing. There was no reason for him to worry. She’d be fine. If she wasn’t, well, he had no doubt she was just as capable at calling for help and waking all the cowboys up as she had been backing her car into the ditch. They’d let him know. In the meantime, he needed to put her and everything else he still preferred not to think about, out of his mind.

      “She seemed okay with it,” Rafferty said. Deciding he needed some food in his stomach, too, he grabbed a slice of precut cheddar.

      “That’s not how we do things around here,” Eli reprimanded in his low, gravelly voice.

      Didn’t he know it. Rafferty downed his snack, and another quarter of his beverage. Avoiding his dad’s look, he walked over to the recycling bin. “Look. She was dead tired—she’s probably already asleep.” He dropped the empty bottle into the plastic bin. “Which is what I plan to do.” Go to bed. Forget everything.

      “We’re going to talk about this in the morning,” Eli warned.

      Rafferty imagined they would. But not now. Not when he had so many unwanted memories trying to crowd their way back in.

      “’Night, Dad.” Rafferty gave his dad a brief, one-armed hug and headed down the hall that ran the length of the seven-thousand-square-foot ranch house.

      It was only when he reached his room that the loss hit him like a fist in the center of his chest.

      But instead of the image of his own family in his mind’s eye, as he stripped down to his T-shirt and boxers and went to brush his teeth, he saw the trespasser he had encountered in the pouring rain.

      She had glossy brown hair, a shade or two darker than his, that framed her face with sexy bangs and fell around her slender shoulders like a dark silky cloud. If only her allure had ended there, he thought resentfully. It hadn’t. He’d been held captive by a lively gaze, framed with thick lashes and dark expressive brows.

      Everything about the woman, from the feisty set of her chin and the fact she was stranded late at night, pregnant and alone, to the way she carried herself, said she was independent past the point of all common sense.

      Thank God she’d be leaving in the morning, as soon as he could get her station wagon out of the muck, Rafferty thought as he got into bed.

      The sooner she left, the sooner he could stop thinking about Jacey Lambert’s merry smile