Maureen Child

Runaway Temptation


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I really appreciate you riding to the rescue.”

      “I could have said no,” he reminded her.

      She tilted her head to one side and studied him. “No, I don’t think you could have.”

      He snorted. “Is that right?”

      “Yeah. I think so.” She shook her head. “You’ve got the whole ‘responsible’ vibe going on. Anyway, I didn’t know how I was going to get away. Didn’t even think about it. I just ran.”

      “Right into me.” And he had gotten a real good feel of the body beneath that ugly-ass gown. High, firm breasts, narrow waist, nicely rounded hips. He frowned and shifted as his own body suddenly went tight and uncomfortable. Hell. Just what he needed.

      “Yeah, I’m sorry you got dragged into this.”

      He glanced at her. “No, you’re not.”

      She grinned. “No, I guess I’m really not. Hard to be sorry about finding a white knight.”

      He let that one go because he was nobody’s hero.

      “So now what?” he asked. “What are you going to do from here?”

      She sat back and stared at him. “I have no idea.”

      “Well, what was the plan?”

      “Like I said, there wasn’t a plan. I just had to get away.” Shaking her head, she stared out the windshield. “I didn’t even know I was going to run until just before I did.”

      She’d torn down her hair and now it was a tangled mess of dark red curls that flew around her face in the wind whipping through the opened windows. He’d had the AC on, but she’d shut it off and rolled down her window, insisting she needed to feel the wind on her face. Caleb didn’t know what it said about him that he preferred that hair of hers wild and free to the carefully pinned-up style she’d had when she ran from the club.

      She still had the skirt of her wedding dress hiked up to her knees and Caleb took another admiring look at her long slim legs. Then he fixed his gaze on the road again. “Look, I’ll take you out to my ranch—”

      “Your ranch.”

      “That’s right.”

      “Jared said he had a ranch.”

      Caleb snorted. “The Goodmans used to run a ranch, generations ago. Now they rent the land out to other ranchers so they can live in town.”

      “So I discovered.” She held her hair back, narrowed her eyes on him and asked, “Anyway, we know I’m not crazy.”

      “Do we?”

      She ignored that. “Now I have to ask. Are you a crazy person?”

      Both eyebrows lifted and he snorted a laugh. “What kind of question is that?”

      “One I probably should have asked before I hopped into your truck.”

      “Good point.” A reluctant smile tugged at his mouth.

      “Well, I thought I should ask before we go much further down this pretty empty road.”

      Amused in spite of everything, he asked, “What happened to me being a damn hero rescuing you?”

      “Oh, you’re still a hero,” she assured him, “but you could be crazy, too. You aren’t, though, are you?”

      “Would I admit it if I was?”

      “You might.” She shrugged. “There’s no telling with crazy people.”

      “Know a lot of nut jobs, do you?” Caleb shook his head, he couldn’t believe he was having this conversation.

      “A few, but you don’t seem like you’re one of them.” A wide swath of lace lifted into the wind and she snatched it and held it down on her lap. “Have you ever seen so much tulle?”

      “What’s tulle?”

      “This.” She lifted the swath of netting again. “It’s awful.”

      “If you don’t like it, Why’d you buy it?”

      “I didn’t.” She sighed. “Jared’s mother picked it out.”

      Caleb laughed. “Sounds like her.”

      “Okay, you’re not crazy.” She nodded and gave a sigh of satisfaction. “If you don’t like my almost mother-in-law you’re obviously stable.”

      “Thanks.” Still shaking his head, he said, “Like I was saying, I’ll take you to the ranch. You can figure out where to go from there.”

      “I don’t know where I can go,” she said quietly turning her head to stare out the window at the scenery flying past. “I don’t have my purse, my wallet. God, I don’t even have clothes.”

      Caleb didn’t like the sound of the rising hysteria in her voice.

      “I don’t know what I was thinking,” she said, and her words tumbled over each other in their rush to get out. “My God, I don’t have anything with me.”

      “I can take you to an ATM—”

      “No purse,” she interrupted. “No wallet, remember? No clothes except for this giant marshmallow of a dress.” She slapped one hand to her chest as if trying to hold her heart inside her body.

      “You’re starting to panic,” he pointed out.

      “Of course I am.” Her eyes were wild. “Now that I got away, I can think about other things and what I’m thinking is that I’m alone. In a strange place. Don’t know anyone but the people I’m escaping from.”

      He watched from the corner of his eye as she shook her head frantically.

      “I can’t exactly go over to the Goodmans’ house and say please can I have my things? My clothes. My purse. My ID. My phone.” She dropped her head into her hands and now her face was covered by what looked like an acre of tulle. “This is a nightmare,” she muttered.

      “Remember, you wake up from nightmares.”

      She lifted her head to glare at him. “Easy for you to say since I’m assuming you actually have a change of clothing.”

      “Good point.” He nodded. “Yeah, you’re about the same size as my sister-in-law. You can wear some of her stuff.”

      “Great. And what if she doesn’t feel like being generous?”

      “She’s out of town.”

      A short laugh shot from Shelby’s throat. “So I’ve been on my own about fifteen minutes and already I’m stealing clothes.”

      “Not stealing. Borrowing.” He paused. “Are you always this dramatic?”

      “Only when my world implodes,” she said and looked at him again. “So basically, I’m homeless and destitute. Well, hasn’t this day turned out all sparkly?”

      He laughed.

      She narrowed her eyes on him, then reluctantly, laughed herself. “This is not how I pictured my life going.”

      “Yeah, not how I saw my day going, either,” he replied, grateful that she seemed to be coming down from that momentary panic.

      “Honestly,” she said with another shake of her head, “I didn’t think beyond moving to Texas to marry Prince Charming who turned out to be a frog.”

      “And you didn’t notice that right off?”

      “No.” She huffed out a breath and turned her face into the wind. “Usually I’m a terrific judge of character.”

      When he didn’t agree, she reminded him, “I picked you to rescue me, didn’t I?”

      Amused