Jan Hambright

The High Country Rancher


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mount up and settle into the saddle. He could only hope that his method worked. That the beautiful detective would drive away happy and convinced there wasn’t a body hidden somewhere on the Bellwether.

      “We’ll head east. That’s the most remote area of the ranch. Lots of game trails. Abandoned mine shafts. I don’t run cattle out there for that reason.”

      “Too dangerous?”

      “One wrong step and you don’t come home.” He turned his horse and headed for the main road. They’d follow it for a couple of miles and take the Bear Creek trailhead just before Harley Neville’s place.

      Mariah nudged her horse up next to Baylor’s and tried to relax. The feel of her sidearm on her belt offered some comfort. Searching without a search warrant, riding next to a suspect, all seemed a little strange to her, but if it helped her pull together a case, it’d be worth the risk.

      “Shoot. I forgot my lunch in the car.” She attempted to turn the horse back toward her vehicle.

      “Don’t worry.” Baylor patted his saddlebag. “I brought enough for two.” He grinned and her heartbeat went haywire.

      Maybe this wasn’t such a good idea. Her certainty about his involvement in Endicott’s disappearance seemed to flail whenever she was with him. Something about his easygoing style sucked her in and changed her mind.

      Baylor spurred his horse and she followed suit as they settled into a slow canter that ate up the distance.

      The sweet scent of honey locust and pine sap hung in the air. The rhythm of the horses’ hooves against the dirt lulled her into a contented state that she’d rarely achieved since she’d started working at the sheriff’s department.

      Baylor reined his horse in and waited for her to do the same. “Here’s our trail. It’s a steep climb, but the view on top is worth it.”

      There was that sensation again. That zing of pleasure across her nerves, that flutter in her chest. “Looks like it would be too much work to get a body up there.” She stared up the sloping trail as it disappeared into the trees.

      Her comment put an edge of tension in the air between them, which was precisely what she needed to pull her back down to earth. Until the Endicott case was solved, and Baylor was cleared, she had to sock the odd feelings away somewhere so they didn’t interfere with her job.

      “A good strong horse and some determination. It could be done,” he said without hesitation.

      She stared at him, trying to gauge his emotions, but his face gave nothing away. Was he joking or dead serious, she couldn’t be sure.

      “Let’s head up. Make sure it’s clear.” He tipped his hat, the one shielding his features from her scrutiny.

      She fell in behind him, leaning forward in the saddle as her horse trudged up the first steep incline, then took a right as the trail switched back across the face of the mountain.

      Half an hour later they reined in their horses under a massive ponderosa pine and dismounted.

      Mariah’s legs were shaking as she got them underneath her and took a look around. Breathtaking vistas spread out in front of her everywhere she turned.

      “What do you think?” Baylor asked, tying the horses to a low-hanging limb.

      “It’s beautiful.” Already her artist’s eye was honing in on all the possible angles she could use in her work. “I could stay up here for days and have something new to capture on every one of them.”

      “I knew you’d like it.” He untied the double-pouched saddlebag, pulled it off the back of the saddle and tossed it over his shoulder. “Come on, there’s a place to relax just up the trail.”

      Mariah tagged along behind him, staring at his broad shoulders as they moved beneath his denim shirt. Every ounce of control she possessed seemed to drain away, and desire, intense and volatile, throbbed in her veins.

      She swallowed, focusing on the trail ahead of them as it opened into a small meadow flanked by dense timber. A gushing creek roared from out of the mountainside, then slowed and meandered across the meadow before dumping into a pond.

      A well-traveled path wound through the heart of the clearing, flanked by knee-deep bear grass, ending next to a sandy beach on the banks of the pond.

      “This is perfect.” She attempted to move past him, determined to sort out all the unfamiliar emotions tangled up inside of her, but he reached out and caught her hand, pulling her toward him.

      A jolt of electricity coursed through her as they made contact. Gazing up into his face, she knew he’d felt it, too.

      “Mariah…I…” What the hell was he thinking? Baylor wondered as he stared at her lips, then back into her eyes. He was a man on fire. He’d wanted to kiss her all morning and hadn’t been able to shake the desire. He’d even tried to remind himself she was a cop, out for blood, and still it hadn’t done the trick.

      He pulled off his cowboy hat, gave it a toss and dropped the saddlebags as he lowered his mouth to hers. She didn’t resist. Instead, her arms came up around his neck.

      Mariah’s head swam. Every nerve in her body attuned itself to the feel of Baylor’s body pressed against hers.

      She opened her mouth for him, tasting him as he deepened the kiss, exploring her with his tongue in a slow, sensual rhythm. An ache manifested itself deep and low in her belly. A primal need that begged for satisfaction as he lowered her to the soft meadow grass.

      Fire ignited in her veins, consuming all reasonable thought in its flame. She wasn’t a cop, he wasn’t her suspect. They were a man and a woman, locked in the heat of desire. Lost in their own private heaven. Oblivious to the world around them.

      The first bullet whizzed past Baylor’s right ear and bored into the ground next to his head, sending up a spray of dirt.

      Somewhere in the timberline on the other side of the meadow, the gunshot echoed back.

      Drunk on desire, Baylor rocked back, staring down at her. Reality jolted him into action. Someone was shooting at them.

      He rolled them both hard to the left, took her hand and dragged her to her feet.

      “Run!” he yelled.

       Ping.

      Another bullet zinged past, hitting the ground inches behind them.

      Baylor aimed for the trees two hundred feet in front of them, caution driving him as he tried to pick the safest place to go off trail. The meadow was riddled with boarded-over vertical mine shafts; one wrong step and…

      Before the thought had time to solidify, the earth gave under his feet.

      In a last desperate attempt to save Mariah, he yanked hard, sending her flying past him, but the cavernous hole was too big.

      It swallowed them whole and they fell through the rotting boards into darkness.

      Mariah hit the bottom of the pit with a thud. The air pushed from her lungs as she slammed into the ground. Pain shot through her body from the jarring drop.

      Baylor hit next to her.

      She heard him grunt.

      Dust clogged her mouth and nose, grit showering her tongue and grating on her teeth.

      She lay still and opened her eyes.

      It was dark at the bottom of the hole, and it took a moment for them to adjust. She scanned the earthen walls of the mine shaft. They were trapped.

      She choked back a sob, drawing on her training instead. A cool head was the best tool in a situation like this.

      “Baylor, can you hear me?” she asked, encouraged by a scraping noise and a grunt.

      “Yeah.”

      The sound of his voice sent a charge of excitement through