Jennifer Greene

One Tiny Miracle


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a woman. A woman who’d not been made love to in a long, long time.

      He snaked an arm around her waist and once again forced her to stop in her tracks and face him.

      “What does that mean? A woman like you?”

      He brought his palms up to her face and Maura felt her knees threaten to buckle as he rubbed his thumbs against her cheeks. She was getting glimpses of what he would be like as a lover and those indications were far too tempting for a wounded woman like her.

      “Oh, Quint,” she said in a strained voice, “surely you can see what I’m talking about. For starters I’m six years older than you.”

      He frowned. “What does that have to do with anything?”

      Maura rolled her eyes. “There’s a gap between us.”

      “We can fix that,” he drawled, then jerked her forward until the front of her body was brushing his. “See? No gap at all. In fact, I can tighten it even more.”

      He was being a hopeless flirt. Almost playful. Something she didn’t think him capable of. Before this evening, the only Quint Cantrell she’d seen was a serious, work-driven man. She couldn’t imagine what had brought about this change in him. Surely not her.

      “There are other kinds of gaps, Quint. You’re young and single.” She didn’t bother to add “rich, attractive and considered one of the biggest catches in Lincoln County.”

      “You are, too.”

      “I’m divorced,” she said thickly.

      “That doesn’t make you contaminated.”

      She couldn’t do anything but laugh and when a smile suddenly spread across his face, it made her feel good, better than she’d felt in a long, long while.

      “See,” he said, “you were taking one little kiss way too seriously.”

      The embrace that had gone on between them had been more than one little kiss. But he was right. The best thing she could do for both of them was to treat this whole thing in a casual way. The last thing he needed to know was that he’d shaken the very earth beneath her feet.

      “You’re right. I suppose I have been making too much of it.”

      The grin on his face deepened. “We still have a little twilight left. Let’s walk on to the stables,” he urged. “You don’t want to have to tell Gramps you couldn’t make it that far.”

      That wouldn’t be nearly as embarrassing as returning to the house with red cheeks and swollen lips, she thought wryly. “All right. Let’s go on. But—”

      When she broke off with uncertainty, he quickly finished, “Don’t worry, you’ve made it clear you’ve had enough kissing for tonight.”

      He slipped his arm across the back of her waist and as he urged her on toward the ranch yard, Maura could only think she might have Quint completely fooled, but not herself. She’d not had nearly enough of his kisses. Or his company. And with each step she took by his side, she wondered if she was headed toward a very special place or the hell of another heartache.

      A few days later, as the weekend approached, Maura was considering driving over to the Diamond D on Saturday. Her mother was still hounding her about having supper with her family and Maura knew that Fiona wouldn’t let up with her nagging until her eldest daughter showed up.

      But on Friday evening Abe came in early from the ranch yard and spent the last waning hours of sunlight in his easy chair. The behavior was out of character and, though he insisted he felt fine, Maura suspected the man was dizzy but just didn’t want to admit it to her.

      Deciding she needed to stay close, Maura crossed the family meal off her plans and promised herself to go another time, when Abe wasn’t behaving so peculiarly. But by Saturday afternoon, he appeared to be back to his normal self and raring to get back with the ranch hands.

      Late that evening, sometime after dark, Abe was still out when she answered the phone and was vaguely surprised to hear Quint’s voice. Since Abe carried his own cell phone, his relatives usually called him directly on it rather than over the landline.

      “Hi,” he said. “I was about to think you weren’t in the house.”

      Just the sound of his voice caused her heart to trip over itself and she realized no man had ever made her feel so giddy and young.

      “I was in the laundry room,” she explained. “Abe is still down at the ranch yard. Did you try his cell?”

      “I’m not calling to talk to Gramps,” he answered. “I wanted to speak with you.”

      A warm flush swept up her torso and over her face. Since the night of their little kissing spree, she’d not seen or heard from him and she’d tried to write the whole thing off as a frivolous impulse on his part. There’d not been any other way to explain his behavior.

      “Oh. Well, if you’ve been concerned about Abe, don’t be. He appears to be back to normal.”

      “Concerned? I didn’t realize anything had been amiss with Gramps. I talked to him this morning. He sounded fine. Has anything been wrong?”

      “Not exactly. Yesterday he stayed indoors more than usual. That’s all. But that appears to be over with now.”

      “Good. Then you wouldn’t feel anxious about leaving the ranch for a few hours?”

      Maura’s mind raced ahead. What could he be getting at? “No. I wouldn’t worry. Why?”

      There was a long pause and then he spoke in a low voice that skittered lazily down Maura’s backbone.

      “Because I wanted to see if you’d like to come over to the Golden Spur tomorrow. I’ve finally gotten a few of my good horses moved over here and I thought the two of us might take a ride. Maybe have a little picnic.”

      It was a good thing Maura had sat on the edge of the armchair when she’d picked up the phone, otherwise she would probably be collapsing with shock.

      “You’re inviting me on an outing?” she asked bluntly.

      He chuckled. “Why not? I can’t think of anybody else I’d rather ask.”

      What about asking no one and going on the ride alone, she silently asked. What about the guy who was so swamped with work he didn’t socialize? The guy who wasn’t that interested in women?

      Her hands began to tremble ever so slightly and she gripped them tightly around each end of the telephone receiver in order to steady them.

      “I don’t know, Quint. It’s been ages since I’ve been on a horse.”

      “More reason for you to accept my invitation. So you can get back in the saddle.”

      The heat in her cheeks grew hotter and she was very relieved he couldn’t see her. “I thought you had lots of work to do,” she countered. “That’s what Abe is always telling me.”

      “He’s right. My kind of work never gets caught up. But tomorrow is Sunday. After church, I don’t work.”

      She’d not expected him to be a man who kept the Sabbath. But then she didn’t really know everything there was to know about Abe’s grandson. Other than he was as sexy as all get-out and the perfect picture of walking, talking danger.

      Releasing a long breath, she passed the tip of her tongue over her lips. The other night, after they’d walked on to the horse stables, he’d remained a perfect gentleman. She couldn’t believe the man was going to this much trouble just for a chance to kiss her again. Maybe he actually wanted her company? Liked her company? The idea thrilled her even more than the memory of their torrid kiss.

      “Oh.