Kate Hoffmann

Australian Quinns


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a day, can’t you?”

      “I don’t know,” he teased.

      “We’ll spend the evening together. I’ll be back before dark. Teague said he can’t land once it’s dark.”

      “Which means he’ll probably find a way to keep you both in Brisbane for the night,” he said cynically.

      She shook her head. “I don’t think so. I think Teague has something else going on.”

      “Why is that?”

      “He asked my advice. Something about starting over again.”

      Brody sucked in a sharp breath. “Oh, hell. That can only mean one thing. Hayley Fraser. I figured that’s where he was off to last night. Callum is going to be mad as a meat-ax.”

      A giggle slipped from Payton’s lips.

      “What?” Brody asked.

      “How could a meat-ax get angry? And what is a meat-ax?”

      “I don’t know. What would you say?”

      “Mad as a…wet hen?” She laughed. “All right. Yours is much better.”

      “Wet hen,” he muttered. “That’s just lame. Who would be afraid of a wet hen?”

      “Why will Callum be angry?”

      “There’s a lot of history between our family and the Frasers. It has to do with a piece of land that Hayley’s grandfather claims my great-grandfather stole from the Frasers. We’ve been fighting about it for years.”

      “A family feud. Like the Hatfields and McCoys.” She paused. “The Montagues and Capulets.”

      “Yeah, I think Teague and Hayley fancied themselves Romeo and Juliet back when they were teen-agers. They were obsessed with each other, to the point where my mum and dad thought they might run away and get married. Then Teague went off to university and a few months later, Hayley ran away. After that, he never mentioned her name again.”

      “What happened?”

      Brody shrugged. “I don’t know. Teague doesn’t talk about it. He was really messed up for a while.”

      “So if they’re Romeo and Juliet, who are we?” she asked. “Bonnie and Clyde?”

      He grinned. “I loved that movie. And we did meet in jail.”

      “They died in the end of the movie. Riddled with bullets, I think.”

      “So you’re expecting a happy ending for us? I can’t think of a movie that ended happily. Casablanca. No, that one really didn’t—how about—no, that one ended badly, too.”

      “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” she murmured. A happy ending? Payton hadn’t thought about the future at all. It was silly to think that she and Brody would share anything beyond her time in Australia. “Life isn’t a movie. It’s not…perfect.” She reached out and took the reins of his horse. “And I have work to do.”

      “Time for a break,” he said. He circled her waist with his hands and lifted her until she could swing her leg over his horse, then handed her a small canvas bag. “Come on. Let’s go for a ride.”

      Brody hooked his foot in the stirrup and settled behind her, taking the reins from her hands and slipping his arm around her waist.

      “I haven’t been on a horse in years,” she said. “Where are we going?”

      “I fancy a swim. And there’s dinner in that sack.”

      “I don’t have a suit.”

      “Then you can sit on the shore and watch for crocs.”

      He gave the horse a kick and guided it out of the stable. They rode in silence past the outbuildings and toward a small grove of trees in the distance. The sun was low in the late-afternoon sky but the air was still warm. Winter in Queensland was more like summer in Maine—the nights cool, sometimes chilly, and the days comfortably warm.

      “Won’t the water be cold?”

      “The pond is pretty shallow,” he said.

      “Are there really alligators?”

      “No. We don’t have alligators, we don’t have crocodiles, either. They’re not common in this part of Queensland. Teague was just being cheeky with you.” He paused. “Although, I suppose they could wander in here without us really knowing.”

      “Snakes, crocodiles, spiders. It’s kind of easy to get hurt here.”

      He nuzzled his face into her neck. “I’ll protect you.”

      “Who will protect you?”

      They reached the pond a few minutes later. It wasn’t like any pond Payton had ever seen. The water was brown, like the soil around it, and a pipe led from the pond to a nearby windmill. She studied the shoreline, searching for anything that moved. “How long can a crocodile hold its breath?”

      “An hour, maybe more,” Brody said. “The salt-water crocs are the bad ones. Freshwater crocs aren’t nearly as nasty. And if they were here, they’d be on the shore, warming themselves in the sun.”

      He slid off the horse, then helped her down, before wrapping the reins around a nearby branch. Taking her hand, Brody led her to the edge of the water. Then he slowly began to remove his clothes.

      “I really wish you wouldn’t go in,” she said.

      “I’ve been swimming in this pond since I was a kid. Believe me, it’s safe.”

      “And I think I’ll just watch for a while,” she said.

      He kicked off his boots and socks, then slipped his jeans over his hips. A moment later, he was naked. Payton held her breath as she watched him walk to the water. He really was a beautiful man, every muscle in his body perfectly toned.

      Desire raced through her body and her fingers clenched at the thought of touching him. Suddenly, crocodiles didn’t seem like such a big deal. Not compared to swimming naked with Brody. As he sank into the water, Payton removed her jacket and dropped it to the ground. A moment later, she pulled off her shoes.

      “My parents used to take me to the beach when we went on vacation,” she said. “And they’d never let me go in the water.”

      “Why not?”

      “My mother was afraid of sharks. And my father was afraid I’d drown, even though I’d taken swimming lessons for years.” Payton shook her head. “They spent so much energy protecting me from alligators that weren’t there.”

      “Crocodiles,” he said.

      When she skimmed her jeans down over her thighs, he smiled. And when she was left in just her underwear, he slowly stood. She walked to the water’s edge. “Take it all off,” he said softly.

      Payton drew a ragged breath. They’d been naked together last night, in the shadows of the stable. But it felt just a little bit naughty out in the open. Still, her desire for him was strange and powerful, a force she didn’t want to deny.

      The water was cold on her skin and she groaned as it slowly moved up her body. Then, holding her breath, she slipped beneath the surface and popped up in front of him. “It’s freezing!” she cried.

      He pulled her into his arms. “You’ll be warm soon,” he said, letting his hands drift over her body.

      “I’ve never done this before. I’ve always thought it would be fun to swim naked, but I’ve never had the opportunity.” As he wrapped her legs around his hips, she leaned back, letting her hair fan out in the water. “It feels nice on my sore muscles.”

      “You work too hard.”

      “That’s what Teague was telling me,” she said as she floated