Wind River Wrangler (Wind River Valley #1)

“But there are people who have no writers in a family and they get published.”


“Right,” Shiloh agreed, opening the warm biscuit, inhaling the odor of it and slathering it with butter. “I call it the storytelling gene. People who love to tell stories are frequently writers. And if they don’t publish, then you often find them in many different careers, but they still like to tell a story.” She looked over at him, her eyes warm. “Your face has a story to tell.”

Mouth quirking, Roan growled, “It’s a top-secret face, Darlin’.”

Heat collected in her lower body as he rasped out the endearment between his lips, although Shiloh thought it was probably done with tongue in cheek. She found herself wishing the endearment had been said with affection. “We all carry secrets,” Shiloh said. “There isn’t a person on this earth who doesn’t.”

Nodding, Roan wiped his mouth with the napkin. “On that, we can agree.” He rose and picked up the plates. “You going to eat your salad?”

“No. I’m stuffed. Thanks. Would you like me to wash the dishes? Help out in some way?”

“You can start carrying your share of the load around here tomorrow,” he said, taking them to the sink.

He had a nice butt. Everything about Roan Taggart was sexy, Shiloh decided, defeated by her hungry body. His walk was so damned confident. The word indomitable came to mind. Shiloh couldn’t imagine anyone standing in his way.

“Dessert?” he asked, turning toward her after he washed off the dishes and put them into the dishwasher.

“What do you have?”

He grinned sourly. Shiloh had perked up at the question and Roan bet she was probably a sweet eater. “I bought a coconut cream pie from the grocery store the other day. Interested?”

“Not right now. Maybe later?”

Shrugging, Roan brought the pie out of the fridge. “Do what you want.”

Shiloh got up and made them coffee. “Would you like a cup, Roan?” She liked calling him by his first name. She saw a silver glint in his eyes when his name had rolled off her tongue. It sent her heart skittering. The look he gave her made her burn. Swallowing against a dry throat, Shiloh lowered her lashes. Roan Taggart wanted her. It was a raw, hungry look. Clasping her hands, she didn’t feel threatened by him. Just . . . desired. How long had it been since she was honestly attracted to a man? Years. Too many of them.

“Pour me some, thanks.” He took his plate of pie to the table. Whether Roan wanted to admit it or not, Shiloh was easy to be around. She wasn’t a pest. She didn’t get underfoot. She wasn’t a nonstop talker, which drove him absolutely nuts. She listened. Asked intelligent questions. And she was a team player. Where she saw an opportunity to help out, she went for it. He thanked her as she set the steaming mug in front of him. Roan wasn’t about to tell her she was dessert to him. It was a good thing Shiloh couldn’t read minds.





Chapter Four


Roan snapped awake. It took a millisecond for him to key his hearing. Moonlight filtered weakly through the semi-opaque curtains pulled across both windows. His six senses were online and he quietly moved out of bed. He wore only a pair of dark blue cotton pajama bottoms, his upper body naked. Twisting the doorknob, he quietly opened the door. Slipping like a shadow into the darkened hall, he sensed someone moving around out in the kitchen. Shiloh? He glanced at the watch on his wrist. Three A.M.

Halting in the living room, he saw Shiloh in the kitchen, putting a copper teakettle on the stove. Her hair was unruly and she was wearing pale pink silky pajama bottoms and a pink cotton tee that outlined her breasts to perfection. Hell. She looked sleepy, hair tangled, and wasn’t exactly graceful with her movements.

The realization that she could not really take care of herself came across strongly to Roan. It wasn’t that Shiloh was weak or stupid. And maybe because of his black ops training, he was at the other end of the spectrum; too alert and having that situational awareness that could help save his life. She was obviously sleepy, rubbing her eyes, yawning. There wasn’t anything to dislike about her and Roan’s mouth flexed downward and thinned. Shiloh wasn’t helpless, just not alert to her surroundings. Maybe he could help her open up her awareness a little more since she was being stalked. It could save her life someday.

“Shiloh?”

Shiloh gasped, whirling around. The cup she had in her hand dropped. It shattered on the floor around her feet. Her eyes widened enormously as she saw the darkened shadow of a man in the living room. A scream nearly lurched out of her mouth. Heart thudding like a freight train in her breast, she saw him emerge from the shadows. And then her lower body got in the mix. Roan Taggart was so damned male.

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