The Borrowed Bride
Susan Wiggs
Praise for the novels of
SUSAN WIGGS
“Wiggs is one of our best observers of stories of the heart. Maybe that is because she knows how to capture emotion on virtually every page of every book.”
—Salem Statesman-Journal
“[A] beautiful novel, tender and wise. Susan Wiggs writes with bright assurance, humor and compassion about sisters, children and the sweet and heartbreaking trials of life—about how much better it is to go through them together.”
—Luanne Rice on Just Breathe
The Borrowed Bride
Susan Wiggs
www.mirabooks.co.uk (http://www.mirabooks.co.uk)
During her own bridal shower, Isabel Wharton is whisked away by past love Dan Black Horse to his retreat in the Cascade range. But returning to her Native roots, and Dan’s loving arms, is harder than she ever imagined.
Dear Reader,
This story, first conceived of fifteen years ago, has a special place in my heart for several reasons. It is the very first work I created for Harlequin Books and ultimately led to my very happy home publishing under the MIRA imprint. I’ll forever be grateful to editor Marsha Zinberg for the opportunity.
The Borrowed Bride takes place in my adopted home state of Washington, and I hope it conveys the wonder and beauty of this region. Re-reading the novella was a glimpse through a different lens, and I was able to see how much of my current writer’s voice was present early on, and how a story like this laid the groundwork for the novels that would come after. Still, the story needed updating in a few spots. And unfortunately for Washingtonians, but fortunately for my editors, there is still poor cell phone service in the area where the story takes place. Overall, I’m happy to report that my general worldview of the redemptive power of love is still in place.
I hope you enjoy this romantic journey and that your own dreams are coming true for you each and every day.
Happy reading,
Susan Wiggs
Rollingbay, Washington, USA
www.susanwiggs.com
To Mary Hyatt, my own dear mensch, with love.
Here’s to long-distance friendships!
Dance. Everywhere, keep on dancing.
—Native American prophecy
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Acknowledgments
One
Isabel Wharton’s dreams were finally coming true—or so she thought. Surrounded by a burst of springtime and eleven chattering women, she prepared to join their intimate circle, to become their daughter, sister, niece, cousin when she married Anthony Cossa.
The bridal shower, held in the garden of a cottage café on Bainbridge Island, was winding down. Isabel tore open the second-to-last package and peered at the gift, then beamed at her future sister-in-law.
“It’s lovely, Lucia. Simply lovely.” What is it? The thing resembled something she had seen in her ob-gyn’s office. She bit the inside of her cheek to stop herself from asking. Lucia and Connie and Marcia would be the sisters she’d never had.
“A silver pasta server.” Connie, Lucia’s younger sister, set aside the package. “Leave it to Lucia to assume you want to cook pasta.”
Ah, but Isabel did want to cook pasta. And cannoli and tiramisu and gnocci, all for Anthony. She wanted to do everything for Anthony. He would make the perfect husband, and better still, he came with a family that was so large, so boisterous and so loving that she was engulfed by a feeling of belonging.
They would warm the cold, empty places inside her. At least she hoped so.
“I saved the best for last.” Connie perched on the edge of her white wicker garden chair.
Isabel caught Mama Cossa’s eye and winked. “I’m not sure I trust your daughter.”
“I haven’t trusted Connie since she tried out for the seventh-grade wrestling team.”
Isabel laughed and removed the slick, metallic gold wrapping paper. Female hoots filled the garden as she lifted a wispy silk garment from the box.
“Now that,” Connie said with great pride, “is hot.”
Isabel stood, holding the lacy red teddy against her. The silk felt as cool and insubstantial as mist. The lace plunged to her navel; the legs were cut sinfully high. Even held against her India-cotton skirt, the teddy felt wicked and wild.
“I figure Tony will have a heart attack when he sees you in it,” Connie said. “But at least he’ll die happy.”
The women’s laughter chimed like music in the garden. Isabel felt a wave of affection and gratitude, along with a feeling of contentment so sharp and sweet that her chest hurt. These women—Anthony’s sisters and aunts and nieces, his beautiful mother—were to be her family. Her family.
Ever since she’d moved to Bainbridge Island and established her plant nursery, she’d begun to feel as though she really belonged somewhere. All that had been missing was a family, and now she was about to get that, too.
They began to drift homeward then; most of the guests were staying on the island, where the wedding would take place in just one week. Mama Cossa, good-humored but limping from bursitis, gave Isabel’s hand a squeeze. “See you at the rehearsal dinner, dear.”
Only a few women remained when a faint hum sounded in Isabel’s ears. She gazed down the length of the garden. The flower beds and trees were drenched in the glory of sunshine. Just past the tops of the towering fir trees, she could see the sparkling waters of Puget Sound.
The island, she decided, was paradise on earth. She had built her life on a foundation of shattered dreams, but finally everything was falling into place.
The roaring grew louder. It was the sound of a boat motor or a car without a muffler—urgent, industrial, a faintly animalistic low grumble.
Connie and the others, who had been bagging up torn paper and ribbons, paused and turned. Isabel frowned. And then, right where the gravel driveway turned off from the road, he appeared.
He was an image out of her worst nightmare. Clad in black leather. A bandanna around his head. Inky, flowing hair. Mirror-lens sunglasses. The Harley beneath him bucking and spitting gravel like a wild animal.
“I smell testosterone,” Connie murmured as the machine roared up a terraced garden path.
Isabel stood frozen, immobile as a block of ice. The apparition skidded to a halt, jerked the bike onto its kick-stand and walked toward her. Long, loose strides. Tall boots crunching on the path. Tiny gold earring winking in one ear. Long brown hands hanging at his sides.
“Somebody call 911,” Lucia whispered.
He yanked off the mirror glasses and stared at Isabel. Dark brown eyes dragged down the length of her. Then he reached into the lingerie box on the table and plucked out the red silk teddy.
“Very nice,” he said in a rich drawl, inspecting the garment. “You were always a great dresser, Isabel.”
She snatched it away and thrust it into the box. “What are you doing here?”
He gave her the old cocky grin, the expression that used to make her go weak in the knees.
It still worked.
His looks had attracted her in the first place. She had been drawn to his aura of seductive danger, the faint sulkiness of his full lips, the powerful body as well tuned as his Harley. The long hair so thick and gleaming that she yearned to run her fingers through it.
The direction her thoughts had taken ignited a blush in her cheeks. “This really isn’t a good time.”
“There never was a good time for saying the things we should have said to each other,” he said with that lazy, Sunday-morning, stay-in-bed-all-day drawl. “But I figure it’s now or never.”
Her blush intensified. “Maybe you could come back later, after…” She let her voice trail off. Her mouth was dry, her thoughts scattered.
“Nope, Isabel, won’t work. We’ve got some unfinished business.” He hooked a thumb into the top of his black jeans and shifted his weight to one leg. “I figure you’d rather settle things in private, so you’d better come with me.”
With a force of will, she was able to drag her gaze from him. “Connie, this is Dan Black Horse.”
“Perfect,” Connie whispered helpfully. “Just perfect.” She sent Dan an adoring look. “I have all of your albums. I’ve been a fan for years. Too bad you’ve quit.”
“Pleasure to meet you,” Dan said with effortless gallantry.
Connie gave Isabel’s shoulder a nudge. “Go ahead,” she said with sisterly wisdom. “If you’ve got something to settle with this guy, take care of it now, because next week it’ll be too late.” She lowered her voice and said, “If you weren’t my friend, I’d kill you for not telling me you knew Dan Black Horse.”
Isabel stooped to pick up her woven straw purse. “I won’t be long.” She forced her lips into a smile. “I’ll be all right, really.”
Dan Black Horse pivoted on a boot heel and led the way down the garden path. When they reached his bike, he eased it off the kickstand and held out a black, slightly battered helmet.
“No way,” she said, stiffening her spine. “I’ll follow you in my car.”
“Nope.” He plunked the helmet on her head and fastened the strap. “Where we’re going, you don’t want a car.”
She clenched her jaw to keep from screaming. Priorities, Isabel, she reminded herself. Keep the priorities straight. The most important thing was to avoid making a scene.
She heaved a sigh, hitched back her cotton skirt and got on the bike.
“Way to go, girl,” Connie murmured, not far behind her.
“We’ll go to the Streamliner Diner,” she told Dan tautly. “And I mean to be back by—”
The thunder of the large engine swallowed her words. He rolled forward, then opened the throttle. The bike jerked into motion.
Instinctively, her hands clutched low on his hips. A feeling of the forbidden seized her. She gritted her teeth, moved her hands to the cargo bar behind her and held on for dear life.
He wasn’t wearing a helmet, she observed as they turned onto the narrow wooded highway that bisected Bainbridge Island. Maybe a cop would pull them over.
Officer, I’ve been kidnapped by a man I swore I’d never see again.
But as they roared southward toward the quaint little township of Winslow, even the stoplights turned green, conspiring against her.
Craning her neck around his bulky shoulder, she saw the diner up ahead, looming closer…and then farther away as they veered past it, down the hill toward the ferry terminal.
“Hey,” she shouted in his ear. “You said we’d have our little talk at the diner.”
“You said that, sweetheart.” He tossed the words carelessly over his shoulder and passed the tollbooth.
The last straggling cars were pulling onto the ferry. A female attendant wearing a bright orange smock was about to cordon off the loading platform.
Dan thumbed the horn. It emitted a chirpy beep. The attendant grinned and waved him through. He drove up the ramp and parked. Immediately, a horn blew. Too late to get off.
As the ferry eased away from the terminal, he turned around to face her. “Damn, Isabel,” he said, “you’re one hard woman to find.”
The second he killed the engine, Isabel struggled off the bike. “You’re crazy,” she said, “but I suppose you know that.”
“Maybe.” He favored her with a look she remembered well, the one of sleepy arousal that used to make her happy to dive back into bed with him for long, languid weekend mornings.
“This is ridiculous,” she said in exasperation—both at him and at her wayward memory. She braced her hand on the iron wall to steady herself as the ferry headed for downtown Seattle.
When Dan didn’t reply, she turned and stomped up the stairs to the lounge. The spacious waiting room, flooded with April sunshine, was crowded with islanders heading to the city for shopping or an evening on the town. She spotted a familiar face here and there and managed to nod a greeting.
Great, she thought. All she needed was for the bank clerk or the hardware store owner to see her going to Seattle with a sinfully good-looking man.
She went out on deck, where the wind caught at her skirt and hair. Gulls wheeled and sailed along beside the ferry. In the distance, a sea lion splashed in Puget Sound.
It didn’t take Dan long to find her. Within minutes, he joined her on the open-air deck. “Here.” He pushed a paper cup of café latte into her hand. “Skim milk, one sugar packet, right?”
She took the cup and sank to a bolted-down bench. “I hope you know you’ve ruined the afternoon for me.”
He sat beside her, resting his lanky wrists on his knees. A dark fire smoldered in his eyes, and she sensed a tension about him, a coiled heat that disturbed and fascinated her. “Couldn’t be helped. Besides, it’s better than ruining the rest of your life.”
She almost choked on a mouthful of hot coffee. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
He reached forward and caught a drop of latte with a napkin before it stained her India-print skirt. “You can’t marry him, Isabel.” His voice, with the unforgettable low rumble of masculine passion that had filled the airwaves for two years, was harsh. “You can’t marry Anthony Cossa.”
“Since when do I need your permission?” she retorted. The breeze plucked at her hair. Her permed curls were now a deep chestnut color, thanks to an expensive salon job. She pushed a thick lock behind her ear and glared at him. “How did you find me, anyway?”
He sent her a hard-edged grin. “Through Anthony.”
“Oh, God.” She set down her cup and folded her arms across her middle. “What did you do to Anthony?”
Dan stretched out his long legs and crossed them at the ankles. He leaned his head back against the wall. The movement and pose were graceful, vaguely feline, subtly dangerous. “I don’t remember you being this suspicious.”
“I’m generally suspicious of men who kidnap me from my own wedding shower.”
“Fair enough. I had business with Anthony. And what do I see when I get to his office? Your smiling face in a silver frame on his desk.”
She tried to picture it. Dan, all in rebel black, with his long hair and earring, facing Anthony, immaculate and trying hard to look laid-back in his Banana Republic chinos.
“He’s a good guy, Isabel,” Dan said expansively. “He’s real proud to be marrying a gorgeous, successful woman.”
“He’s no slouch in the looks and success departments,” she argued. “Maybe I’m real proud to be marrying him.”
“Maybe,” Dan said, jamming a thumb into his belt and drumming his fingers on his jeans.
Isabel jerked her attention from the insinuating pose and glared out at the Sound.
“That’s what I thought at first,” Dan went on. “I was going to blow the whole thing off, wish you a happy life with your upright, square-jawed bachelor-of-the-month, and bow out.”
“I wish you had.” She took a gulp of coffee. She probably shouldn’t ingest caffeine. Being with Dan made her jumpy enough. “Why didn’t you?”
“There are things I’ve always wondered about, Isabel.” He sat forward, gripping the edge of the bench. It was there again, the pulsing rhythm in his voice, the mesmerizing glitter in his dark eyes. “Five years ago, you walked out on me and never looked back.”
I couldn’t look back, Dan. If I had, I would have gone running into your arms.
She gave up on the latte and rose from the bench to drop her cup into a waste barrel. “What do you want from me?”
“Just a little of your time.”
Her eyes narrowed. “How much?”
He sent her the same lazily sexual smile that had cast a spell on her five years earlier. She had been twenty-one, a terrible driver, and while backing out of a parking space in front of an ominous-looking nightclub, she had knocked over a large black motorcycle.
Terrified but determined to do the honorable thing, she went into the club to find the owner of the bike.
He was performing that evening, playing to a small, grungy but clearly appreciative crowd. The lead singer of a local band, he strummed a wild, primeval tune on a battered Stratocaster guitar. To Isabel, he looked like eternal hell and damnation in the flesh. He was gorgeous. She was spellbound.
He forgave her for the damages, took her out for a latte that had stretched into an all-night conversation, and stole her heart.
She backed warily away from the memory, for it was still as dark and seductive as that moonlit night had been.
“How much time, Dan?” she asked again, telling herself she was older, wiser, immune to his devilish smile.
“That depends,” he said, “on how long it takes for you to realize you’re marrying Anthony for all the wrong reasons.”
“Oh, please.” She turned away and gripped the rail of the ferry. “I’m a big girl now. And I’m not stupid. I don’t want you back in my life.”
The boat was nearing the downtown pier. Good. The minute they got to the terminal, she would call Anthony at his office. The situation was bound to be awkward. Best to explain this to him before Connie got started.
A flash of electric awareness came over her. She felt Dan behind her, although he wasn’t touching her. Despite her anger, a vital tension tugged at her.
“Turn around, Isabel,” he whispered in her ear. “Look me in the eye when you say you don’t want me.”
Her entire body felt slow and hot, as if she were swimming through warm honey. She forced herself to turn to him, pressing the small of her back against the iron rail.
He clamped one hand on the bar on each side of her so that she was trapped. She looked at him, really looked at him, and her throat went dry.
He had hardly changed at all. Still the same magnificent face that made women stop and stare. Same velvet-brown eyes with gold glinting in their depths. Same lean, unyielding body, filled with a hard strength that made his tender touch all the more astonishing. Same perfectly shaped lips…
His mouth was very close. She could feel his heat, could feel the clamor and clash of panic and desire inside her.
“You were saying?” he whispered. His lips hovered over hers, and she felt a fleeting reminder of the wildness that had once gripped her whenever he was near. “Isabel?” His intimate gaze wandered over her throat now, no doubt seeing her racing pulse.
“I was saying,” she forced out, “that I don’t…”
“Don’t what?” His thumbs brushed at her wrists, lightly, gently.
“…want you…” she tried to continue.
“Go on,” he whispered. His tongue came out and subtly moistened his lower lip.
“…in my life again.”
His hands stayed on the railing. Yet he moved closer, his hard thighs brushing hers, searing her through the wispy fabric of her skirt. She felt every nerve ending jolt to life. By the time he grinned insolently and pushed back from the railing, she was dazed and furious, and the ferry was unloading.
“Just checking,” he said.
“You bastard,” she whispered.
A pair of women with straw shopping bags passed by, sending Isabel looks of rueful envy.
Dan stepped back, smiling his I’m-a-rebel smile.
“I need to make a phone call,” Isabel said. “And then I’m taking the next ferry back to Bainbridge.”
“We haven’t settled a damned thing.”
“We settled everything five years ago. It didn’t work then, and it won’t work now.”
“Five years ago was only the beginning.”
“No.” The word sounded strangled as she headed for the stairs. “It was the end.”
He caught her wrist, and she froze. There was not a trace of a smile on his face when he brought her around to look at him.
“Don’t you think you owe me one more chance?” His voice was a low rasp that reminded her of the smoky, yearning love ballads he used to sing to her. “After all, you almost had my baby, Isabel.”
Two
Dan Black Horse couldn’t believe Isabel had agreed to come with him. But then, he couldn’t believe he had said such a blatantly manipulative thing to her.
She had even called the clean-cut Anthony and told him not to worry; she’d be in touch.
And so here they were—a couple of hours southeast of the city, at his guest lodge in a wilderness so deep and untouched that there weren’t even roads leading to the property.
He looked across the timber-ceilinged lounge at her and could not for the life of him think of a damned word to say.
She stood at a window, one slim hand braced on the casement, gazing out at the dense old-growth forest that rose like a sanctuary around the lodge. In the green-filtered glow of the afternoon sun, she looked fragile and lovely, the shape of her legs visible through the thin, full skirt, her back straight and proud, her hair flashing with burnished light.
A wave of tenderness washed over him. Always, she managed to look isolated and alone, even when she was in a crowd of people. It was one of the first things he had noticed about her.
“You changed your hair,” he said at last, then grimaced at his own inanity. Boot heels ringing on the floor, he crossed to the bar and took out a can of beer for himself and a soda for her.
She turned around to face him. Her full breasts strained against her cotton jersey top. “You changed your life.”
Her face was more striking than he remembered. Large doe eyes. High, delicate cheekbones. A full mouth that drove him crazy just thinking about it. An air of winsome uncertainty that made him want to take her in his arms and never let her go.
Ah, but he had let go. Five years earlier, he had not been brave enough, smart enough, to hold her.
He handed her the soda and gave her a lopsided grin. “Yeah, I guess you could say I made some changes.”
“A few, it would appear.” She strolled around the rambling room. “Where’s the phone? I had no idea you were taking me this far away. I should check in with—”
“No phone,” he told her quietly.
“What?” Liquid sloshed out of the can, but she didn’t seem to notice.
“There’s a radio for emergencies, but the phone lines don’t come up this far, and it’s too remote for cellular.”
She sagged against the back of an armchair. “Whatever happened to the city boy? Didn’t you find fame and fortune with the Urban Natives?”
“Depends on your standards for fame and fortune. The band did okay. The last album went gold, and it got me into this place.”
“I noticed the name of this place on the door—The Tomunwethla Lodge.” She brushed her hand over a woven wicker bean jar on a side table. “What does that mean?”
Ah, she had trained herself well. He had always hoped she would acknowledge the past, maybe even come to cherish it as he did. But given Isabel’s background, that wasn’t likely.
“Cloud Dancer Lodge,” he said. “‘Cloud Dancer’ is a song I once wrote. A really bad, crying-in-your-beer song. Probably the most popular thing I ever did.”
Isabel rose and stood on a braided oval rug in front of the massive hearth. “So what’s the point?”
“Of the song?”
“Of everything.”
He set down his beer and took her hand, leading her to the huge sofa facing the fireplace. A moose head with baleful glass eyes stared down at them.
“The point of everything,” he echoed, blowing out his breath. He tried another grin on her, but she remained solemn. “Lady, you asked a mouthful.” He half turned, hooking a booted foot over his knee. God, he wanted to touch her, really touch her, to wake up the passion he knew was only sleeping inside her. But the way she was looking at the moment, he was afraid she might shatter.
Just as she had five years ago.
“First, my granddad got sick,” Dan said after a moment. “I moved to the town of Thelma to help look after him. And damned if I didn’t start to like it out here again.” He linked his hands behind his head and stretched out his legs. “Used to be, I couldn’t wait to get away from the rez, from the country.” Through half-lidded eyes, he watched her for a reaction. There was none. If anything, she seemed even more subdued. More withdrawn.
Well, what did you expect, Black Horse?
“My granddad died.”
“Dan, I’m sorry.”
“He was eighty-three. He left me a grant of land that’s tied to a treaty with the government dating back to the 1880s. Right around the time of his death, a timber company approached the tribal council, wanting to make a deal on clear-cutting.”
“But this area is sacred ground,” she blurted out. Then she looked surprised at herself and fell silent.
“Exactly,” he said. “But the deal was real tempting. When you don’t know where your next meal’s coming from, lunch with a grizzly bear looks pretty appetizing.”
That coaxed an extremely small smile from her.
“So I did some research. The lands are protected, but the council was leaning toward the timber company. I made a counteroffer. Got a special grant to develop a recreational area, sank everything I had into it and built this place. Just put the finishing touches on it a week ago.”
“It looks as if it’s been here forever,” she said. “The lodge is really beautiful, Dan.”
“It’s supposed to have that rustic flavor.” Flipping his wrist outward, he did a perfect imitation of Andy, the band’s former keyboard player, who had switched careers to interior design. “Without skimping on creature comforts.”
Isabel laughed softly. The sound gripped Dan where he felt it the most—in his heart.
“So that’s the short version,” he said. “If this is a success, I could open lodges in Alaska, maybe Belize or Tahiti in the winter—”
“Why?” Her question was sharp and humorless.
“Because I know what I’m doing.” Sort of. “Somebody else would come in and build a theme park. Probably stick totem poles up everywhere and sell shaman baskets for yard ornaments. I wanted something better. I wanted to do it right.”
She stood and crossed the room, inspecting a cloth wall hanging and the tuber mask beside it. “This is just right. Really.” Even as his chest filled with pride, she paused. Maybe she was beginning to unbend a little. “I take that back. The snowshoes hanging on the wall are marginal. And the antler ottoman has got to go.”
“It’s my favorite piece of furniture.”
She sat back down on the sofa. “So now I know why you’re here. Why am I here?”
He paused. “A picture’s worth a thousand words?” he offered.
“Fine. I came. I saw. I’m impressed. Now take me back to the city.”
“I can’t exactly do that,” he said in a soft, slow voice.
“What do you mean?”
“We have a lot to talk about. I need time.”
She shot up again. “I don’t have time. I’m getting married exactly one week from today. I have to meet with a caterer. A florist. A dressmaker. Photographer, videographer—” She counted them off on her fingers and turned on him in frustration. The pale skirt floated around her slim legs, and for a moment, she looked as exotic as a gypsy dancer. “Sorry, Dan. I just didn’t schedule in being abducted by an ex-boyfriend.”
He’d had no idea she was so bitter. This was going to be harder than he had thought. A lot harder.
“In other words,” he said, “you want me to say what I have to say and then get the hell out of your life.”
She blew out an exasperated breath. “That’s putting it a little bluntly.” Then she looked defiant. “I don’t have time to play games with you.”
He crossed the room in two strides and clamped his hands around her upper arms. She felt delicate and breakable. He used to marvel at her softness, her femininity, the way it contrasted with his own hard edges and roughness. But when she flinched at his touch, he grew angry.
“Is that what you think this is, lady? A game?”
“Tell me different.” She glared up at him.
“I brought you here because you ran away, and I was fool enough to let you go. Well, not this time.”
“What?”
He stared into her eyes, seeing his reflection in their depths and, in his mind, seeing the dreams and desires that used to consume them both, feeling the ache of an unfulfilled promise.
“I can’t let you go, Isabel. I can’t let you just walk out of my life again. You’re making a big mistake, marrying that guy, and I can prove it.”
“How?” she challenged, lifting her chin.
“Like this.” He lowered his mouth to hers and cupped his hand around the back of her head. This was not how he had treated her aboard the ferry. He was not teasing her or, in some mean-spirited way, trying to assert his masculine power over her. This was a kiss designed to bring back the wildness and passion they had once shared. To remind her—remind them both—of all they had lost and all they could be once again if they tried.
She held herself rigid. At first, she made a resentful sound in the back of her throat. He softened his mouth on hers and skimmed his thumb down her temple to her jaw, lightly caressing. A small sigh gusted from her, and her clenched fists, which she had put up between them, relaxed. Her palms flattened lightly against his chest.
Ah, he remembered this, the thin, keen edge of desire he felt only with her, and the way she swayed and fit against him. Her mouth was soft, and the taste of her—one that had lingered for years after she left—was as familiar and welcome as the springtime.
His tongue traced the seam of her lips, and she opened for him, almost shyly, her trembling hands over his heart.
Finally, when it was all he could do to keep from making love to her right then and there, he lifted his mouth from hers. She looked up at him, and he down at her, at the sheen of moistness on her lips.
The sheen of tears in her eyes.
“Isabel?” His voice was low and rough.
“I can’t believe you’d do something so cruel.”
He dropped his arms to his sides. “What the hell is that supposed to mean?”
She drew an unsteady breath. “You’re just trying to manipulate me. To make me feel unfaithful to Anthony.”
“What about being faithful to yourself?” He pivoted away, furious at her, furious at himself for wanting her. “I guess you never learned that, did you?”
She caught her breath as the dart struck home. Though Dan knew it wasn’t her fault, she had turned away from the part of her that was like Dan—the Native American part.
“I moved on, Dan,” she said. “I moved past that. It’s known as growing up.”
“I’m sorry. I didn’t find you again to hurt you. I did it to ask you for a second chance.”
She brushed at her cheeks with the back of her hand. “It’s no good. I can’t. You—you bring up a darkness in me. I get all twisted around inside when I’m with you. I can’t live like that.”
“There are those who say you should seek out your darkest places. Explore them. Find the sunshine that will burn the shadows away.”
“Don’t you see? That’s what I’m trying to do.”
“You’re running away, Isabel.”
She crossed to the door and went out onto the porch to stand, glaring at a magnificent view of Mount Adams. “It’s my choice.”
He came out and stood behind her, placing his hands lightly on her shoulders. She didn’t pull away.
At length, she said, “Take me back to the city, Dan.”
“I’ll take you back this instant,” he said, “if you can say you really mean it when you tell me it’s all over between us.”
He turned her in his arms. He saw the truth written all over her face. She had been just as aroused by the kiss as he had.
But he could see that she was close to breaking. It was time to back off, to give her space, to let it all sink in.
“I have to feed the horses,” he said. “They’ve got internal clocks that tell them exactly when five o’clock rolls around.”
“I can’t believe you have horses. You wouldn’t even keep a goldfish in your apartment in Seattle.”
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