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One Wild Cowboy and A Cowboy To Marry: One Wild Cowboy / A Cowboy to Marry

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Год написания книги
2018
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Eager to be rid of the callow youth, Emily swung open the door to the café and glared at the teenager. “I don’t need a ring to be his. Now go.”

“You heard the lady.” When Xavier didn’t immediately comply, Dylan shoved him out the door and shut it firmly in his face.

Emily turned to Dylan. She knew it was unnecessary and politically incorrect of her, but she really liked the idea of Dylan jumping to her defense. Unfortunately, it wasn’t an action she could let stand as precedent.

She rolled her eyes comically. “Obviously, I was exaggerating...about being your woman.”

The way Dylan was looking at her—as if he didn’t know whether to kiss her or chide her—forced Emily to remember exactly how good it had felt to be held in his embrace.

“I am aware of that,” he retorted.

“And for the record,” Emily continued stiffly, telling herself she and Dylan would not end up kissing again, no matter what, “I don’t need you to come to my rescue.”

The corners of Dylan’s lips twitched. “It would appear you did.”

Was it possible he had enjoyed defending her honor as much as she had? Emily pushed the bothersome thought away.

“No,” she corrected forcing herself to stay on track. She needed to keep her emotions under wraps. “I didn’t.”

“Uh-huh.” Dylan came closer, all sexy, determined male. “If you change your mind...”

Emily’s pulse jumped. “Why would I do that?”

“Because guys like that don’t like to be told no,” Dylan said in a low, cautioning tone.

Emily had been successfully fighting her own battles for as long as she could recall. “Well, in this case the kid is going to have to get used to it, because I am not interested in being his cougar.”

One corner of Dylan’s mouth curved upward at the notion. “He actually said that?”

So, she wasn’t the only one who found the teen’s proposal to her completely ludicrous!

“It was part of his come-on,” she explained. “I think in Xavier’s teenage fantasy I was just supposed to melt in his arms or something.”

Dylan grunted in response, his disapproval evident.

“Anyway,” Emily rushed on, anxious to put the embarrassing situation behind her, “I’m sure that after what just happened he’ll leave me alone now.”

Dylan’s expression was suddenly as inscrutable as his posture. Deliberately, he inclined his head. “If he doesn’t...you’re welcome to be ‘my woman’...anytime.”

Chapter Three (#u0bbc0630-59cf-5b77-875e-ea5ae938998f)

“Dylan Reeves really called you his woman?” Simone echoed in the café kitchen early the following day.

Doing her best to keep her focus on getting ready for the morning rush, Emily shrugged nonchalantly. “He was mocking me because of what I said to that boy in the heat of the moment.” The fact that Emily warmed from head to toe, every time she recalled it, was her own foolishness. “Obviously, Dylan didn’t mean it because it’s not true.” She brought an extra large pan of golden-brown cinnamon rolls from the oven, and slid in a pan of buttermilk biscuits.

Simone manned the sausage and bacon on the griddle. She winked. “He could be—if you wanted it. Seriously...he’s got the hots for you.”

Emily guffawed. “You only wish my life were that exciting. Dylan is the kind of guy who roots for the underdog in every situation and he thought I was disadvantaged in that moment.”

“Were you?”

Emily gave the hash-brown potatoes a stir. “I had just stomped on Xavier’s toes and planned to escort him to the door. But...Dylan beat me to it.”

“Wow...” Simone comically fanned her chest. “Two men fighting over you.”

Emily blushed despite herself. “I wouldn’t call Xavier a man,” she said.

“I know.” Sympathetic, Simone furrowed her brow. “What’s up with that? How old is he?”

“Nineteen.”

“That is way too young to be running a restaurant,” Simone said.

“No kidding. But I imagine he’s going to find that out the hard way.”

The bell on the service door sounded, as Billy Ray and Bobbie Sue Everett came in. The married couple waited tables at the café during the day and attended community-college classes at night. Normally very down-to-earth and unflappable, they were giddy with excitement. “You-all have got to see this. We’ve never seen anything like this!”

All four of them rushed to the front windows. Dawn was barely streaking across the sky, but there it was—on the opposite side of the Laramie town square—a big burnished-bronze trailer-style restaurant, with an old-style saloon front, sitting on top of an enormous tractor-trailer bed. Next to it was the enormous crane that would move the Cowtown Diner onto the lot where a gas station had once stood.

Emily’s heart sank. It really was happening.

“Can you believe it’s actually going to be open for business by the end of the week?” Billy Ray said.

Aware the customers would soon be lining up outside the door to be let in when the café opened at six o’clock, Emily went back to the kitchen and brought out the platters of homemade cinnamon rolls and sticky buns that would be on display.

“It’s only possible,” Emily said, “because the building is delivered ready to go and everything they serve in the restaurant is prepackaged and pre-made.”

“It’s still amazing,” Bobbie Sue murmured, while quickly helping her husband set up the tables.

Emily had a sinking feeling her customers were going to think so, too.

* * *

THE LUNCH CROWDS WERE finally thinning when Dylan walked into the café at one-thirty, so he was able to get a table right away. To his surprise, Emily came out of the kitchen personally to bring him a menu. After the events of the previous day, he had suspected she might try to avoid him. He couldn’t blame her; he had done as much this very morning, choosing to eat breakfast on the ranch instead of coming to the café, as usual.

But then he’d thought about it and decided that was pure foolishness. He was blowing this all out of proportion and really wanted to get back on solid ground with her.

“I don’t need to see that,” Dylan said, determined to keep the exchange as casual as possible. “I memorized the offerings on your menu the first week you opened.”

And like most ranchers in the area, he had been eating her “cowboy cuisine” frequently ever since.

“You sure? I’ve put a few new things on the menu, just today.”

He was sure. But since it seemed to mean so much to her, he opened the laminated menu anyway. A hand-lettered inset offered two new sandwiches and a fried jalapeño-cheese popper appetizer that was a customer favorite at the Cowtown Diner chain. “Competing already?” he drawled.

He’d figured the sight of the rival establishment would have upped Emily’s competitive spirit.

Curious to know just how far she would go, he leaned back in the red vinyl booth and prodded, “Or just stealing another restaurant’s signature dish?”
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