Grabbing her aged baseball-glove-leather tote bag from the passenger’s seat of the convertible, Summer tried her cell. Low power and even lower battery. No surprise there.
“Okay, I guess I get to walk nine miles along this bug-infested highway. Nice, Summer, real nice.”
She was about to put up the worn black top of the car and lock it, when she heard a truck rumbling along the highway.
“Oh, great. Let’s hope you are a kind soul,” she said into the wind. “‘I have always relied upon the kindness of strangers’”, she quoted from Tennessee Williams.
And let’s pray you aren’t some psycho out on the loose. Not that she couldn’t handle herself. She was armed with pepper spray and a whole arsenal of self-defense courses. She’d learned all about how to protect herself, working as a counselor to battered women at a New York City YWCA for the past five years.
She’d also learned all about the dark, evil side of life working there, too. Which was why she was now stranded on this road. Everyone she knew in New York, including her cousins and her immediate supervisor, had agreed it was time for Summer to take a vacation.
Burned out. Stressed out. Angry. Bitter.
Those were the words they’d used to describe her.
And that didn’t even begin to touch the surface.
Summer took a long breath, tried to imagine a peaceful scene somewhere in the tired recesses of her mind, while she waited for the old truck to pull up beside her. But somehow, she didn’t believe deep breathing would get her through this acute, aching depression.
And neither would God, she decided.
Then she looked up and saw her rescuer.
He was young, probably only a few years older than Summer’s twenty-seven years. He was pretty in a rugged, rough-cut way. He had vivid gray-blue eyes that flashed like heat lightning. And he had crisp, curly light-brown hair that seemed to be rebelling against the humidity.
Warning flares went off in Summer’s weary mind like fireworks on the Fourth of July.
Putting the rickety old truck into Park, he said, “Need some help?”
Summer decided that was an understatement, but she hid that behind what she hoped was a serene smile. “Kinda looks that way, doesn’t it?”
“Want me to look under the hood?”
“No need,” she said, ignoring the homesick delight his Texas drawl caused along her skin. “It’s the radiator. Probably finally busted for good.”
He got out and walked to the raised hood anyway. Since he was a man, Summer figured he didn’t trust her word on car maintenance. Had to see it for himself. Probably thought just because she was a blonde, that she didn’t have any brain cells. Never mind that she had been a double major in college. No need for this handsome interloper to know that just yet.
He turned and wiped his hands down the sides of his worn jeans. “Yep, looks like you’re right. It’s too hot to even touch right now.”
Summer noted his solid build and laid-back swagger. “I told you so,” she said with a hint of sarcasm to hide the hint of interest she had in him.
He ignored the sarcasm, his gaze filled with his own interest. “Where you headed?”
“Athens.” She didn’t feel the need to give him any more information.
“I live there,” he said. Then he extended his hand. “Mack Riley.”
“Summer Maxwell,” she said, taking his hand and enjoying the strength of his touch a little too much.
He pulled his hand away with a quick tug, making her wonder if he’d felt that little bit of awareness, too. “Summer?”
“Yes,” she said, thinking she saw recognition in his beautiful eyes.
“Pretty name.” He hesitated, then said, “And just who are you visiting in Athens?”
“My grandparents,” she replied, mystified by his suddenly odd behavior. “I wanted to surprise them.”
“Oh, I reckon they’ll be surprised, all right,” he said as he shut the car’s hood. “Who are your grandparents? I might know them.”
“Jesse and Martha Creswell,” Summer said, thinking he probably did know them. Everybody knew just about everybody else in the small town of Athens, Texas.
He stepped back, gave her a look that shouted confusion and surprise. “Well, how ’bout that.”
“You know them?” she asked, echoing her thoughts.
“I sure do,” he replied. “Good people. C’mon, I’ll give you a ride into town, then we’ll send a tow truck to get your car.”
“I’d appreciate that,” Summer said, sending up a prayer that he wasn’t dangerous. She knew better then to get in a car with a complete stranger, but he seemed normal, and he knew her grandparents. But just to test that theory, she put her hands on her hips and asked, “Will I be safe with you?”
He laughed, shook his head. “I’m not on any Top Ten Most Wanted List, if that’s what you mean.”
Oh, but he could be on a Top Ten Hunk list, Summer decided. His smile was criminal in its beauty.
“Okay,” she retorted as she started locking up the car. “I just had to be sure. ’Cause my granddaddy, he shoots first and asks questions later.”
“I hear that,” he said, helping her to latch the convertible top. “I do believe Jesse would have my hide if I let anything happen to you.”
“So how well do you know my grandparents?”
“I met them when I first moved here.”
Why did she get the feeling he was being evasive? Maybe because he wouldn’t look her in the eyes. And maybe because she’d learned not to trust people on first impressions.
“Am I missing something here?” she asked, determination causing her to dig in her heels.
“Do you have suitcases?” he asked back, misunderstanding the question, maybe on purpose.
“Oh, yes, I do.” She unlocked the trunk.
He laughed as he looked down at the beat-up brown leather duffel bag. “How’d you ever get that in this poor excuse for a trunk?”
“You’d be surprised just how much this trunk can hold.”
He nodded, grabbed the considerably heavy bag without even a huff of breath, then tossed it in the back of his truck. “Well, I guess that’s it then.”
“I guess so,” she said as she rounded the truck to get in. Once he was all settled behind the wheel, Summer stood at her open door, glaring at him. “Except the part you’re leaving out.”
He lifted his brow. “Excuse me?”