Except in the kitchen. Which was an entirely different matter.
She curled onto her side, and Mittens found a nest on top of the sheets behind her crooked knees. She heard little licking sounds as the kitten bathed herself, and finally, silence.
At last Allie’s eyelids grew heavy and she slept, only to be rudely awakened by an irritating rapping on her door. Mittens flew off the bed as though she had been launched.
“What!” Allie exclaimed.
“Rise and shine, sleepyhead. It’s past time to be up and at ’em.”
Blurry-eyed, she peered out the window. “The sun is barely up.” She never rose at this hour. The servants did, of course, to prepare her morning meal, but she had no intention of—
“Come on, get yourself some breakfast and let’s get going if you want to do some shopping in Bridle,” Cord said.
Shopping. Now that was a task for which she had a great deal of experience.
She hopped out of bed, grabbed her wrapper and opened the door a crack. “Would you mind bringing me a cup of coffee to sip while I prepare myself for shopping?”
Looking mystified by her request, he leaned a hand on the doorjamb. “Maybe I better clear up something here. In this country, the housekeeper fixes coffee and brings a mug to the boss, not the other way around.”
“Oh. Well, if such a simple request is too difficult for you to perform, then I shall get my own coffee.” Pulling her wrapper modestly around her, she flounced past him. Surely he didn’t expect her to do any work before she had consumed her first cup of coffee.
Cord’s jaw went slack, while other parts of his anatomy got an early wake-up call. Sleepy eyed and wearing her hair in a thick braid that hung halfway down her back, Leila was resplendent in an ornate, royal-blue silk gown embroidered in gold and red swirls. Barefooted, so he could see her delicate ankles and arched insteps, she padded from her doorway across the width of the kitchen floor to the coffeepot and poured herself a cup.
Cord didn’t know quite what he wanted to do first—slip off Leila’s gown and take her back to her bed, where he could explore her slender body, starting with her sexy, shocking-red toenails, or read her the riot act for not behaving like any servant he’d ever met.
Before he could decide, the kitten pounced on his leg, burying her claws in his calf. “Hey, cut that out!”
Coffee mug in hand, Leila sailed by him, snatching the kitten from his leg. “Please do not speak so curtly to Mittens. You will hurt her feelings.” Stepping into her room, she closed the door behind her.
Cord opted not to bang his head against the thick adobe wall. It wouldn’t do any good. And he sure as hell was likely to hurt himself—or the wall.
But maybe he could bribe Sheikh Rafe with a couple hundred acres of Texas grassland to take Leila back.
The woman acted nothing like the meek servant who had gotten into his truck yesterday at the Desert Rose with the sheikh watching her. The moment they’d been out of sight of the Coleman’s place, her subservient mask had slipped.
It made him wonder what game she was playing—and if he was the one being taken for a ride.
THE TOWN OF BRIDLE was little larger than a village in Munir, although Allie conceded the surrounding farmland was more lush and interesting than the date trees and oil derricks of her desert country. While seeking to purchase stock from the Desert Rose, her brother had insisted they stay as close to the horse ranch as they could. The accommodations they found at the Bridle Motel had been barely adequate for their needs.
Allie wondered if the shopping facilities, which she had not had an opportunity to visit, would be any better. Given the small size of the town and the cracked sidewalks, she would have preferred to shop in Austin. Or better yet, in Dallas.
Still, Bridle was quaintly American and right out of the Old West as she’d seen it on television.
Driving with his elbow on the truck’s windowsill, Cord asked, “What do you want to do first? Get the forms at the post office or go shopping?”
She smiled at him. “Shopping is always a priority with me.”
“Somehow I thought that might be true.” He angled the pickup into a spot in front of a Western clothing store. “What kind of duds are you looking to buy?”
“Duds?”
“Clothes. Not ball gowns, I trust.”
“Oh, no, I wish to wear clothes like those your sister wears. American jeans. A cowboy hat. Boots. That is what women wear here.” Even out in public, she thought in amazement. Although some of her countrywomen wore such things in the privacy of their own homes, she had never had that luxury. She had her position to think of, an image to maintain even among the servants. But now she was free to choose clothes on her own. Temporarily.
“So you’re going whole-hog Western style, huh?”
“Have you heard the expression, when in Rome—”
“I have.”
“Then surely it applies in the same way when in Texas.”
“I believe it does, Leila.” His amused smile sent her heart fluttering. “I believe it does.”
Once inside the store, Cord hung back while Leila circled the merchandise like a pack of coyotes picking out a weak heifer to attack. She fingered jeans and shirts, tried on hats, examined leather boots, looking as though at any moment she was going to close in for the kill.
Sherianne Wilcox, a teenager from one of the nearby farms who worked part-time at the store, walked over to Cord.
“Can I help you find something, Mr. Brannigan?”
“Nope. I’m just waiting for the young lady to make up her mind.”
The teenager glanced toward Leila. “She’s real pretty.”
“That she is.” Leila had whipped her long hair into a knot that rested at her nape, a target a man would aim for with a kiss. And then he’d untie that knot, letting her hair stream through his fingers.
“Is she your girlfriend?”
He jolted at Sherianne’s question, yanking his attention back to the youngster. “Nope. Housekeeper.”
The girl’s eyes widened in surprise, her smile revealing a shiny set of braces. “Well, she’s sure lots purdier than Maria is.”
Despite the air-conditioning, heat raced up Cord’s neck. “I’ll just go see how she’s coming along.”
He jammed his hands in his pockets and strolled to the back of the store. By now, Leila had gathered an armload of clothes and had a totally impractical white Stetson perched on her head.
“You about done here?” he asked.
“I need to try these on to see if they fit. Then I will be ready to go with you.”
“Okay, but I’ve got to get back to the ranch sometime this year. Can you move it along a little faster?”
She did that funny toss of her head thing, suggesting she’d do as she pleased, then vanished into a dressing room.
Little wonder men didn’t like to go shopping with women. When he needed a pair of jeans, he came into the store, picked out a pair of 32-34s, paid for ’em and was done with it. Leila was making a damn career out of this shopping trip.
He checked his watch, then paced around the store. Obviously her view of shopping—and his view of work—were in direct conflict.
“What