A protective urge tugged at his heart, and he wondered why she’d been running down the tiny streets of Kane’s Crossing in a wedding dress. This was a quirky town but, come on.
He thought back to high school, to a girl who’d rarely attended classes because she’d been traveling the state for her beauty pageants. He’d always kind of had the hots for her, had always wondered if a beautiful goody-goody girl like Daisy Cox would even give him the time of day.
But he’d never found out. After graduation he’d run off to a faraway land and lost himself, leaving no room for idiotic fancies.
Daisy’s voice brought him back to the moment. “I remember you. Rick Shane, right?”
The fact that she recalled who he was sent a jolt of nostalgia, of lonely hunger through his veins. He ignored the emotion, half-nodding to acknowledge her words.
“Daisy Cox.” He drawled out her name, stretching it between them with the slow ease of a man slipping satin from a woman’s shoulders. He liked the sound of it, the impossibility of it.
Her blue eyes widened for the slightest second, then narrowed a bit. There. That was a little more familiar. She’d worn the same expression every time he’d leaned against the Spencer High lockers and ushered her down the hall with a suggestive grin. She’d been hard to get, the girl voted most likely to be too good for a guy like Rick Shane. It had fed his fantasies all the more.
But that was before his life had changed. Before he’d been forced into manhood in a little country on the other side of the world.
“Hey, Rick,” said his brother, Matthew. “We’re gonna have company in a few seconds. Maybe you could pretend that you’re having a conversation with something other than the counter.”
The hard edges of a comeback curse lined Rick’s mouth, but he held it back. Leave it to Matthew to act superior.
Rachel, his sister-in-law, smiled at him, cushioning his temper. He stood away from the wall and bent to whip Daisy’s dress out of sight. Then, as Daisy scooted over, he hunkered beneath the counter just as the doorbells tinkled.
Daisy gasped, probably from nerves. She shifted next to him, gathering her gown around her body as his arm pressed into hers. The contact felt nice, warm, soft, just like her spring-meadow perfume. Rick’s body heated just by breathing her in.
Mrs. Spindlebund’s voice creaked over the music. Rick could picture the elderly toothpick woman with her salt-and-pepper bunned hair and permanent sneer as she said, “Good afternoon,” to the party.
Everyone murmured a return greeting. Daisy tilted her head, and a ringlet brushed Rick’s cheek. He couldn’t help thinking of the last time he’d felt a woman this close, breathing next to him, her hair tickling his skin. A twinge of longing shook him to the core, awakening a sleeping agony.
Mrs. Spindlebund continued. “I know you people are busy with important events—” there went that sneer during the word important “—but have you seen Daisy Cox?”
Rick could imagine his friends and relatives shrugging and tightening their smiles.
“Well—” Mrs. Spindlebund was, by now, probably fixing a glare on all present “—she couldn’t have disappeared.”
Rachel, who’d endured run-ins with the elderly gossip goddess in the past, had evidently come to the end of her rope. “Mrs. Spindlebund, we’ve been celebrating my daughter’s birthday. Daisy Cox would have no interest in this party.”
“Very well,” Rick heard Mrs. Spindlebund say. He could almost see the suspicion in her slitted eyes. “And, Rachel Shane, don’t think for one minute that Mr. Tarkin didn’t notice your absence from his wedding today. He’s your horse-farm partner, after all.”
Nick Cassidy didn’t think much of nosy news hens, either. He asked, “Can you blame a family for choosing their own kin over business, Mrs. Spindlebund?”
The bells on the door sang out. The elderly woman must’ve opened it, preparing to leave. Daisy relaxed against Rick, and he fought the urge to slip an arm around her, reassuring her with his touch.
Cut it out, he told himself. You promised you’d never get close to anyone again.
You can’t afford to let down another woman.
As usual, Mrs. Spindlebund had the last word. “You people think you’re above the rest of us. What you did to the Spencers was unconscionable. You won’t treat Mr. Tarkin the same way.”
Ashlyn Reno, a Spencer daughter who’d been disowned when her lawbreaking parents had left town, raised her own frosty voice. “Don’t let the door hit your bony bustle on the way out, Mrs. Spindlebund.”
After an emphatic “hmph,” the door clanged shut, leaving the faint aftermath of bells and the silence of an ended song.
Sheriff Reno’s voice filled the emptiness. “From my window view, it looks like the wedding guests are searching every building.” He paused. “Ms. Cox, you’re a wanted woman.”
Rick glanced at her, watching as her face took on a sundown-hued blush. Long ago, he had loved to get her flustered, loved to see her flush and tilt up her chin after snubbing him.
But now, her reddened skin was more than a sign of agitation. It was the prelude to tears.
As one rolled down her cheek, Rick forgot himself. He thumbed away a wet globule from her skin and asked, “What the hell do you think you’re doing?”
Daisy pulled back from his touch, burned by it, stunned by it. “I’m not going to marry Peter.”
He must have sensed her discomfort, because he stood, casting a long shadow over her body, making her feel insignificant and petty.
When she’d first rushed into the bakery, she hadn’t gotten a good look at him. She’d merely felt a presence in the corner—a tall, black shape that had lingered in her mind even while she hid from her problems. Now, as Rick Shane held out his hand for her to stand, she couldn’t help remembering the high-school version of him: cocky, stand-offish, interesting in a cool, mysterious way.
For most of Daisy’s life, she’d been a good girl. For most of it. But when Rick Shane used to lean against the hallway walls, a mischievous invitation in his eyes and a slow grin on his lips as he watched her walk by, she couldn’t help wondering what it’d be like to be a bad girl, just once. Or maybe twice.
But Coral would’ve killed her. Her sister needed Daisy to remain a pristine beauty queen, competing in her contests and bringing home enough money to support them. Their parents had died in a train accident when Daisy was three years old, leaving her, the “surprise, late-in-life baby,” without any close relatives to raise her. Twenty-year-old Coral had stepped in, working hard to keep their little family afloat. She’d even sacrificed her law-school scholarship to provide her younger sister with a home. Daisy couldn’t forget that.
Even if it meant marrying Peter Tarkin to pay off the money Coral had borrowed from him. The loan that had helped them survive for years.
Daisy glanced at Rick once more. He was a man now, his sable hair brushing the collar of his long-sleeved shirt, his dark jeans traveling the length of his legs down to his boots. He was a walking shadow, a black cloud hiding thunder and a more explosive brand of mystery. Even his near-midnight eyes held shades of a wounded soul.
In high school, those eyes had been quick to laugh—at least, with everyone else but her. He’d always seemed to have a wink and a grin for the other kids back in those days.
The memory saddened Daisy, made her wonder why his smile wasn’t as flippant, why the lines around his mouth seemed more like lost highways than rays of sunshine.
Obviously, he’d sensed her perusal. His jaw clenched, his mouth firmed out, his open palm dropped. It was as if an invisible wall had fallen around him.
On a whim, Daisy stretched