No need to check for anyone stranded inside the vehicle. Still, habits died hard. He slowed for a look as he drove past. Around here, with towns few and far apart and where the sun parched everything it touched, folks kept an eye out for others.
Just as he watched over Dana.
“I’m surprised you didn’t notice it before tonight,” he added. “You’re on the road often enough.”
“Not lately.” She sounded irritated.
“In fact, that could’ve easily been your van broken down back there. And what would you have done by yourself?”
“Called for a tow truck, of course. Besides, when I leave town, I’m usually not alone. I have clients with me.”
She shifted in the passenger seat.
She hadn’t said much so far on their way home. He’d even caught her with her eyes closed a few times. No surprise, considering the clock read ten past midnight.
Cinderella hadn’t made it home on time.
Between her last-minute duties at the banquet hall and the long ride back to town, they’d only come to the outskirts of Flagman’s Folly now.
“Sleep well?” he asked, smiling.
“Just resting my eyes.”
In the dim light from the dashboard, he could see the line of her cheekbones. Again, he noted the weight she’d lost. Still, she looked beautiful. But tired. “With all the kids away, maybe you can get some extra rest in the morning.”
“Not a chance. I’m picking up P.J. and Stacey at seven.”
“So early?”
She laughed softly. “I wouldn’t inflict P.J. on Anne and her mother any longer than that.”
It had been a while since he’d seen the kids. Once, he’d had the run of Paul’s house. He swallowed the bitter thought and kept his eyes on the road. “He’s still a chatterbox, huh?”
“Always been a chatterbox,” she corrected.
“He takes after his mama.”
“He does not.”
His laugh sounded much more loud than hers had. “Now, don’t try pulling that one on me. I grew up with you, remember?”
“How could I forget?”
She didn’t sound happy about it. “Was it that bad?”
“Don’t be silly.” She sighed. “I didn’t mean that. I was just thinking in general about growing up here.”
“The best place in the world,” he said.
“Mmm.”
“What? You don’t agree?”
“Of course, I do. It’s just...you know how people are here. They don’t forget a thing, either.”
“Works for me. It’s nice to have folks around who know all about you.” Nice, except for their long list of expectations. He stayed quiet for a while, listening to the tires whip the road. “Well,” he said, finally, “I’d hate to live in a town where nobody knew his neighbor. Wouldn’t you?”
She didn’t answer. He smiled. She’d gone back to resting her eyes again. Her lashes left shadows on her cheeks. Her lips had softened. He wanted a taste. When he’d held her in his arms tonight, he’d had to fight like hell to keep from pulling her closer and kissing her.
Before they’d left the banquet hall, he’d thought about polishing off a whole bottle of champagne. He hadn’t had but two glasses, hours before. Maybe some extra would have given him justification for what he wanted to do now. To step outside everyone’s expectations. Especially hers.
He’d rejected the idea of more champagne, though. He’d never been much of a drinking man, and he wouldn’t use liquor as an excuse for his behavior.
Besides, he didn’t need alcohol to explain why he felt the way he did about Dana.
Glancing across the space between them again, he noted the way the pink lace of her dress lay across her shoulders. Then he forced his gaze to the road, where it belonged.
He had no right to look at her as she slept, unaware and vulnerable. No right to look at her at all. He was obligated to watch over her, to take care of her, as he’d promised his best friend he would do.
She’d made that damned hard for him.
He thought back to the day Paul had stopped by the ranch house on his last leave. The day Paul had asked him to watch over his family. Stunned by the request, Ben still had his wits about him enough to agree in an instant.
Paul and Dana and their kids were as close as family to him. He loved Lissa and P.J.—Paul Junior—as much as he loved his niece. He felt the same now about Stacey. Of course he would watch over them. All of them.
He had to keep that promise. Had to make sure he stayed close to Dana and the kids.
Staring at her with lust in his eyes probably wasn’t the best way to get her to go along with that.
She woke up again just as they reached Signal Street, the town’s main thoroughfare. He managed to smile at her briefly without making eye contact.
A few minutes later, after he’d turned onto her street and pulled into her driveway, he found himself grasping the steering wheel, as if his tight grip could rein him in, too. “Here we are,” he said inanely, his voice croaking.
When he rounded the truck and opened the passenger door, she gathered her dress in both hands. Balanced on the edge of her seat, she hesitated.
The light from the streetlamp a few feet away turned her face pale as whipped cream and her hair buttery gold. Her eyes sparkled. He stood, one hand palm up, heart thumping out of rhythm, the way he’d waited after he had invited her to dance.
Finally, she reached out to him. Though he’d had the heater on low for the ride home, her fingers felt cool. Automatically, he sandwiched her hand between his. “You should have said something,” he reproached her. “I’d have cranked up the heat.”
“It’s okay.” She slipped free and walked toward the house.
For a long moment, he watched the pink-skirted sway of her hips. Then he came to his senses. As she unlocked the front door, he caught up to stand beside her.
“Coffee?” she murmured.
Not such a good idea. He forced a laugh. “You’re not awake enough to make coffee.”
“Of course I am,” she shot back.
He’d said just the wrong thing. Or had he? Had his subconscious picked just the right words to guarantee she would argue the point?
She frowned and pushed the door open. “It will take more than the ride home to settle me down after all the excitement today. And it’s the least I can offer to say thank you.”
You could offer me something else.
Fingers now curled tight around a nonexistent steering wheel, he followed her into the house and the living room he’d once known so well.
“Have a seat,” she said. “I’ll be back soon.”
Obediently, he dropped onto her couch and sat back as if he didn’t have a care in the world.
Yeah. Sure. At least he’d gotten the obedient part right. No one in town would have cause to argue with him about that. Not even Dana.
He knew what folks thought of him—he’d lived with the knowledge his entire life. Good old Ben Sawyer.