No more.
The moment she’d graduated college, she’d promised herself that her days of moving from place to place were officially over. She’d accepted the job at Western America, bought a house in Houston, and she’d been settled ever since. She’d made friends and built a life for herself. And while the actual day-to-day could be boring at times, she still preferred it hands down to the nomadic lifestyle she’d grown up with.
She wasn’t losing her job.
Fred wanted Pete’s signature on the multimillion-dollar endorsement package her company had offered, and Wendy was going to make it happen. Mr. Wild and Reckless had already given them a verbal agreement months ago, but it had been one mishap after the other when it came to getting him to actually sign. They’d overnighted the initial documents as was policy, but then he’d claimed his dog had chewed them up. He’d left set number two in a hotel room in Vegas. Number three had ended up at the bottom of a bull pen. Number four had disappeared in a truck stop somewhere between Nashville and New Mexico.
While Wendy had freaked over each “accident,” Pete had laughed them off as just another day in the life of PBR’s most notorious cowboy.
Don’t get your panties in a wad, darlin’. That’s what he’d told her on the phone in the deepest, sexiest drawl she’d ever heard. Just send out another set.
Not this time.
Numbers five and six—she’d brought an extra—were safe and sound in her briefcase and she wasn’t leaving until everything was signed.
Or else …
She fought down a wave of anxiety, popped an antacid from the roll in her pocket and steeled herself. Briefcase in hand, she made her way around the arena wall until she reached the cluster of bull pens. A security guard stopped her in her tracks, but she flashed a VIP pass at him and he waved her forward. She was just about to turn a corner and head for the excitement when she barreled into the hard wall of a very muscular chest.
Her head snapped up and she found herself staring at her worst marketing nightmare.
She’d seen plenty of pictures of Pete Gunner over the past few months: everything from professional publicity shots of him climbing into a saddle or dusting himself off after a grueling ride, to a papparazzi’s wet dream where he’d been table-dancing at Billy Bob’s honky-tonk or lapping at a watering trough after the PBR finals in Vegas.
But nothing in print could begin to compare with the man himself.
Several day’s growth of stubble shadowed his jaw and circled his sensuous mouth. Whiskey-colored hair framed his rugged face and brushed the collar of his white button-down shirt. Vivid blue eyes peered at her from beneath the brim of a beat-up Stetson.
“Don’t be in such a hurry, sugar.” He gave her his infamous grin, his lips crooked just a hint at the corner, and her heart did a double thump. “It’s always better if you take your time.”
Not that Wendy was the least bit attracted. She knew his type all too well. She’d grown up with such a man, and while she loved her dad, she wasn’t falling for a man just like him. She liked her men stable. Controlled. Reliable.
She drew a deep breath and ignored the fluttering in her chest.
“I—” The rest of her words stalled in a choked cough as the antacid took a nosedive down the wrong pipe.
His eyebrows drew together. “You okay, sugar?”
“I—” She swallowed. “I—I’m fine,” she finally managed to say.
He grinned and her heart started again. Her hands trembled and her tummy tingled.
Seriously?
He was just a man. Sure, he was sexier than most with his bad-boy drawl and seductive smile, but still … She wasn’t going to let that turn her to a pile of quivering Jell-O, even if she had been so busy with the new Outlaw line that she’d had zero time for a social life over the past six months. Her self-imposed celibacy was not going to jump up and bite her during the most important ten seconds of her career.
She stiffened and gathered her control. “You’re just the person I wanted to see. I need you to sign—”
“There’s plenty of signed photos at the press table,” he cut in. “You can take your pick.”
“No, no.” She shook her head. “I don’t want a signed picture.”
“A body signature?” His eyes darkened with a look of pure, raw passion and her mouth went dry again. “Above the waist or below?”
She licked her lips and tried to ignore the way his eyes followed the movement. “No, of course not. I’ve got these papers for you—”
“Pete!” The shout came from her right and she turned to find a burly cowboy motioning him forward. “Gid-dyup, dude. We’ve got to get the hell out of here!”
“I hate to cut this short, but I’ve got someplace I really need to be.” And just like that, he turned and walked away.
Wendy watched the push and pull of his Wranglers as he disappeared into the crowd. He really did have a great butt. She could totally see why every woman in the eighteen-to-forty-eight-year-old demographic was head over heels for him. The front view had been good, but the back was about the best she’d ever seen—
Hello?
He’s walking away, remember? Which is what you’ll be doing when Fred finds out that you let him slip through your fingers.
She bolted forward and raced after him as if her life depended on it.
It did.
Her job, her home, her stability meant everything to her and she wasn’t going to let some party-hearty cowboy screw it all up.
She was getting that signature, no matter what she had to do.
2
THERE WAS A NAKED WOMAN in his bed.
Pete Gunner came to that conclusion the moment he yanked aside the curtains leading to the rear of the sleek black tour bus.
The woman sat up. Dark brown hair spilled down around her shoulders. Excitement fired her gaze. The sheet fell to her waist. Yep, she was naked, all right.
As an eight-time PBR champion and the circuit’s reigning wild child, it was a scene he was all too familiar with. Buckle bunnies were par for the course. And bare-assed buckle bunnies? An added bonus.
If it had been any other night.
“It’s really you, isn’t it?” she murmured. “The Pete Gunner.”
“So they say.”
Her gaze narrowed for a split second. “You look different than you do in your poster.” She licked her full lips. “Better. Much better.”
He tipped his hat and gave her the famous Gunner Grin. “You’re not so bad yourself.” And then he did the one thing he would never have done if it had been any other night. He took a step forward and retrieved her tank top and jeans that were draped across a nearby chair. “As much as I’d like to take you up on the offer, I’m afraid now isn’t a good time.” He set her clothes on the edge of the bed. “Why don’t you get dressed and I’ll get my bus driver to fetch an autographed picture and a few rodeo passes for you?”
A pout tugged at her lush bottom lip. “But I’ve