Big Sky Country. Linda Miller Lael

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Big Sky Country - Linda Miller Lael


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occurred to her to wonder who lived there now that there was a house of sorts.

      The sight of Slade Barlow standing on the little patio brought her up short.

      So did the silent static immediately arcing between him and Hutch.

      Jasper sat next to Slade, a little behind him, panting from the heat and recent exertion, calmly watchful.

      “I thought this dog looked familiar,” Slade said quietly, his arms folded as he regarded his father’s son. Everyone knew that Slade and Hutch were half brothers, but it was a subject people whispered about—no one discussed it openly, as far as Joslyn knew.

      “I’m here to take Jasper home,” Hutch replied. Every muscle in his back and shoulders seemed tight, from Joslyn’s perspective. He dropped his gaze to the dog, gave a low whistle. “Come on, fella.” He beckoned. “Let’s get going.”

      Jasper thumped his tail against the ground a couple of times, but he didn’t move from Slade’s side.

      “I’m not sure he’s ready to leave quite yet,” Slade observed. His gaze moved to Joslyn, and he gave a slight nod to acknowledge her presence, his mouth quirking up ever so slightly at one corner, as though something about her amused him.

      That got under her skin.

      “He belonged to Hutch’s father,” she said helpfully, and immediately wished she’d kept her mouth shut. There was a lot going on here, and it wasn’t entirely about the wall-leaping stray.

      “I remember seeing him riding shotgun in Carmody’s truck,” Slade allowed.

      Jasper still didn’t move. Neither did Hutch.

      Slade made a clicking sound and started in Hutch’s direction, clearly hoping the dog would follow. Jasper stayed put.

      Short of picking the animal up bodily and lugging him back through the gate to his pickup, Hutch seemed to be out of options.

      “I’ll be damned,” he muttered.

      Slade shrugged one powerful shoulder, and Joslyn found herself wondering, incomprehensibly, what he’d look like without a shirt.

      To break the spell, she leaned down and patted her palms against her blue-jeaned thighs, summoning Jasper.

      “Time to go home,” she cajoled cheerfully.

      Jasper merely gazed at her, switched his tail again, just once, and held his ground.

      “Suppose I bring Jasper out to the ranch later on,” Slade suggested easily. It was obvious that he was enjoying this little standoff, and that annoyed Joslyn—not that he would have cared whether she was annoyed or not. He was looking directly at Hutch, not at her; she might have been transparent. “I’d like to take a look around anyhow.”

      Beside Joslyn, Hutch stiffened slightly. “That figures,” he said, and though he spoke mildly, the remark had a sharp point to it.

      Slade didn’t flinch. If anything, he seemed intrigued by the situation, charged though it was.

      The scene reminded Joslyn of the famous gunfight at the OK Corral down in Tombstone. Except that nobody was armed.

      Thank heaven.

      “I’ll bring the dog out to Whisper Creek in a little while,” Slade reiterated.

      Hutch didn’t reply. He just nodded once, abruptly, and turned and headed toward the gate in the ugly wall. Maybe he hoped Jasper would follow, but that didn’t happen.

      Jasper had evidently made up his mind to stay.

      Joslyn looked in Hutch’s direction, then back at Slade.

      Hutch might have gone, but the strange charge lingered in the air, a silent rumble like the prelude to a summer thunderstorm.

      Slade lifted his eyes to the mansion behind Joslyn, and something flickered in their too-blue depths. “Are we neighbors?” he asked, his tone idle.

      Joslyn felt her cheeks turn warm. “It would seem so,” she said. “I’m renting Kendra’s guesthouse.”

      “Ah,” Slade said, as though her response explained a lot. Global warming, say, and strife in North Africa.

      She didn’t want to leave without the dog. It was the principle of the thing. So she tried one more time.

      “Jasper?” she said, with just the faintest note of pleading in her voice.

      Jasper cocked his head to one side, looking apologetic but remaining where he was. It was almost as though the dog had been searching high and low for none other than Slade Barlow and, now that he’d found him, it was trail’s end.

      He was home free.

      Wondering why she felt so rattled—there was a thrumming inside her that was both unnerving and singularly pleasant—Joslyn offered Slade a faltering smile. “Well, I have company, so I guess I’ll go....”

      “See you,” Slade said.

      She turned and hurried through the gate, leaving it open just in case Jasper changed his mind.

      Fat chance of that happening.

      Doubling back through the flower beds and the rose garden, Joslyn saw that Kendra was just pulling up in her sporty blue convertible, a shiny BMW. Hutch, probably exasperated over being rejected by his father’s dog, especially in favor of Slade Barlow, stood near his truck.

      Kendra got out of the BMW, hauling her gigantic purse with her.

      Wine bottles clinked together inside.

      “Hello, Hutch,” she said, sounding shy.

      Hutch’s tension eased visibly as he looked at Kendra. “Hey,” he said.

      There it was again, Joslyn thought. That weird zip in the air.

      She felt superfluous standing there, even intrusive.

      “Hutch just stopped by to pick up Jasper,” she explained to Kendra, who hadn’t asked. Hadn’t even looked away from Hutch, as it happened.

      “I thought dogs were supposed to be loyal,” he said musingly with a little shake of his head. “I’ve been trying to track Jasper down ever since he ran off, the day Dad died.”

      Kendra was clearly puzzled, and a faint flush of apricot pulsed under her perfectly sculpted cheekbones. Her smile wobbled a little on her mouth and she cast a frantic say-something glance in Joslyn’s direction.

      “Why don’t you join us for supper?” she asked Hutch.

      Kendra’s color deepened to pink.

      Uh-oh, Joslyn thought. Wrong “something.”

      “Can’t,” Hutch said, almost too quickly. “I’ve got horses to feed.”

      Curiouser and curiouser, Joslyn reflected. “Another time, then,” she said.

      “Another time,” Hutch agreed. Then, with a nod of farewell and one more glance toward the still-open gate leading to Slade’s backyard, he sighed and got into his truck. He started the engine, rolled down his window and smiled at Joslyn, though his eyes were sad. “Thanks for looking after Jasper,” he said.

      “No problem,” Joslyn answered.

      With that, he was leaving, backing up, turning around, heading down the long, glistening driveway.

      “What’s going on between you two?” Joslyn immediately asked, turning to her friend.

      Kendra’s blush had subsided by then. She followed Hutch’s rapidly disappearing truck with her eyes, looking every bit as sad as he had moments before.

      “Nothing,” she said unconvincingly.

      “Let’s open the wine,” Joslyn said, resigned.

      Kendra nodded,


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