Cowboy Vet. Pamela Britton

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Cowboy Vet - Pamela Britton


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she’d told him she was about to rip her clothes off and dance naked, he couldn’t have been more surprised. “What?” he asked.

      Actually, he might like that….

      “I want to interview for your vet tech job,” she said, glancing at Frank again, the pink dress she wore gaping open as she leaned forward.

      “But you’re not qualified,” he protested. Good Lord, the thought of Jessie Monroe coming to work for him…

      “Actually,” she said, lifting her chin, “I am. I have a degree in animal science.”

      What? “How?”

      “Lots of late hours at the coffee shop while commuting to the Bay Area.”

      “Which college?”

      “Gavilan,” she said.

      Something in his eyes must have made her think he wasn’t impressed, because she added, “It’s one of the top junior colleges in the state.”

      “I know it is,” he said. It wasn’t the college she’d gone to, it was that she wanted to work as his veterinary assistant. Her. Jessie Monroe. Who as a wild-child teenager had let Tommy take the rap for her.

      Rand absolutely would not hire her.

      “Look, Jessie,” he said, “I’ve had hundreds of applicants—”

      “Qualified applicants?” she asked, having obviously overheard him talking to Pete.

      Rand tipped his head. “Some, yeah. My point being that there are people who’ve applied already, people I need to consider ahead of you.”

      “But I might be better qualified than them,” she said. Her eyes seemed to shimmer. “Something you won’t know unless you interview me.”

      “Nah. I’ve already looked over the applicants. A few of them have actual work experience, Jessie, not a bunch of college credits and a few lab classes under their belt.”

      “How do you know that’s all I’ve got?”

      “Educated guess.”

      She leaned toward him. “Sometimes the most highly educated individuals are incompetent.”

      “You got more than that?”

      “Actually, I do,” she said proudly. “I’ve been interning at a breeding farm in the Bay Area part-time.”

      “Then why don’t you go work for them?”

      “Because the commute is killing me.”

      He looked up at her. He didn’t really believe that excuse. “Then move to the Bay Area.”

      “I don’t want to move. I like this town.”

      “Jessie—”

      “You just don’t want to hire me,” she interrupted.

      “No. That’s not it—”

      “Bull,” she said, slipping out of the booth. “Your refusal to interview me has nothing to do with my qualifications and everything to do with your cousin.”

      “Well, yeah,” Rand said. “I’m not going to lie to you.”

      She stared, and he could have sworn he saw hurt in her eyes. “You still think those drugs were mine?”

      “With your reputation, why would I think that?”

      “Because people are innocent until proven guilty.”

      “There was nothing innocent about you.”

      “And Tommy Lockford, cousin to the great Rand Sheppard, was a saint.”

      “More of a saint than you were.” Rand took another sip of coffee, even though the topic of conversation all but turned his stomach.

      “So you think.”

      “So I know,” he said, throwing her words back in her face.

      She shook her head, her bangs falling in her eyes. She pushed them away impatiently. “Why did I think you might give me a shot?” she muttered under her breath. “You wouldn’t hire me if I held a degree in veterinary medicine from UC Davis.”

      All right. Time to cut to the chase. “You’re correct,” he admitted. “I wouldn’t.”

      She stiffened.

      “Order up!” Frank called.

      Jessie half turned toward her boss, then looked back again. “We’re not through with this conversation, Dr. Sheppard.”

      “Yes, we are,” he said in an equally stern tone. “You’re too late. I’ve already got someone in mind.”

      She flicked her hair over her ears, her face coloring in a way that told him she knew he was lying.

      “But if it looks like she’s not going to work out, I’ll let you know.”

      “No, you won’t,” she said, walking away.

      And he wouldn’t, Rand knew, because the idea of staring into those green eyes every day…well, it didn’t bear thinking about.

      When he paid his bill a short while later, he realized why he was so worked up.

      He didn’t want to hire Jessie because he had the hots for her.

      And that was God’s honest truth.

      Chapter Two

      He hated her.

      It was undisputable fact, Jessie thought as she finished her shift, Dr. Sheppard having long since hit the road.

      By the end of the week, Jessie wished she could give herself a frontal lobotomy. Every time she recalled their conversation she went from burning mad to horribly embarrassed. She couldn’t believe she’d asked him for a job.

      But no matter how humiliating, she didn’t regret it. She’d do anything to break into her chosen field.

      Which was probably why she found herself listening in on yet another conversation in the lineup at the espresso shop on her way to work.

      “Hear he’s had a devil of a time keeping up with all the work.”

      “That’s what happens when you’re the only large-animal vet in a town of two thousand.”

      “Yeah,” said the first guy.

      The sound of a coffee grinder filled the air; the chocolate smell of the beans made Jessie’s mouth water. If only Frank made coffee as good as this place. “I tried to get an appointment with him this morning but his receptionist said he was on his way into the clinic for an emergency surgery.”

      “Gonna have a hell of a time doing that without an assistant. Or did he find someone?”

      “Not as far as I know.”

      Surgery? Jessie thought, placing her order a moment later. If he was supposed to do surgery he would need help. Unless he sent the animal out to another clinic. But hauling a sick animal might put too much stress on it, which meant he’d have to—

      “You know what?” she said to the young woman making her drink, who raised her diamond-pierced eyebrow. “Scratch that order,” she said. “I’ll be back in a bit.”

      If the woman was mad at her for leaving, Jessie didn’t stick around to find out. She brushed by the people waiting in line and all but ran from the place.

      Outside felt more like late winter than May. Los Molinos’s downtown strip was empty except in front of the Elegant Bean, where all the action usually took place this time of morning. Jessie snuggled into her down jacket, the faux fur around the hood tickling her cheek. The car she drove, a Honda that had seen better


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