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Six Weeks To Catch A Cowboy
Six Weeks To Catch A Cowboy
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Six Weeks To Catch A Cowboy

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“Just over a year,” she said. “Katelyn used to live up here and work downstairs, but then she married the new sheriff and they bought a house over on Sagebrush. As soon as I heard she was moving out, I asked if she’d rent the place to me.”

“Katelyn...Gilmore?”

“It’s Davidson now,” she told him.

“I didn’t know she’d married the sheriff.” Then he frowned. “Or maybe I just don’t pay much attention when my mother starts gossiping about local events.” It was also possible that Margaret Channing hadn’t said anything, preferring to pretend that the entire Gilmore family didn’t exist.

“Not just married but a new mom now to the most adorable little girl,” Kenzie told him.

Though she hadn’t invited him to sit, he straddled a stool at the island and folded his arms on the counter. His stomach rumbled.

“You know, if you made sandwiches to go with that soup, you’d probably be able to feed two people,” he told her.

“Is that your way of inviting yourself to stay for dinner?”

“Soup’s not dinner,” he said again. “But if you added a sandwich...”

She shook her head, but the smile that tugged at her lips confirmed that she was warming up to his presence. “Grilled cheese, okay?”

He grinned. “Grilled cheese is the best kind of sandwich with soup.”

Kenzie turned the knob for another burner, set a frying pan on it, then retrieved the ingredients for the sandwiches.

“Can I help?” he offered, as she began to butter slices of bread.

She nodded to the pot on the stove. “Just keep an eye on the soup.”

He picked up the wooden spoon she’d set down, so that he was armed and ready.

“If you haven’t kept up with local events, how did you know that I was living here?” Kenzie asked him now.

“Your mother told me,” he admitted.

The knife she’d taken out of the block to slice the cheese slipped from her grasp and clattered against the counter. “When did you talk to my mother?”

“When I stopped by the house on Whitechurch Road earlier.”

“Well, that would explain the three voice-mail messages she left for me,” Kenzie noted, picking up the knife again.

“Three messages and you didn’t call her back?” he asked in feigned shock.

She shrugged and resumed slicing the cheese. “If it had been anything important, she would have said so.”

He mimed thrusting a dagger in his heart. “Ouch.”

She rolled her eyes.

“She was surprised to see me,” he confided. “And reluctant to let me know where I could find you.”

Butter sizzled as Kenzie set the sandwiches in the hot pan.

“She’s always been...protective of me,” she said.

“I knew that,” he acknowledged. “I just never knew that she disliked me so much. Which was a surprise, because most women usually find me charming. Even moms.”

“No doubt.”

“And I never did anything to earn her disapproval.” But they both knew that wasn’t exactly true, so he clarified, “At least not anything that she knows about.” He sent Kenzie a questioning glance. “Or does she?”

She dropped her gaze to the pan, as if turning the sandwiches required her complete focus. “There’s nothing for her to know.”

He nodded, relieved by her response. Glad to hear her confirm that what happened between them hadn’t been a big deal to her, either.

Glad...and a little bit skeptical.

But he didn’t express his doubt. He didn’t want to have the awkward conversation they probably should have had seven years earlier. And he especially didn’t want to dig up old feelings of guilt and regret—not hers or his own.

She reached into the cupboard over the sink for dishes, then pulled open a drawer for cutlery.

He rose from his seat at the island to help.

“I do appreciate this.” He slid the sandwiches out of the pan and onto the plates while she poured the soup into the bowls. “You feeding me, I mean.”

She smiled at that. “As if I had a choice.”

“You always have a choice,” he told her.

She sat down beside him. “So tell me why you showed up at my door instead of grabbing a bite with Gage or Brett or one of the other guys you used to hang out with,” she suggested.

“Truthfully—” he dipped his spoon into his bowl “—I didn’t keep in touch with anyone when I left Haven. Aside from you, I don’t have many friends remaining in this town.”

“I was your sister’s friend,” she said, as she tore off a piece of her sandwich and popped it into her mouth. “Not yours.”

“Maybe we weren’t friends,” he acknowledged. And then, because he apparently did want to have the awkward conversation they’d skipped seven years earlier, he added, “But we were almost lovers.”

She shook her head as she finished chewing. “A quick roll in the hay would not have made us lovers.”

He touched a hand to her arm. “I treated you badly that night, and I’m sorry.”

“It was a long time ago—and long forgotten,” she told him.

But he didn’t believe it.

Certainly he’d never forgotten.

“Then you’re not still mad at me—about what happened that night?” he prompted.

“Nothing happened,” she said again, tearing off another piece of her sandwich. “And I was never mad at you,” she confided. “I was mad at myself. And...embarrassed.”

“Why would you be embarrassed?” he wondered aloud.

She swirled her spoon in her soup. “Because I threw myself at you.”

Apparently they had different recollections of that night. Because while there was no denying that she’d made the first move, he’d made a lot more after that. “As you said, it was a long time ago and nothing happened.”

“Nothing of any significance,” she agreed. “But not for lack of trying on my part.”

It was true that she hadn’t been shy about what she wanted. And he’d been unexpectedly and shockingly aroused by the bold actions of a girl he’d previously dismissed as just another friend of his little sister.

“Back then, you and me—” He shook his head. “It would have been a mistake.”

She nodded. “I know.”

“But now...” He deliberately let the words trail off and dramatically waggled his eyebrows.

She smiled, seemingly appreciative of his effort to lighten the mood, but immediately shot him down. “Now it would be an even bigger mistake.”

She was probably right—for more reasons than even she knew—but he was curious about her rationale. “Why would you say that?”

“Because even if we weren’t friends before, I get the impression you showed up at my door because you need a friend now.”

“Or at least wanted to see a friendly face,” he acknowledged, as he shoved the last bite of sandwich into his mouth before turning his attention back to the soup.

“What was going on at your parents’ place tonight that you didn’t want to eat there?” she asked.

“Celeste had a thing this afternoon—a baby shower? Bridal shower? Some kind of shower, anyway. And I told her that I’d fend for myself so she didn’t have to rush back.”

“Fending for yourself meaning inviting yourself to share my dinner?” she queried dryly.

“I offered to take you out,” he reminded her. “You could have had a thick, juicy steak at Diggers’—or anything else on the menu.”

“Mmm... I do love their strip loin, but this is better,” she told him.

He spooned up the last of his soup which, along with the sandwich, had sated his gnawing hunger but was, by no stretch of the imagination, better than steak. “Why?”

“Because if we’d walked into Diggers’ together, the whole town would be buzzing about it before the meat hit the grill.”

“And that would bother you?”

“I don’t like being the subject of gossip and speculation,” she said.

“You’re not worried that people will remark on my truck being parked outside your apartment?”

“I wasn’t—” she frowned as she stacked the empty bowls and plates “—until just now.”

“I’m sure they have better things to talk about,” he said, attempting to reassure her.

“You’re the closest thing this town has to a celebrity,” she reminded him, as she transferred the dishes and cutlery to the dishwasher. “Everything you do and say is major news.”

“Then the gossips are going to throw a ticker tape parade when they find out about Dani.”

She sent him a quizzical look. “Who’s Dani?”

“My daughter.”

Chapter Four (#u4c669689-867b-56bf-8ded-97fa83c888af)

Kenzie stared at him, stunned. “You’re serious? You have a child?”

Spencer nodded. “A little girl.”

There were so many thoughts swirling through her mind, she didn’t know where to begin.

“How old is she?” she asked, latching onto the most obvious question first.

“Three. Well, almost four.”

“Are you...married?”

He shook his head. “No. Never. I mean, I would have married Emily, but she never told me that she was pregnant. In fact, it was only six weeks ago that I found out about Dani.”

“I can’t... I never...wow.”

“Yeah, that about sums up my reaction, too,” he admitted.

She took another minute to absorb the information he’d provided, but her brain was stuck on the fact that the wild child of the esteemed Channing family had a child of his own now. But maybe even more shocking was that the object of her adolescent adoration was sitting in her kitchen talking to her about it.

And while it had taken a concerted effort not to drool over his hotness as she sat beside him eating her dinner, this new information made her uneasy, because now she knew she hadn’t been ogling—surreptitiously, of course—the hottest guy in school but a little girl’s father.

Obviously her tired brain needed caffeine to process this.

She reached into the cupboard for a mug, then remembered the hot guy still in her kitchen. “Do you want coffee?”

“Sure,” Spencer said.

She grabbed a second mug, then popped a pod into the single-serve brewer. “Cream? Sugar?”

“Black’s good,” he said.

She handed him the first mug then brewed a second, to which she added a splash of milk.

“So.” She lifted her cup toward her lips, sipped. “An almost-four-year-old daughter.”

He nodded.

“And you only found out about her six weeks ago?”

He nodded again.