Rodeo Daddy. B.J. Daniels

Rodeo Daddy - B.J.  Daniels


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to drink the wine?” Sam cried.

      Jack swung his gaze to the bottle of wine, then at Chelsea. “Why not.”

      Now that Sam had removed her cowboy hat, Chelsea could see how much father and daughter resembled each other. There was no doubt that Jack was Sam’s father. How could a mother just dump her baby off and not look back?

      She reached for the glass of water Sam had gotten her, but instead Jack pushed a glass of wine into her hand.

      “Here, this might be more what you need.” He poured himself a glass as well and took a drink, his gaze studying her over the rim of the plastic tumbler.

      She took a sip, grateful, her eyes meeting his with a plea, one she doubted he would grant even if he could. There was an edge to him. A hard, finely honed anger tinged with bitterness. Was this about the check? she wondered. Or about her asking if he was a cattle rustler? It could be either, she realized.

      Or he could be guilty as hell, and all that anger and bitterness nothing more than a defense mechanism. Did it really matter?

      Yes. She still had to know. Their eyes met and she wondered if he could see what she was thinking.

      He raised his tumbler slightly in a mock toast.

      She gave him a tremulous smile, the motor home suddenly unbearably hot.

      “Tuna casserole, my favorite,” Sam said as she slid into the booth opposite Chelsea.

      Jack seemed to drag his gaze away. He turned it on the girl, appearing both annoyed and amused. “I thought you hated tuna casserole,” he said as he lifted the large, now unwrapped dish to the table.

      “I don’t know where you got that idea.” She gave Chelsea a look that said, “Men!” Then she narrowed her gaze. “So did you have an affair with my dad?”

      Chelsea choked on her wine. This kid was way too precocious.

      “Samantha!” Jack bellowed.

      “I was just asking,” Sam said.

      “Keep asking and you can go to bed without any supper,” he warned.

      Sam cocked a brow at him as if the threat amused her.

      Jack shook his head, looking tired and vulnerable. His gaze came up to meet Chelsea’s and she thought she saw almost a pleading in it, as if her coming here hurt him as much as it did her and he just wanted it to be over. She knew the feeling.

      “We should have music,” Sam said in a burst of energy, and slid out of the booth.

      * * *

      JACK DROPPED his head down, wanting to tell Sam he gave up. She’d made her point.

      A moment later, elevator-type music drifted from Sam’s boom box, confirming his suspicions. Terri Lyn had played romantic music at their dinner last night, making Sam roll her eyes whenever he looked at her.

      This was definitely payback. Either that or his daughter had been abducted by aliens and a girl from another planet left behind in her place.

      Sam shot him a grin as she slid back into the booth. “Nice, huh?”

      He drained his wineglass and refilled it with the wine Terri Lyn had so thoughtfully brought to go along with the casserole, the candles now flickering warmly on the table and a CD in Sam’s boom box.

      His daughter looked expectantly at him and he noticed the not-so-subtle way Sam had sat across from Chelsea in the middle of the booth. It appeared she wanted him to sit next to their guest. He smiled to himself as he refilled Chelsea’s glass with wine.

      Under other circumstances, he might have found some humor in Sam’s scheme to get rid of Terri Lyn.

      He glanced at Chelsea, his pulse taking off at a trot at the thought of sitting next to her in the intimate booth. Not a chance, Sam.

      “Dad?”

      He dragged his gaze away from Chelsea, but not before noticing how she’d changed over the last ten years. She’d matured in ways he had never imagined. She was more rounded. More beautiful, if that was possible.

      He felt a stirring within him and cursed the impact she had on him. Had always had on him. Except now he knew that it could only bring him heartbreak.

      “The casserole is getting cold,” Sam said pointedly.

      As if that would make any difference in the taste, he thought.

      The alien Sam was all smiles and almost ladylike. He tried to match her joviality as he slid her over in the booth none too gently. He wasn’t about to sit next to Chelsea, no matter how much Sam had hoped to manipulate him.

      His daughter’s smile faltered a little. His widened.

      “So how did you meet my dad?” Sam asked again, not to be dissuaded even if one part of her plan hadn’t worked.

      “We met on her father’s ranch,” Jack said, his jaw tightening. “I was their ranch hand.”

      He saw Chelsea’s eyes narrow. He reached for her plate. Chelsea wanted to have dinner with them—well, sometimes you got what you deserved, he thought as he slapped a large spoonful of Terri Lyn’s casserole down on it, then reached for his daughter’s plate.

      “Where was the ranch?” Sam asked, her gaze going from Chelsea to him and back again.

      “Near San Antonio,” Chelsea answered, her cheeks a little flushed.

      Jack found himself wondering why she’d really come here—not just to tell him she knew about the check or ask him if he was a cattle rustler. Surely she didn’t think there was anything left to say between them?

      “Do you know how to cook?” Sam asked Chelsea, as if she’d suddenly taken an interest in cooking.

      Chelsea seemed surprised by the question, but no more than Jack himself. What was this, twenty questions?

      He gave Sam an extra-large serving of the casserole before handing back her plate. That should keep her quiet.

      “Yes,” Chelsea said, smiling. “I enjoy cooking.”

      “What do you cook?” Sam asked, undeterred.

      “All sorts of things.” Chelsea seemed nervous. She was obviously not used to this sort of interrogation.

      Jack groaned inwardly and reached under the table to squeeze Sam’s knee in warning. Little good it did.

      “Do you have to use a cookbook?” Sam asked.

      He’d ground her for a month, he thought. Not that there was much to ground her from on the rodeo circuit. “Why don’t we just eat?” he interceded.

      “Terri Lyn uses a cookbook,” Sam said.

      Chelsea obviously didn’t know how to answer that one. “I don’t always use a cookbook.”

      He shoved his leg over to give Sam a nudge but his knee brushed Chelsea’s under the table instead. The shock was immediate. And intense. He felt as if he’d been goaded with a cattle prod.

      “Sorry.” He didn’t dare look at her, but he felt her stiffen in response and saw her pull her knees over toward the wall.

      This was going to be some dinner. Just wait until he got Sam alone. And once Chelsea tasted Terri Lyn’s tuna casserole, things were destined to get worse. “Sam.”

      He could tell his daughter wanted to ask a lot more questions, but she bowed her head and whipped quickly through the blessing first.

      “Amen. So what do you cook?” she asked the moment her head bobbed up.

      Chelsea laughed softly and seemed embarrassed.

      “She doesn’t have to cook,” Jack said, not looking at her. “Her family hires someone to cook for them.” He hadn’t meant to make it sound so much like


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