Maverick Christmas. Joanna Wayne
hands aren’t all that busy in the winter. He could probably spare a couple of them for a day or two.”
“That would be great.” Chrysie looked up from the floor and stared at the dingy walls. “A yellow would really brighten up the house, maybe the color of daffodils.”
“Walls like a spring daffodil?” Evelyn looked around as if seeing the house for the first time. “I was thinking white, but yellow might be nice. Come to think of it, my kitchen could use some brightening, too.”
Evelyn stayed a few more minutes, then walked over to the door to let herself out. “You sure have yourself locked in here.”
“I like to feel safe, especially for the girls.”
“There’s no trouble here on the ranch. Buck wouldn’t have it. Someone come messing around here, he’d shoot them full of lead. Nobody messes with anything on Buck’s property.”
“That’s good to know.” But the locks would stay.
“Give some thought to what I said about the sheriff, Chrysie. He’s a good man. Nice-looking, too. All the young, single women in town are after him all the time—not that there are that many young, single women around.”
“I’ll give it some thought.”
After Evelyn left, Chrysie finished the floor, then dumped the dirty water outside. She stood for a minute, letting the frigid air fill her lungs while she took in the magnificent mountain view.
This place was so perfect. Clean air. A decent house for practically no rent. A small, friendly community that had accepted them with a minimum of questions. She just had to make sure it stayed that way.
Which meant she needed Sheriff Josh McCain to forget she existed.
A good catch, maybe. But not for a fugitive from justice.
Chapter Two
The snow had been no more than occasional flurries for most of the day, but it began to fall harder just as Josh turned onto the road to Buck Miller’s house. Before he’d come to Montana, he’d thought of snow only in terms of powder quality for skiing. Now it was a way of life.
The frigid temperatures had been a rough adjustment to a Louisiana man’s system that first winter. Physical labor had been a new experience, as well. But poverty had been the real shocker. He’d never realized how important money was until he didn’t have any.
Buck had given him his first real job. The old rancher and the rest of the hands figured out pretty quickly what a greenhorn Josh was. He got all the dirty work that first year, had gone to bed with aching muscles and new calluses on top of old. But the work had accomplished what years of spending his father’s money and playing with the druggies on the streets of the Big Easy couldn’t—it had made him a man.
No one had asked Josh why he’d moved to Montana. They judged him by the job he did and his willingness to help out where needed. It was the way of life up here and the reason Josh had stayed.
He should give Chrysie Atwater the benefit of that same philosophy, but he was having trouble doing that, especially after talking to Evelyn and Mrs. Larkey about her.
He never underestimated a woman’s ability to do most things a man could do. Some of the biggest spreads in the state were owned and run by women. But Chrysie wasn’t Montana-bred. She was a single mother from the South who’d moved to a small town pretty much in the middle of nowhere where she had no job, no friends and no family. It just didn’t add up, and things that didn’t add up always made Josh suspicious.
But unlike everyone else who’d tried lately, she seemed quite capable of managing his sons. He’d checked on them several times this afternoon, and their complaints had assured him they were being well cared for.
Danny had said Mrs. Atwater was bossy and made him practice his reading. And Davy had whined that she made him wear his snow pants when he went outside to play and gave him fruit for his afternoon snack instead of the candy and soda he’d wanted.
Even more impressive, Chrysie had sounded calm on the telephone when he’d asked her about the boys. That in itself put her in a whole new class as far as his experience with sitters was concerned.
Not that the sexy Mrs. Atwater was perfect. Last night’s tree-falling incident had proved that the woman was wound a tad too tightly for Josh’s liking. But what the hell. Josh was desperate for someone to watch the boys on a daily basis, and she might be the ideal solution.
That is, if she checked out. Before he could ascertain that, he’d need to find out exactly what had brought her to Aohkii, Montana.
THE AFTERNOON HAD been every bit as stressful as Chrysie had expected. The boys were incorrigible, constantly pushing the limits. It was clear they’d never been disciplined appropriately. She’d love to point out to Josh McCain all the ways he was failing his sons, but she didn’t dare. The less interaction she had with the sheriff, the better.
She glanced at the clock above the kitchen counter. Six-thirty, and he wasn’t back yet. For the minute, both Davy and Danny were under control, wolfing down sloppy joes as though they hadn’t eaten in weeks. Jenny and Mandy were taking their usual small bites and dawdling between each mouthful.
“Can I have more?” Danny asked.
“You surely can.”
“Me, too,” Davy said, shoving the rest of his food into his mouth. “Daddy’s sloppy joes aren’t this good.”
“Sloppy joes, floppy joes, up your nose,” Danny said as she refilled his plate.
Mandy giggled as if he’d said something remarkably witty. Jenny ignored him. At five, she was not nearly as impressed with the boys’ antics as her three-year-old sister.
“Davy kicked me under the table,” Jenny complained.
“Did not.”
“Did so.”
“I was just swinging my foot and your leg got in the way.”
“Stop swinging your foot at the table,” Chrysie ordered.
“My dad lets me.”
“I’m not your dad,” she said, glancing out the window as she heard an approaching vehicle. She all but shouted her relief when she saw it was the sheriff’s black pickup truck.
A minute later Chrysie opened the back door, and both boys jumped from their chairs as if shot from cannons and raced to smother their father in hugs. She wasn’t sure if that was their usual greeting or if they were just thrilled to be rescued from her.
The sheriff removed his black Stetson and raked his fingers through his thick, dark hair, smoothing the strands the hat had mussed. “Something smells good.”
“Yeah, Mrs. Atwater made sloppy joes. And they’re really good. She doesn’t put those yucky onions in them like you do, Daddy.”
“Guess I’ll have to get her recipe.”
Davy climbed back in his chair. “Can my daddy have some, too?”
“If he’d like. There’s plenty,” Chrysie said. She didn’t consider that much of an invitation, but apparently it was all the sheriff needed. He shrugged out of his parka and hung it on one of the coat hooks near the door.
He was not the kind of man a woman could just ignore, she admitted as she felt his dark, piercing gaze follow her as she grabbed an extra plate from the cupboard.
He took the only available spot—the chair at the end of the table opposite hers. She filled the plate and set it in front of him. “You can have water, milk or coffee,” she said. “I’m afraid that’s all I can offer.”
“Milk sounds good.”
She poured him a glass, then joined them at the table, though her appetite had vanished. Apprehension did that