Christmas Countdown. Jan Hambright

Christmas Countdown - Jan Hambright


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about prints?”

      “None that my technician could find. I wish I had better news, but I don’t. My best advice is to stay vigilant. I’m going to send a patrol car by a couple times a night, starting tonight. Maybe they’ll get lucky and catch the culprit.”

      Mac pulled on his rubber gloves and spread out the cloth with his hands.

      “Thanks, Sheriff.”

      “No problem.” He slipped on his shades and left the barn.

      “Maybe we should get a truckload of motion-sensor lights. Blaze the place out like a Christmas tree if anyone comes near the barn.” She arched her eyebrows a couple of times and grinned.

      “That’s not a bad idea.” Mac poured a cup of the poultice on the steaming cheesecloth and smeared it around. “One at the outside front entrance and one at the back would do the trick. I’d also like to put an electronic lock on the stall gate.”

      “You’re serious?”

      “Yeah.” He stared at her, hoping some of the concern he felt rubbed off on her. This was war, and it could get more intense as the key races got closer. “This person is going to get desperate. The more times we turn back their attacks, the more intense those attacks could become.”

      “You’re scaring me.”

      “You should be scared, that’s what’s going to keep you and your horse safe.”

      He folded the cloth over and she picked it up, moving back into the stall where she applied it to her horse.

      “I’ll call the hardware store and have them send over the lights tomorrow. And a locksmith to install a lock on the stall door. You can put the lights up, can’t you?”

      “Yeah.” Mac let out a breath and pulled off the gloves.

      Any deterrent would help. In fact maybe they should consider rigging the whole damn stable.

      “It’s cooled off. Let’s see if it worked.” Excitement stirred in Emma’s veins, encouraged by the fact that the swelling was completely gone from Navigator’s shoulder. Her racing dreams were alive, well and pinned on the next few moments.

      Mac snagged the lead rope and held it out to her.

      “You do it,” she said. “You’re the one keeping my hopes off of life support.”

      His expression was serious as he clipped the shank on the halter ring and led Navigator out of his stall.

      Emma stood next to the gate and held her breath, watching the Thoroughbred move around in a circle beside Mac. His stride was smooth, easy and uninhibited by pain or stiffness.

      Relief washed over her. “He’s going to be okay! You did it.” She rushed Mac and threw her arms around his neck before she’d even thought out the target of her elation.

      His chest was a collection of rock-hard muscles, his arms gentle as he encircled her, lifted her up off the floor and put her back down.

      Their gazes locked and his slipped to her lips.

      She wet them with her tongue and knew she was in trouble.

      Navigator shuffled backward, his ears pitched forward.

      Lowering his mouth to hers, Mac hesitated six inches from her lips.

      Frustrated, Emma made up the distance and pushed up onto her tiptoes.

      Contact. Searing, mind-blowing contact fused them together for an instant before Emma pushed back and struggled to catch her breath. She tried to make sense of her body’s overwhelming response to kissing Mac Titus, but she couldn’t.

      Mac stepped away, pulling Navigator with him as he headed for the barn door. What the hell had just happened? More to the point, why had he let it happen? With every passing minute at Firehill he was being sucked in. And kissing Emma … well, that had been a mistake, he decided, realizing his entire body wanted in on the action and ached for more.

      He led Navigator to the hot-walker and clipped him on, then went back to the gate post where he switched the contraption on and climbed up on the fence to watch—get his lust under control, was more like it. He wasn’t surprised when she leaned on the top rail of the fence next to him a moment later.

      “He looks great, Mac. Thank you.”

      “You’re welcome. We need to rub liniment into his shoulder every half hour and again tonight before it cools down outside. He’s going to need a blanket, too. We’ve gotta keep the muscle warm and loose.”

      “Hey, why don’t you head to the bunkhouse and wash up? I’ll keep an eye on him.”

      “Are you saying I stink?”

      Emma stared up at him, seeing a shallow grin arch his lips, lips she’d like to feel on hers again. “Hardly.” In fact she could easily bury her face against his chest and breathe him in for hours on end. “But mustard and yarrow have a way of sticking to you. Better to wash it off while it’s fresh. As it is I’ll have that smell stuck in my nose for a month.”

      “Yeah, me too.” He climbed down off the fence next to her. There it was again, that rush of desire washing over her mind and body, drowning her resistance in its wake.

      “We pulled him back today, Emma. He’ll get his shot.”

      “Yes, he will. Go.” She flicked her hand toward the bunkhouse fifty feet to the left of the barn’s entrance and let out a sigh when he moved behind her and walked away.

      She stared at his retreating backside, at his broad shoulders and the defined muscles beneath his snug white T-shirt. If the air got any more emotionally heated, she swore she’d pass out.

      “Breathe, Emma … just breathe.” She turned back to keep an eye on Navigator and let her gaze follow him around the endless circle until she felt almost normal again.

      Almost.

      MAC LAY ON THE COT in the stable staring up at the beams long after midnight.

      Emma had made him supper and delivered it to a patch of grass where they ate and tended Navigator’s shoulder every half hour. He should have resisted her invitation and indulged in physical activity—pull-ups in the hayloft until his body screamed, or mucking stalls—to break the hold he felt growing between them, but he’d let her get under his skin.

      Hell, he was in too deep already and he knew it. Felt it in his bones. Twenty-five years of carrying his father’s animosity toward Thadeous Clareborn and the horse-racing business was crumbling like chalk in the rain. But that aversion had shaped his life, shaped who he was and what he needed.

      Get in, get out … no emotional attachments.

      There was no warning.

      No whisper of movement, just the icy pressure of a knife blade at his throat, and the man wielding it standing over him.

      Mac’s training kicked in, hard, fast, deadly.

      He latched on to the attacker’s wrist and jerked it up and away.

      The blade gleamed sharp in his left peripheral.

      Balling his right fist he slammed it back, catching the man in the forehead.

      The intruder staggered back and hit the floor.

      Mac rolled off the cot onto his belly and snagged the man’s ankles just as he tried to stagger to his feet.

      Jerking hard, he pulled the thug’s legs out from underneath him. He hit the ground again. A grunt hissed from between the other man’s lips.

      Mac scrambled to his feet and reached for his weapon, determined to detain the invader until Sheriff Wilkes could get there.

      Over his right shoulder he heard the slightest sound, the shuffle of footsteps, then the electrical hiss of a Taser gun being fired.

      Muscle-paralyzing


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