Command Control. Sara Jane Stone

Command Control - Sara Jane Stone


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reached out, grabbed his hips and drew him close, craving contact. This man wanted her. She could feel it. But something had a hold on him. And she needed to know what it was.

      Running her hands up from his hips, over his oh-so-tempting chest and shoulders, she moved to his biceps, then down his powerful forearms to his hands. Entwining her fingers with his, she forced him to release his hold on the fridge.

      “The other day, in the bookstore, you started to say something. You said ‘I’m a’—but never finished the sentence. Now might be a good time to tell me.”

       5

      LOGAN CLOSED HIS EYES. One kiss. That was all he wanted. One kiss before he watched pity eclipse her laughing, playful expression. Christ, she wanted it, too. The way she’d said that one word—now—had turned him inside out with need. But he’d hesitated, damn it.

      “Logan?”

      Opening his eyes, he stepped away, his arms falling to his sides. He didn’t have a choice now. He had to tell her. “I haven’t kissed a woman in a while.”

      She nodded, watching him, waiting for an explanation.

      “It’s been more than a year.” Longer since he’d claimed a kiss that would lead to more. “I—”

      A loud ring echoed in the kitchen.

      Sadie’s eyes widened. “The landline.” She raced across the kitchen to the cordless phone on the far wall. “Hold that thought. I need to get this.”

      She frantically punched a button on the phone. “Laurel? Are you having the baby?”

      Logan blinked. If the woman on the other end said yes, he needed to make himself scarce. Talking about his late wife while her sister was in labor? Not going to happen.

      “Dinner?” Sadie closed her eyes. “I’m the worst sister in the world. I got caught up in something and forgot. Laurel, I’m so sorry. I’ll be right there.”

      Sadie hung up the phone and turned to him. “I’m sorry. I completely lost track of time. I promised my sister I’d be back for dinner.”

      “No problem. I’ll head out.”

      He shoved his hands in his pockets and headed for the door. Her sister had bought him some time, but he knew if he wanted to kiss this woman he had to tell her that he’d lost his wife to cancer. If she stuck around long enough, someone in town would volunteer the information.

      But after he told her, would she order him to kiss her? Not likely. No matter how that conversation played out in his mind, it didn’t lead to her mouth on his and her body tight against him.

      “Logan?”

      He paused in the archway between the kitchen and the hall. “Yeah?”

      Sadie smiled, her expression still brimming with heat and laughter. That look—it made him want things he might not be ready to handle based on his performance today.

      “If Laurel’s still pregnant tomorrow,” she said, “I could help you with the farm chores.”

      He raised an eyebrow. After he’d chickened out when she’d demanded a kiss, she was still interested? Part of him wanted to say, Forget the chores, let’s start again here. In front of the fridge.

      But this woman was trouble. Her laughter drew him in like a drug. He wanted to take her to bed. He wanted to talk to her and tell her things he hadn’t shared in a long time—only he couldn’t. He wasn’t ready.

      “I promise to stay away from Titan,” she added.

      The answer was no. He knew that, but— “I was planning to repair the heifers’ birthing pen,” he said. “I could use a hand. Come find me in the barn tomorrow morning.”

      “I’ll bring the coffee.”

      * * *

      SADIE RUSHED INTO her sister’s cramped kitchen, letting the screen door slam behind her. Out of breath from running across the fields adjoining the two properties when the sun was so low behind the clouds she could barely see—this was why people drove cars short distances in the country, no streetlights!—Sadie stared at her sister.

      “You didn’t tell me Louise Reed had a ruggedly handsome nephew,” she said.

      Seated at the kitchen table beside her husband, Laurel looked up from her half-empty plate. “Are you late for dinner because you were with the supersexy soldier?”

      Greg, her twin’s husband, glanced up, a fork full of steak and potatoes suspended inches from his mouth.

      “No.” Sadie sank into the empty chair next to Laurel.

      Her sister eyed her suspiciously. “Are you sure? If you were, I want details. Especially the naked ones.”

      Greg set his fork down on his plate and pushed back from the table. “That’s my cue to leave.”

      “I was not with him. Not like that.” But she’d thought about it.

      “Yet,” Laurel said.

      Sadie waited until she heard Greg turn the TV on in the other room before she nodded. “Yet.”

      “He’s an army ranger.”

      “I know,” Sadie said.

      Laurel smacked the wooden table with her open palm. “So you talked to him.”

      “I helped him with the farm chores. And afterward, I fed him pie.”

      Her twin’s eyes sparkled. Leaning forward as far as her belly would allow, she spoke in a low voice. “I heard a rumor he rode a horse into battle. And Cindy said—”

      “I’m not interested in gossip,” Sadie said, shaking her head. “If I want to know something, I’ll ask him.”

      “You’re planning to see him again?”

      If she had her way, she’d do more than see him. But sharing her interest with Laurel didn’t feel right. She was here to help her twin, not the handsome soldier who might have ridden a horse through a war zone. God, that sounded hot. Part cowboy, part soldier and all muscle—the man was a walking, talking fantasy. With secrets. She couldn’t forget about those.

      “I’m living in his aunt’s guesthouse,” Sadie said. “I’ll probably bump into him again.”

      “So no plans?” Laurel pressed.

      “I might have agreed to help him repair a birthing pen for the heifers,” she admitted. The downside to not spending time with Laurel—she forgot how easily her twin knew when she was fudging the truth. “But only if you don’t need my help.”

      Laurel raised an eyebrow. “You’re going to fix a birthing pen? Did you tell him you don’t know a screwdriver from a hammer?”

      “He didn’t ask. And I’m not that hopeless. Anymore.”

      “When was the last time you used either?”

      Sadie picked at the potatoes on her plate. “Not recently.”

      “Yeah, you’ll be a great help.” Laurel stood and began clearing the table. “You’re going to end up having wild sex in a barn while I sit here watching my feet swell.”

      Guilt came crashing down on her. Sadie abandoned the steak dinner she’d barely touched and brought her dish over to the sink to help her sister. “If you need me, I’m here.”

      Laurel waved her away, taking the dirty dish from her hands. “No. You should have sex with the soldier.”

      “I’m not looking for a vacation fling,” she said. “You know that is not why I’m here.”

      Laurel


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