Читать книгу Your Ranch Or Mine? - Cindy Kirk, Cindy Kirk - Страница 9
Chapter Two
ОглавлениеMitchell Donavan smiled as his golf ball sailed down the fairway of the Big Timber course before veering to the right.
Though his hadn’t gone as far or as straight as Alexander Darst’s, it had been a respectable hit off the tee. He’d been playing for nearly ten years, ever since he realized that as much business was conducted on the golf course as in the office. If you didn’t play, you could be left out of the game.
Mitch had spent enough of his boyhood on the outside looking in. He didn’t care to repeat the experience as an adult. He hoisted the strap of his bag over his shoulder and started down the fairway.
When he reached his ball, he paused and stared into the distance. The vertical peaks and sawtooth ridges of the Crazy Mountains made him feel at home in a way the ramshackle house of his childhood never had….
“When I went off to college, I always planned to come back here,” Mitch reminisced. In the years since he’d graduated, Mitch had seen his share of the country. But his heart had remained firmly planted in Montana where the land was beautiful, the people genuine and the pace to his liking. “I just never thought the return trip would take this long.”
“What was the holdup?” Alex’s gaze remained focused on his ball as it joined Mitch’s at the edge of the green.
“Wasn’t ready,” Mitch said simply, knowing his reluctance had been more complicated than that. “I had to experience the world outside of Yellowstone County before I came back to settle down.”
“Settle down?”
The gleam in Alex’s eyes made Mitch wish he hadn’t spoken so freely.
“I have someone in my office who’d be perfect for you,” Alex continued.
Mitch pulled a pitching wedge from his bag and moved to set up his next shot. “What’s her name?”
“Anna Anderssen,” Alex said.
A roaring filled Mitch’s ears and he hit the ball harder than he’d intended. It sailed across the green and landed in the sand trap on the other side.
“Ease back on your follow-through,” Alex instructed.
Mitch blinked as if his eyes were exposed to the blazing sun rather than shaded by tinted glasses. “What did you say?”
“You need to pull back—”
“Not that,” Mitch said impatiently. “Before.”
“You mean about Anna?” The gleam was back. “Want me to set you up?”
“Nope.” Mitch’s fingers tightened around the strap of his bag, remembering the blond-haired, blue-eyed charmer who’d once held his heart in the palm of her hand. “I just didn’t realize Seth’s sister was back in town.”
Alex pulled the putter from his bag. “She and a couple friends are living in a big old house on Main.”
“Why did she bother coming back?” Mitch muttered as he stepped into the bunker, sand wedge in hand. He forced himself to concentrate and chipped the ball onto the green. He felt a surge of satisfaction as it kept rolling, circled the cup and dropped into the hole.
“Something to do with her friend Lauren.” Alex’s ball quickly followed Mitch’s into the cup. “She’s the psychologist who’s working on her dissertation research. Didn’t Seth make you complete a questionnaire for her?”
“He made me, all right. Went on and on about her.” Mitch reached down and snagged the balls from the cup and tossed Alex’s to him. “But he didn’t say a word about her being Anna’s friend.”
The name felt odd on his tongue after all these years. Last Mitch knew Anna was living in Denver. And he’d learned that from another high school buddy.
Seth rarely mentioned his sister. Mitch wasn’t sure if his reluctance to discuss Anna was because he didn’t think Mitch would care, or because he suspected something had happened between them that long-ago summer.
None of it mattered, anyway. Anna was the past and Mitch’s eyes were firmly focused on the future. He was no longer the loser from the wrong side of town but a successful architect with his own company. He didn’t need to prove himself to Anna Anderssen anymore.
When he ran into her, he’d be polite but distant. He’d learned his lesson. Never again would he be fooled by a pretty face and laughing blue eyes.
Anna paused in the doorway of the Sweet River Civic Center. She glanced down at her dress and wondered if she had time to go home and change. When Alex’s last appointment of the day had turned out to be more time intensive than he’d anticipated, he’d asked her to represent him at the first meeting of the area’s Young Professionals group.
With the event starting at five-thirty, she had no choice but to come straight from work. In Denver she’d have felt appropriately attired in the stylish burnt-orange sheath she’d worn to work. Especially when coupled with the translucent multicolored bead necklace and designer heels.
But this wasn’t Denver or Chicago or New York. This was Sweet River, Montana, where casual attire usually meant clean jeans and a cowboy shirt for men and a skirt and tank top for women.
She scanned the room and felt tension ease from her shoulders. Though most of the men were wearing jeans, the majority of women had on dresses. Perhaps this wouldn’t be so bad after all….
Anna had barely stepped into the cavernous building when she heard her name over the conversational din. Anna turned and widened her eyes at the sight of the dark-haired woman with the stylish bob hurrying toward her, tall and slender with amber-colored eyes that matched her dress. It had been almost thirteen years since Anna had seen her. Yet she’d have known her anywhere.
“I don’t know if you remember me—” the woman began.
“Of course I do.” Anna wrapped her arms around her and gave her a heartfelt hug. “How could I forget Cassie Els, er, Dodds, volleyball player extraordinaire?”
Cassie had been one of her classmates and captain of the volleyball squad. Though she’d grown up poor, she was smart and ambitious. Not to mention she had a killer serve. No one had been surprised when she’d earned a sports scholarship to the University of Montana. But instead of going off to college, she’d married another classmate, Jack Dodds, and had a baby six months later. The last Anna knew the couple had been living in Omaha with their two boys.
“Those carefree days seem like a lifetime ago.” Cassie’s smile dimmed slightly. “And it’s ‘Els’ again. Jack and I have been divorced almost five years.”
“What happened?”
“Long story.” Cassie waved a hand. “One best told over a pitcher of margaritas and a basket of chips.”
“You name the time and place and it’s a plan,” Anna said. “How long are you in town?”
“I’m back for good.” Cassie’s lips curved up in a smile. “The boys are registered for school and Trenton—he’s almost thirteen—has already started football practice.”
Anna couldn’t believe that Cassie had a boy that old. Of course, if she’d had a child right out of high school, that baby would be almost a teenager.
“I told Mitch I wasn’t sure if a thirty-one-year-old unemployed seamstress qualified as young or professional, but he assured me I did,” Cassie continued. “So here I am.”
Anna swallowed hard. “Mitch?”
“Donavan,” Cassie said. “He moved back, too.”
“With you?” Anna could barely push the words past her suddenly numb lips.
“Goodness no.” Cassie laughed. “But I wouldn’t mind if he had.” Her eyes lit up and she waved a hand at a large group milling around the hors d’oeuvres table. “Mitch. Over here.”
Anna stood frozen in place as a tall cowboy broke away from the others and ambled across the concrete floor toward them.
The urge to flee rose up inside Anna, yet this time she didn’t move a muscle. Instead she straightened her spine, dug her nails into her palms and waited. Mature. Confident. She repeated the words to herself as he drew close.
Anna knew the moment he recognized her because his jaw tightened. Still, to his credit, he kept moving forward. She took advantage of the opportunity to let her gaze linger. His short-sleeved cotton shirt showed off muscular forearms tanned by the sun. Although the majority of the men wore jeans, Mitch had eschewed Wranglers for navy pants. His dark wavy hair, longer than most of the men’s in the room, brushed his collar. She couldn’t help remembering how it had felt to slide her fingers through the soft strands and—
“You know Mitch, don’t you, Anna?” Cassie asked.
Anna fisted her hands tighter and nodded. She took a deep steadying breath and inhaled the tangy scent of his cologne, the same brand he’d worn all those years ago. She’d always loved the way he smelled, the way he tasted….
For a second her composure wavered.
Mature and confident. Fixing a smile firmly on her lips, Anna stuck out her hand. “Nice to see you again, Mitch.”
“I heard you were back in town.” He hesitated for the briefest of seconds before his hand closed over hers. His palms, once rough and callused, were now smooth and the mere touch of his fingers sent electricity shooting up her arm.
Her breath caught in her throat and she wondered if he’d experienced the same jolt. But his face remained expressionless, his eyes shuttered.
He dropped his hand. An awkward silence descended. Thankfully Stacie’s fiancé, Josh Collins, chose that moment to stroll over with a tray of drinks.
“Care for some wine?” Josh asked, his gaze shifting curiously from Anna to Mitch.
“Don’t mind if I do.” Cassie took a glass of chardonnay and smiled her thanks.
When Josh turned to Anna, she shook her head. With Mitch’s presence affecting her so strongly, she needed coherence more than alcohol.
Mitch took a glass of burgundy and grinned. “Looks like someone has put you to work, Collins.”
“I don’t mind.” The handsome rancher shrugged good-naturedly. “This is an important night for Stacie.”
“May I have your attention, please?” Stacie’s voice rang out over the crowd. Once the room grew silent, the vivacious brunette explained the mixer she’d designed to help everyone get better acquainted.
Anna groaned to herself. When she’d walked in and seen all the small tables with two chairs, she’d immediately thought of speed dating. But instead of racing between potential dates, they’d have five minutes at each table to share information about their business or occupation.
“I love this.” Cassie’s eyes snapped with excitement. She turned to Mitch and gave his hand a squeeze. “I’m so happy you asked me to come with you.”
A twinge of something that felt an awful lot like jealousy stabbed Anna in the heart. The emotion took her by surprise. She’d have sworn on a stack of Bibles that any feelings she’d had for Mitch Donavan had disintegrated years ago.
“It was great seeing you again.” Anna focused her entire attention on Cassie. “I’ll give you a call.”
“I’d like tha—”
“Everyone should be in their seats now,” Stacie called out.
“Ooh, I see an empty seat over there.” Cassie flashed Anna a parting smile and hurried to a table where rancher Wes Danker sat.
Anna scanned the room. Only two empty seats remained. Both at the table next to where she and Mitch stood.
Confident. Mature.
“I guess you’re stuck with me.” Anna slipped into the closest chair and rested her folded hands on the table.
“It appears so.” He pulled out the remaining chair and sat down.
Anna inhaled another steadying breath. Then, for good measure, she took one more. She had five whole minutes. More than enough time to apologize.
“Mitch,” she began, her confidence faltering as his enigmatic gaze settled on her. “I realize this is awkward, but I want—”
“Explain about your business,” Josh instructed, moving from table to table. “Or your job. That’s what this time is for.”
Anna didn’t care about the rules. She’d waited thirteen years to make amends and by God, she was going to seize this opportunity.
“Mitch.” She kept her fingers wrapped tightly together, resisting the urge to reach out and touch him. “I—”
“Before I moved back to Sweet River, I had my own architectural firm in Chicago,” he said in a tone you’d use with a stranger. Before she could get another word out, he told her about several of his favorite commercial projects before mentioning that he’d recently started designing custom log homes.
She listened to him extol the many facets of an architect’s life. As he spoke he kept his gaze focused on a spot over her left shoulder. Despite his cool attitude, she heard the pride in his voice as he described several of his designs. This wasn’t just a career for him, but a passion. A passion he’d obviously had since boyhood. Why hadn’t she known this was what he’d always wanted to do with his life?
Because you never asked. You were always too busy talking about yourself.
“Time to switch,” Stacie announced.
Switch? Anna pulled her brows together. “I didn’t get my turn.”
“Sorry,” Josh said with an easy smile. “You can catch up with Mitch later.”
Anna turned back, fully prepared to be a rule-breaker, but Mitch had already risen and moved to the next table. Disappointment rose inside her. Still, Anna consoled herself with the knowledge that once the game of musical chairs was over, she’d have her chance.
But when she finished her last spiel about Alex’s law practice and looked around the room, she realized there would be no second chance with Mitch. Not tonight. The handsome man with brilliant blue eyes had disappeared. And he’d taken the former volleyball captain with him.