Wildcat Blues Nalini Singh (spanish books to read TXT) đ
- Author: Nalini Singh
Book online «Wildcat Blues Nalini Singh (spanish books to read TXT) đ». Author Nalini Singh
The air was cool, crispâŠand redolent with a thousand new smells that made her wildcat nose twitch. She supposed some of those smells might be termed bad, but to a cat, it was all just smells. And right now, while she might be in her human skin, her mind was of the cat.
She closed the front door behind herself, did a few stretches, then headed out across a field that appeared empty of livestock. The footing was uneven, probably from animal hooves, but it was nothing in comparison to the forest in which she regularly ran. Enjoying the bright, clean air, and the sprawling vista, she nonetheless kept her senses open for any sign of domestic animals.
The last thing she wanted to do was give some poor cow a heart attack.
But these fields appeared to have been left emptyâto regrow the patchy grass maybeâor could be she was running on some vegetable fields left fallow for the season. So it wasnât until she was out of sight of the house that she caught the hint of an animal scent.
She sniffed. âHorse.â
About to head in the opposite direction, she was halted by another scent entwined with that of the horseâs: Tanner Larkspur.
Her face flushed, her thighs clenched, and she made a bad, bad decision.
She turned in the direction of his scent. She wouldnât go too close, wouldnât scare his horse. She just wanted toâŠto⊠âYou just want to eat him up with your eyes, Zara âTerrible Decisionâ De LĂȘon, thatâs what you want!â she muttered to herself. âAdmit it. Heâs like a live porn movie as far as your misbehaving hormones are concerned.â
Then there he was, out in the distance. The land wasnât flat here, was kind of gently rolling, and he stood near a tree on a rise beyond the dip in front of her. He was doing something with a fence post. Fixing it maybe?
The man was also not wearing a shirt or a tee.
Zara threw up her hands. That was just ridiculous. The sun wasnât even really up yet! How dare he flaunt himself to an innocent woman minding her own damn business.
His head lifted, though there was no way he shouldâve sensed her. He was human, didnât have her nose. But he tipped his cowboy hat back on his headâŠand smiled. She could feel the sexy punch of it even from so far out.
Her breasts seemed to swell in the confines of her bra, her skin suddenly hyper-hot.
And that was before he patted his horse, then started to walk toward her.
She shouldâve turned around and continued her run in the opposite direction, but Zara didnât run from anyone. Especially not a six-feet-plus tall man who smiled at her like she was his favorite flavor of ice-cream. âSuch a bad idea, Zara,â she muttered under her breath. âFarm boy. Farm boy.â
The litany was a reminder of all the reasons she couldnât and shouldnât do this. Which was why she didnât understand why she was running toward him, her wildcat pouncing at her skin in excitement, and her heart thumping against her ribcage.
She had enough control to stop halfway to his horse. Leaning up against the fence with both arms, she caught her breath. It hadnât been a long run for a cat, and she wasnât huffed because of the exercise.
It was him.
He reached her not long afterward. Stepping far too close, until she couldâve spread her hand on his bare chest without fully extending her arm, he smiled that lethal smile again and said, âGood morning, Zara.â The way he drawled out her name, it made it into something indecent.
âTanner,â she said through a mouth that had turned into a desert. âYouâre up early.â
âFarm hours,â he said, leaning up against the fence with one arm. âWhatâs your excuse, kitty cat?â
She narrowed her eyes. Had anyone else called her that, sheâd have kicked him where it hurt. But⊠Oh, hell. âEarly riser, farm boy.â
He grinned at her sharp retort. âI am that,â he said, easy as pie and as delicious. âDid you sleep okay? Strange place and all.â
âYes. Until your suicidal rooster decided to sing me a demented aria.â
His laughter was warm caramel sliding over her skin, getting into places it had no business going. âYou got a little time? I can show you around the farm a bit.â
Say no, Zara, recommended the sensible part of her brain.
The hormones cackled, and her lips parted. âWhat about your fencing?â
âItâll keep.â His eyes lingered on her face, on her lipsâŠas if heâd eat her up. âWeâre in a small seasonal lull at the farm. Thatâs why Tally times her visits around now. So no oneâs in a rush.â
âOh. I donât know much about farms.â
âYou will,â he said, his lips curving again. âAfter your tour with a farm boy.â
âRight.â She flushed again, when she wasnât a woman who went around mooning over men. Thank you to her parents for the dark tone of her skin. It hid all kinds of sins, including lusting after one out-of-bounds cowboy. âShall I meet you back at the house?â
âRace you? Star there is fast, but you run like you own the wind.â He held her gaze full-on. Not a battle for dominance, but a connection that made her cat purr and arch its back. âYouâre beautiful to watch in motion.â
Toes curling inside her running shoes, she pushed off the fence before she gave in to the primal wildness inside her and pounced on him. She liked being petted and praised by Tanner Larkspur. Especially when he looked at her that way, with those dark eyes so focused on her that it was as if nothing and no one else existed.
âIâll wait for you to get back to your horse to keep it fair,â she said, her voice holding a slight huskiness.
âIâll
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