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Ride Me Dirty(6)

By:Vanessa Vale


Sam gave me an impatient look, waiting.

"Based on that IM alone, she's on the prowl. That means she might choose  to fuck some random asshole just to get her jollies. If she wants hot  monkey sex-" I held up my hand at Sam's raised brow. "-Her friend's  words, not mine, we just need to ensure we're the men-the only men-to  give it to her."

Sam sighed, ran a hand over the back of his neck. He wasn't just two  years older, he was bigger than me. Taller and broader, he'd played  football in high school and college. He'd wanted off the ranch all his  life and I was just thankful he'd returned to Bridgewater to settle.  Besides the whole Samantha fiasco, we'd been burned by women who either  wanted us for our money-the ranch wasn't small and Sam did extremely  well as a lawyer-or, for one night, interested in being in the center of  a Kane cousin sandwich.

But I had a feeling about Catherine, a feeling she would love being  taken by two men, love being touched and fucked and kissed by both of  us. But convincing the uptight, New York attorney of that? Shit. That  was probably going to be more difficult than I wanted to believe, and I  would absolutely need Sam's help. He was the dark, brooding, intense  one. I had a feeling Catherine would go for the quiet reserve my cousin  offered before she would take a chance on a player like me.

Sam set the softball back on his desk and frowned. "Fine. I'll help you  find Airplane Girl. But right now, I have work to do. Are we finished?"

I knew when to stop pushing. Until he met Catherine, I wouldn't be able to convince him. She'd be the one to do that.

I stood to leave and gave him a wave as I walked toward the door. "I know, I know, get the hell out."

Now I just had to find Catherine and figure out a way to introduce her  to Sam. One look, and I was confident he wouldn't be able to walk away  from her. No fucking way. Getting Catherine into bed with both of us was  going to be a bit harder, but neither of us ever backed down from a  challenge. And what a hot, enticing challenge she was.







CATHERINE



"How long will you be in town?" Cara Smythe asked. I'd found a note with  her phone number and the house key tucked beneath the knocker on Uncle  Charlie's front door when I arrived.

She grew up on the property next to his and we'd played together as kids  when I would visit. I remembered her with red hair, freckles and a blue  bike with streamers on the handlebars. God, I had wanted a bike just  like that, but living in New York-and with my parents-didn't allow for  one, or a puppy, or running through the sprinklers on a hot July  afternoon. I remembered Cara as always smiling and happy, whether we  were jumping rope or sneaking around after her older brother and his  friends. Her parents were equally likable and I always envied their  loving relationship. My parents were the complete opposite-spending  Christmas on European cruises instead of in front of the tree-and I  remember wishing I could stay in Montana forever. Instead, after the  summer when I was twelve, I never went back. Life moved on and Cara was  married now and lived in town.         

     



 

"I have a ticket for next Wednesday, but if I get things wrapped up sooner, I'll change it."

I had stopped in town and picked up a few groceries and coffee so I  could survive. Charlie's house was on five acres two miles out of town  and I'd figured the cupboards would be bare. I'd figured right.

It made no sense to stay in a hotel when the house was now mine, at  least it was officially once I signed the papers. I wasn't picky about  where I slept-I could sleep standing up-and staying here was one less  thing I'd had to plan while trying to get out of the city. I stood in  the kitchen and it was just as I remembered it. Yellow walls, orange  laminate counters and dark wood cabinets. Faux brick linoleum covered  the floor. It was like stepping back in time, especially holding the  phone that was attached to the wall, cord and all. My cell was charging  by the coffee maker, but completely useless without any reception. I had  no idea there were places in the US that had no cell service. Sure, the  top of a mountain or in the middle of a desert maybe, but I was in  Bridgewater County, Montana. It might not be heavily populated, but it  was populated. Didn't people want to use cell phones around here?

"Why would you want to leave early?" she asked.

I sighed and glanced at the rooster clock over the stove hood. I'd been up thirteen hours and I was feeling it.

"I've got to get back to work." Just checking my email while waiting in  line at the rental car counter had my blood pressure soaring. Mr. Farber  hadn't taken Roberts off my case. That meant the longer I was gone, the  less chance of getting it back.

"No, you don't. I know you lawyer types, working sixty hour weeks."

Sixty? Try seventy-five.

"It's Montana in July," she continued. "Let's have some fun, like when we were kids."

I pulled a loaf of bread and some peanut butter out of the grocery bag.

"God, Cara, we are so not kids anymore and a bike ride or climbing a tree doesn't do it for me now."

"When was the last time you rode a bike?" she countered.

I thought back. It had probably been her bike with streamers.

"You're married and I'm …  well, I'm a workaholic."

Cara laughed through the phone. "The first step is admitting it. That's  why I left the note, so you wouldn't stay holed up in that house  working. And, being married does not mean the end of fun." She giggled.  "The opposite, in fact."

I had an idea where her mind was going and it only made me a little  envious. She had a man who made her laugh at just the thought of being  with him. As for Chad, the rat bastard, he was a waste of time and brain  power.

"How did you even know I'd be here?" I asked, changing the topic.

I walked to the fridge, put the milk inside, the phone cord stretching  as far as it would go. There wasn't any food in the fridge besides an  opened box of baking soda, a bottle of ketchup and five cans of  Charlie's favorite generic cola. I wasn't sure if it was because someone  cleaned out the perishables or not. I remember Charlie was a horrible  cook, so it was possible he didn't keep much.

"Are you kidding? Everyone knows everything that goes on around here.  I'm sorry to hear about Charlie. I liked him a lot. But I'm glad you're  back."

Yeah, Bridgewater hadn't changed much since I was a kid. The main street  was quaint with local shops. I drove past the lawyer's office so I knew  where it was, but it was hard to get lost in such a small town. The  mountains were to the west so there wasn't even a chance of getting  turned around. As I was driving, those going the other way raised one  finger on the steering wheel in greeting, stranger or not. It was a  Montana thing I'd forgotten, but I liked it. I liked how people were  nice, even to those they didn't know. That didn't happen in New York. It  was cutthroat and fast paced, no one slowing down enough to wave to  anyone else. No one ever looked up from their phone. But in Bridgewater,  things were different. Cara, who hadn't seen me in …  fifteen years, knew  I was back and wanted to connect right away. It was startling for me.  Unusual.

"I'd love to see you. Come out with me tonight."

I thought of my meeting for the following morning with Charlie's  attorney, plus all the work I had to do for the office. My laptop sat as  dead as my phone on the kitchen table. No internet at all. I'd searched  for a cable or something, anything to indicate modern technology, but  the house phone attached to the wall-with a dang cord-was all I had to  connect me to the outside world.

I might be able to get the details of the sale wrapped up quickly, but  not in one meeting. Plus, I had to empty the house, of Charlie's  personal effects to be ready for sale. The man had lived in the house  for forty years and it showed. I had my work cut out for me. I mentally  groaned at adding another to-do to my already overloaded list.         

     



 

Besides tackling the house, nothing else would get done here. I had to  find a coffee shop or something where I could go online to work. I took  vacation days for this week, but that meant nothing. Vacation didn't  exist for those wanting to be partner. I still had work to do or Roberts  would have all my cases by the time I returned. I could only imagine  how my emails were piling up. I went to my cell, checked it for service.  None.

"Okay, sure."

Placing the bag of coffee grounds by the coffee maker, I folded the  brown grocery bag and wedged it between the fridge and the counter with  about twenty others.

"Great. Then let's meet at the Barking Dog at eight."

"The Barking Dog?"

"It's a bar on the east end of Main. No excuses."

I looked around the kitchen and realized it was going to be awfully  quiet by myself. There were no honking horns, no police sirens. There  weren't even any street lights. A night out couldn't hurt, especially if  I made good progress with the attorney in the morning. "All right."