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Authors: Dahlia West

Rough Stock (38 page)

BOOK: Rough Stock
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Rowan was lost underneath him, his hand dipping into her bra and freeing her nipple, only to cover it with his lips. “Seth!” she cried and pressed her hands to the back of his head, urging him breathlessly.

He knew what she wanted and delivered a sharp bite, pulling her sensitive flesh into his mouth and sucking hard.

She arched her back as he marked her, first one breast then the other. He finally let go of her hand and kissed and licked her exposed belly as he tugged at the button of her jeans.

As Rowan lay naked, underneath a robin’s-egg-blue sky and surrounded by a sea of wildflowers that whispered in the wind, Seth dipped his head between her thighs and brought her tense, taut body to its first orgasm with his tongue. Rowan understood that she’d always come first with Seth, and more than once, even if it took hours, all day, all night. He’d bring her shuddering to climax after climax, holding off on his own.

She was coherent enough—though just barely—to spread her legs for him, knowing what was coming next, or rather that
they
were coming next—together.

Seth grinned at her as he pushed down his jeans to his thighs. “There’s my girl,” he said. “Spread a little wider for me. Show me.”

Perhaps spurred on by the husky tone in his voice, or their isolation, hidden as they were by the flowers with no one out here to see them anyway, Rowan bit her lower lip and reached down, tentatively pulling her pussy lips apart, giving him exactly what he’d asked for.

The breeze rustled the lavender and puckered her nipples, exposed as they were. It danced across her swollen clit too, tickling her.

Seth wiped his mouth, lips still glistening from his earlier attentions. “God damn, Rowan. You are the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen.” He had his cock in his hand, rubbing the thick shaft slowly, teasing them both.

Rowan groaned and couldn’t stop herself from lifting her hips into the air. “Seth!” she begged.

“Okay,” he said finally, ending their torment. “Okay.” He lowered himself, guiding the head to her entrance. He pushed in hard, knowing she was aching for him. The sudden clenching response of her body nearly sent her into a second orgasm.

It was too soon, though, for both of them, and Rowan wanted Seth to have as much pleasure as he’d already give her, many times over. She wrapped her legs around him, signaling that she was ready for a rough ride. He pounded into her, again and again, driving them both toward an intense release. Not quite together, but close. And there was always next time, something to strive for, thought Rowan as she held him in her arms, sweat and breath mingling against her bare skin.

Her ring sparkled in the sunlight beating down on them.

Chapter Thirty-Nine


S
eth woke just
before dawn, as usual, and tried to slip out of bed unnoticed.

Rowan stirred next to him, though, and caught his arm, trying to draw him back.

He leaned over her, planting a soft kiss on her lips.

She groaned. “Don’t go.”

“I have to. And you have to be at work in a few hours anyway. Go back to sleep.”

She frowned but rolled back over, and Seth pulled on a fresh pair of jeans and a clean shirt before he eased the door closed behind him. They’d gotten themselves into a nice little routine over the last few weeks, coordinating their schedules with Rowan’s shifts at work so that they at least had one whole day off together every week.

Seth had fully moved in at this point, sharing half the closet space with her in their shared bedroom. His boots were by the door, next to everyone else’s, and occasionally Mac let him share the remote control at night before bedtime.

He walked quietly past the old man’s closed bedroom door, not because he worried about waking Mac. Seth already knew the old man wasn’t in there. He hadn’t heard the man wake—the large, rambling farmhouse offered a surprising amount of privacy, which made sense because like the Big House at Snake River, it had been designed with a large family in mind.

No, Mac was up before dawn because Mac was always up before dawn, and no heart attack seemed capable of altering the man’s routine.

The floor still creaked, though, and Willow was asleep.

Seth stopped at the little girl’s door and heard the familiar scrape on the wooden floor on the other side. He grasped the knob and pushed it in. Kinka greeted him, happily but silently as he’d learned, just wagging his white, fluffy tail, tongue lolling to the side.

Seth opened the door enough to let the dog head downstairs and snuck into the room on sock feet to pull up the blanket over Willow’s sleeping form. He leaned down and brushed his lips over her cool forehead, careful not to wake her. Someday, of course, there would be questions, so many questions, about dads and stepdads who were really uncles, and it would all be a little complicated, but Seth didn’t care. He loved Willow. And she loved him. And they both loved Court.

It would work itself out as long as they all wanted it to.

At the front door, he let Kinka out and pulled on his boots. He snagged two thermoses from the counter, filled them, and left. Outside, it was chilly, but the sun breaking over the horizon against a clear, bright sky told Seth, even without Austin’s uncanny ability, that it would be a good-weather day.

He fed all three dogs and left their gate open so they could join him at the pasture’s gate. Seth opened it for them, and the three guard dogs yipped with glee as they sped off to find the small portion of the Barlow herd that they enjoyed protecting. The cows had gotten used to their canine companions, and there was little lowing in the field to announce their incoming charge.

In the barn, Seth found his future father-in-law laying down feed for the small but apparently growing menagerie of pets. He saw Seth and put down the feed bag, taking the offered thermos of hot coffee.

“I’ll fix the leaning post on the western side on my way to Snake River,” Seth told him.

Mac nodded. “Sounds good. Tractor blew a fuse, and it’ll take me all day to get in there and replace the damn thing.”

Seth nodded in turn, grateful he didn’t have to be in two places at once.

Mac stuck a finger in the bunny cage and gave the little guy an ear rub.

“It’s different,” said Seth, because neither of them were the type of men to just ignore an elephant.

“Yeah, it is,” said Mac, but he didn’t sound unhappy. Not at all. “Different but good,” the old man declared, nodding to the livestock. “Pair of sheep, pair of cows, pair of horses, and a rabbit,” Mac grunted. “Seems like enough work for any man my age. And she’ll be up in a few hours.”

Mac’s eyes twinkled as he spoke. Seth knew the man loved his long days with his granddaughter. He had five years to catch up on, and Mac Archer was loving every minute of it. “We’re going fishing,” Mac declared.

“Oh, yeah?”

The old man nodded. “Can’t have her just watching that Spongeboob all day.”

Seth laughed. “No, we can’t have that. I’ll bring some of Sofia’s tortillas back tonight. We’ll have fish tacos.”

“Well,” Mac said, draining his thermos. “Sounds like we got a plan. We got work to do.”

He set off for his tractor, and Seth set about saddling up Choctaw, who was reluctant to leave Rafaela, the mare. Seth led him to her stall for a morning nuzzle then swung up into the saddle. He left the Archer place and headed for Snake River, thermos in hand, horse on a loose rein.

Kinka, Jory, and Kono barked when they saw him but didn’t leave their self-appointed posts at the far end of the range, putting themselves between the herd and any predators that might come down out of the mountains.

The trek was short and easy, only a mile to work each and every day, and honestly, Seth was glad to make the commute on horseback. How many men could say they did that? He’d trade his Ford for Choctaw any day.

When he reached the homestead, he tied Choctaw to the old hitching post outside the Big House and headed inside for breakfast. He found everyone gathered at the large table, Sawyer and Court fighting over biscuits, Austin and Walker sitting with their heads together, going over a set of documents. Even Gabe gave him a nod, and Seth was glad that things had gotten mostly back to normal. Though as he glanced at the two empty chairs at either end of the table, he realized normal wasn’t the word. Not normal, but manageable. Things had become manageable. And that was all right with him.

Epilogue


S
eth held Choctaw
by the reins as Willow pet the horse on the shoulder.

“Can I come?” she asked, but Seth shook his head. “Aww,” she protested.

Rowan bent and lifted the girl into her arms, out of the way of the nearby horse’s hooves.

“Not this time, sweetheart,” Seth told her. “But while I’m gone, Pop-Pop and Mama are going to saddle up Caramel and let you ride, okay?”

The little girl’s excited squeal convinced Seth that buying the pony had been a good idea.

Rowan leaned in, hugging Seth with her free arm. Seth wrapped
his
arms around both of them and squeezed.

“Are you sure you don’t want me to come with you?” Rowan whispered.

But again Seth shook his head. “No. You stay here. I’ll be back in a few hours.”

He gave Willow a tweak on the nose and swung his leg up into the saddle. Mac gave him a solemn wave.

The ride was easy but far. Seth had brought his rifle along just in case he ran into trouble, but looking around, he saw nothing but rolling hills, high mountains, and lush green grass. He and Choctaw passed the homestead, turned to the river, and kept their steady pace. Down into Goodman’s Gulch, they finally came to the right place, and Seth dismounted, setting the reins on the saddle horn and letting Choctaw pick at the grass.

On his knees, under a tree, Seth pushed a spade into the earth and lifted dark, fertile chunks out of the ground in front of him. When it was deep enough, he stood, walked back to Choctaw, and pulled a heavy stone cross out of the horse’s saddlebag. He carried it to the hole and slid the base into the loamy, hollowed earth.

Carved in script on the marker’s arms were Rafe and Manny’s names, two friends who’d lived and died together on this rugged, open land. Both men had graves in town, in the Catholic cemetery next to Saint Joseph’s, but Seth was convinced this was where they’d rather be and surely where they’d rather be remembered.

The graves were for the family, but this was for the men themselves, the men who’d sacrificed themselves so that all of them could go on.

He took a long look, but by no means a last one. Seth had lived on this land and worked it from the time he could ride a horse. He’d pass by the marker on his way through the Gulch, on his way to the Ridge, on his way to Pike’s Point maybe, though he’d only been that high a few times in his life. There was no forgetting these men. They’d never be out of sight or out of mind.

He turned and headed the few yards down to the Snake River. Choctaw followed, loyal trail horse that he was, without having to be led. Seth stopped near the water’s edge and unbuckled the counterweight bag, dumping the multicolored river stones back onto the bank that was visible now that the spring runoff had fully receded. The sun was rising over the far side of the east bank. A riot of pinks, golds, blues, and purples spilled across the sky, matching the hues of the stones beneath his boots.

This was his land, left to him by his father, and his legacy, left to him by his ancestors, all of whom, Seth felt, were gathered around him now. If he closed his eyes, he could hear their whispers in the sound of the water running past.

Destiny. Legacy. Family.

Seth Barlow had it all now…and he was never letting go.

THE END

Available May 1st!

WRANGLER (STAR VALLEY Book Two)

Sawyer Barlow is the family goof-off. Never one to take life too seriously, he works hard but prefers roping and riding—fillies
and
women—and he does both any chance he gets.

A drunken bet sets his sights on Cassidy Conroy, Star Valley’s prissy little b…beauty queen. She’s rich and spoiled and thinks she’s too good for a Barlow. He’s not interested in chasing her too far, but he’ll knock boots with her for one tequila-fueled night with a hundred bucks on the line.

BOOK: Rough Stock
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