“Bathe?” He uttered it like a word in an alien tongue. All his powers of reason were focused on her eyes, which were so bright they seemed colorless to him, like light reflecting on deep water.

“As in wash? Shower? I assume you must have some sort of provision for cleanliness in this camp?” Her voice was dry, sardonic.

But Bronco noticed that her fingers were still wrapped around his wrist. Now that the initial shock had passed, they felt warm, incredibly good. A sweet forbidden pleasure.

Regret and self-discipline made a knot in his chest as he shook himself free of her-literally and figuratively. “The men bathe in the creek-the one in the meadow. That’s if they bathe at all. This is a survival training camp, not Club Med.” He jerked his head toward the five-gallon plastic bucket. “For you, there’s plenty of water in the spring.”

“Uh-huh.” He could see her putting it together, chewing on the inside of her cheek. Her shoulders rose, then fell as she drew and exhaled a breath. “I don’t suppose you could warm-”

“Not a chance. You bathe cold or not at all.”

“But,” she protested, “that water must be like ice!” The resentful glare she gave him filled him with a prickly sense of relief. He was comfortable with her anger.

Once more in control, he said placidly, “I suppose if you want, you could draw a bucketful now and set it in the sun. It’d probably be warm enough by tonight.”

“Gee, thanks,” she muttered scathingly. She managed to stand up with surprising grace, considering the location of her sore spots and the fact that she was trying to keep the sweatshirt pulled down over the parts of herself she didn’t want him to see. He was starting to wonder about that on-again off-again modesty of hers.

“I am not putting clothes on this body until I’ve had a bath. I haven’t had a bath in two days. I’m dirty, I’m itchy, and I stink.” As she said that she was stomping angrily, if a bit stiffly, across the tent to where she’d left her things. She scooped up her saddlebags and the bucket and turned to face him, standing very straight, chin up and head high. There was a patch of bright pink on each cheek, and her eyes blazed fire.

It struck Bronco then-even with raw sores on her legs, his baggy sweatshirt hanging halfway to her knees and her hair all over the place the way she’d slept on it-that Lauren Brown was probably the most magnificent-looking woman he’d ever seen.

“Well?” she said, imperious as the queen of Sheba. “Since I’m not allowed to ‘set one foot outside this tent’ without you, would you be so kind as to accompany me to the latrine?”

“Sarcasm isn’t becoming in a woman,” Bronco said conversationally. “Did you know that?” He held the tent flap open and made an exaggerated gesture, waving her through. “After you, Your Highness.” She stalked past him, head high, and he decided it wouldn’t be wise to chuckle.

He did, however, comment on the fact that she was barefooted. That got him a dirty look-an unwise move on her part, since in that one moment when she wasn’t watching where she was putting her feet, she stepped down hard on a pinecone.

“Want me to carry you?” Bronco inquired helpfully over Lauren’s hiss of pain.

Her reply was a furious mutter that included, among the more repeatable words, “Over my dead body!” This time he did allow himself the gut-relaxing luxury of laughter.

Outside the blanket-enclosed latrine, she halted and shoved the bucket at him, narrowly missing hitting him in the chest with it. “If it’s not too much to ask,” she simpered with nauseating sweetness.

“Ma’am,” Bronco responded earnestly, “I’d be happy to go and get you some water, but if I do, I’m gonna have to ask you for your clothes.”

“What?”

“I’ll just take that off your hands right now.” And he lifted her saddlebags from her arm and transferred them to his own shoulder. “You can go on inside and take off your shirt and toss it out to me. Soon as I have it, I’ll be on my way.”

She was staring at him openmouthed, and from the looks of her eyes, she was about ready to self-combust. He gazed placidly back at her. She whispered, “That’s outrageous.”

He shrugged. “Up to you. It’s either that or we take a hike up there together. I just figured you’d rather not do that, with your sore butt and bare feet, but if you’d rather…”

She gave him a look that would have killed him dead where he stood, if she’d had any witching powers in her at all. Then she lifted the blanket and with an angry flounce disappeared behind it. A moment later his sweatshirt came sailing over the top of the enclosure.

“Thank you, ma’am,” he said as he reached up and snagged it. “I’ll be back quick as I can.”

He truly meant that. Because he knew it wasn’t going to take her long to figure out-if she hadn’t already-that all she really needed to do if she wanted to make a run for it was wrap one of those blankets around her, go on back to the tent and help herself to some of his clothes. He was gambling on her being too smart to try it, but with women, you never knew.

Inside the latrine, Lauren crouched in her underpants, shivering in the shady early-morning chill and seething with fury. Boiling mad on the inside, goose bumps on the outside. I hope he dies, she thought with much grinding of teeth. I hope he falls in the damn spring and drowns.

She didn’t mean it. Even the thought made her feel panicky-lonely and frightened. Arrogant and odious as Bronco was, without him where would she be? A picture flashed into her mind, of Ron Masters’s cold eyes and cruel smile; she could still feel his fingers pressing into the flesh of her upper arm. She looked down and her stomach turned as she saw the bluish-purple marks those fingers had left on her skin. She shivered again, and this time the cold went clear through to her heart.

She began to feel terribly alone, there in the shade of tall pine trees. It was quiet. Too quiet… The kind of quiet that made what sounds there were-the occasional bird’s call or squirrel’s chatter-stand out with crystal clarity by contrast. Now and then a breeze stirred the trees, bringing with it distant sounds-men’s voices, calling to one another, laughing; ambiguous clanks and thuds; the shrill ripple of a horse’s whinny. It seemed to her that Bronco had been gone a very long time.

Lauren paced. She couldn’t sit-with nothing to pad it, the closed lid of the portable toilet was too hard for her sore bottom.

She thought of her family-her dad, and Dixie, who had to be the best stepmom anybody’d ever had-and how much she loved them and how worried they must be. She wondered what they were doing to get her back, and whether anyone else even knew she was missing. She won dered if they’d told Ethan, busy with his summer college classes out in California, or Aunt Lucy and Uncle Luke and her cousins, Rose Ellen and Eric, back on the farm in western Iowa, or Uncle Wood and Aunt Chris and their kids in Sioux City. And Aunt Gwen, nearly a hundred now and fragile as blown glass, whom Dixie called the Family Treasure.

She wondered who would have the task of informing her mother, out there in her two-million-dollar house in California that had missed by an eyelash falling into the Pacific Ocean during the last El Niño. It had been a long time since she’d thought of her mother. Remembering her now made her think of Bronco’s mother, and how she hadn’t had a chance to ask him about her. She would, though, when he came back.

Right on cue she heard the faint crunch of footsteps on pine needles. Her heart gave a lurch. Hating the breathlessness of fear in her voice, she called out, “Bronco-is that you?”

“Yes, ma’am.” Horrible man-he sounded amused.

Clutching an edge of the blanket to her chin, Lauren peered around it. “About time,” she said sourly. She’d never let him know how glad she was to see him.

“Stopped off at the tent-thought you could use this.” And he thrust something at her-a bundle made up of a towel with the corners tied together. She hesitated, then took it from him and untied the knot. Inside was the green soap, still wrapped in its washcloth, and one of the breakfast coffee mugs. “For dipping,” Bronco explained with the casualness that comes from personal experience. “If you pour it over you, you don’t dirty the whole bucketful.”

Staring down at the bundle, she nodded, too confused by the mixture of gratitude and resentment inside her to speak.

After a long and strangely tense moment, Bronco set the bucket filled with crystal-clear water inside the enclosure, swung her saddlebags off his shoulder and dropped them on the pine needles beside it. Then he turned and walked away.

He’d just about made it back to the tent when she let out the first screech. He paused, listened, then walked on, smiling and shaking his head. He wouldn’t have thought such a well-brought-up lady lawyer would even know such words.

Chapter 7

He waited for her, pacing in the dappled shade in front of the tent where he could keep an eye on the blanketed enclosure, and using every ounce of willpower he could muster to keep himself from thinking about what was going on inside it.

He tried, instead, to think about what might be happening right now down there at the ranch, where the full forces of the federal government had one feisty little Irish lady holed up and surrounded, but that wasn’t much better. Thinking about that made him feel stirred up inside-nothing he could quite pin down, just out of sorts. Like a horse with cockleburrs in his tail. He tried telling himself it was the FBI that was making him so edgy-couldn’t trust those guys not to make a mess of things. But in his heart he knew he didn’t really trust his own people any better, and besides, what was bothering him went a whole lot deeper and was a lot more complicated than interagency rivalry. It had more to do with things like honor, loyalty and duty. The problem was, it wasn’t all that clear to him just now exactly where his lay, and whether in fact a couple of those might be coming into direct conflict with each other.

About one duty, though, he had no doubts whatsoever. He watched, outwardly relaxed, inwardly alert as she came toward him, picking her way barefoot across the pine-needle carpet, mindful, this time, of those lurking cones. She had her winter-grass hair twisted and tucked into a loose knot of some sort that clung to the nape of her neck in defiance of gravity, and her skin looked rosy and wholesome as a child’s.

And again he knew that peculiar sensation inside, that unfamiliar sense of awe.

“Feelin’ better?” he asked without expression.

Lauren grumpily muttered something about “freezing to death” as she brushed past him and into the tent. But there was sparkle in her eyes and an uncertain tilt about her lips, a kind of wariness, he thought, as if she was trying hard not to let on how good she felt.

He chuckled, because he knew firsthand how exhilarating a wash in ice-cold spring water could be. And then, of course, there was the way her cold-hardened nipples poked out sharp and clear against the material of her T-shirt, leaving him to imagine the firm round breast-shape underneath, and to think again those forbidden thoughts about how nicely they’d fill up his hands. He’d caught a whiff of the green-apple shampoo she’d used, and for just a moment, like a gust of a freshening breeze blowing through him, he felt what it would be like to hold her in his arms at that moment, with her body cool and soft and sweet as rain upon his skin. And then…to feel her grow soft and warm and pliant beneath him, like fine leather in the sun…

After she’d recovered from her bath and gotten herself dressed and her sores doctored and bandaged, Bronco took her with him down to the corral to see to the horses. He chose to take her there the long way around, through the timber and over the saddleback ridge, avoiding the cabin and the clearing, as well as the woods nearby where the men had their bivouacs. The way he saw it, the less those guys saw of his “prisoner,” the better.

Walking along with her through the woods, stepping in and out of sunshine, stirring up hot summery smells of pine sap and pollen dust, he couldn’t help but think again how enjoyable it might be to be doing so under different circumstances. Very different circumstances.

Ah, but it was only in his mind. And only for a moment. John Bracco was well aware that he had a job to do, one that to anyone other than an ex-army ranger might have seemed on the edge of impossible. His job was to keep this woman safe-keep her alive, if it came down to that-and somehow do that without letting her or anyone else know he was on her side. He couldn’t even let himself be too nice to her, lest she or McCullough start getting ideas.