left between her spine and the wall, he braced his arms on either side of her head. She turned her face away from his as she felt the crush of his body against hers, the touch of his breath against her cheek. God help her, she could never stay angry with him for long.
'I never said I'd be easy to get along with,' he said. 'You didn't have to say it. I knew you wouldn't be. '
He closed his eyes and kissed the wave of hair that had fallen over her temple, his mouth brushing against the soft skin just underneath her eye. Then his lips traced the line of her eyebrow, and she felt the touch of his tongue at the sleek point of it. She lifted her chin, seeking his mouth, and sighed a little as he kissed her with slow intensity. Silently they pressed closer to each other, clinging fiercely, hungering, prolonging the kiss until Ben made an uncomfortable sound and raised his head.
'I won't be able to stop,' he said, breathing hard.
'Ben, when are we going to be able to-'
'I wish I knew.' He looked pained. 'I can't visit you tonight. No one's going to sleep well tonight after the trouble this afternoon.'
'What's going to happen between us and the Johnsons?' she whispered, burrowing deeper into his embrace. 'I hate it that things have gone this far.'
'We'll have to take things as they come. I won't let my temper get out of hand again. It'll be easier now that our engagement is out in the open.'
'You have so many responsibilities. I wish I could make things easier for you. '
'I'll be fine.' He groaned and rested his chin on the top of her head. 'If only I didn't want you so much. I can't even look at you across the table without feeling
'It's just as difficult for me.'
'It's different for men, honey. Believe me.'
'I'm sorry,' she whispered with a smile.
'Addie!' came May's voice from inside the house, a signal they'd spent too much time alone on the porch.
'I'll be right in, Mama.' Addie shifted away from Ben, knowing she had to leave him. She missed the warmth of his body as soon as they parted. In a sudden movement she reached out and pulled herself against him, her grip feverishly tight. 'I can't let go of you.'
“Addie, ' he muttered, crushing her against his chest. She clung to him and welcomed the pain of it, needing to know that the violence of his love matched hers. 'I want you every minute. I miss being with you. I want to hold you for hours.' He bit her earlobe carefully and then buried his face in her hair. 'One more kiss. And then go in the house.'
Shivering, she offered her lips to him, and though the kiss started out tender, it ended in rough eagerness.
'Now, go,' he said, though his heart was hungry for a few more minutes with her.
'Don't be distant with me tomorrow,' she whispered. 'When other people are around, you never look at me as if you love me.'
'You wouldn't let me before. Remember? It wasn't my idea to keep our relationship a secret.'
'I was uncertain about how I felt,' she admitted. 'Weren't you?'
'Never. I've known for a long time how I feel about you.'
She felt overwhelmed by the knowledge of his love for her. It wasn't difficult to remember the days when she'd had no one but Leah. She remembered the rainy night when even Leah had been taken away from her. Now she had more than she'd ever dreamed of.
But like a shadow, the memories of Adeline crept through her mind, dark and indistinct, inescapable. For the rest of her life she would have that part of herself to contend with, and deep in the back of her mind there would always be an awareness of what she had once been. What had happened to make her that way? How could a daughter plot against her own father?
Suddenly she heard the echo of something Caroline had once said to her.
'I don't deserve you,' she said, and Ben's mouth twisted.
'Why in hell would you say that?'
'I've done terrible things in the past. Things I can never tell you about. I'm not half as good or kind as I should be, and-'
'I never expected you to be some plaster saint, Addie. And as for not deserving
Halfway irritated at his cavalier attitude toward her guilty conscience, she offered her cheek to him instead of her lips. Why, she'd been trying to unburden herself to him, and he was downright flippant about her worries!
Ben laughed softly as he lowered his mouth to her cheek and pressed a kiss there. 'Why the sudden change in temperature? You were warm enough a minute ago.'
'I was trying to tell you about my faults, and you just-'
'I don't care about your faults. The ones I already know about don't matter, and I'll discover the rest soon enough.'
'I'm trying to warn you-'
'That you're not what you seem on the surface?'
He smiled and settled his hands at her waist, pulling her closer. 'I know that, and a few other things as well. You like to misbehave sometimes… ah, that may be a fault of yours, Addie, but I happen to like it very much. And another one-in bed you're one of the greediest women I've ever known-'
'Ben!' she exclaimed, color flooding her face. '-but I happen to like that too. You have other faults which I enjoy equally. Should I continue or have I made my point?'
Addie pushed hard at his chest in an effort to break his hold on her. 'You're being crude and-'
'Addie!' They heard May calling again, this time more insistent than before. 'It's time to come in
'You heard her,' Addie said impatiently. 'Now, take your hands off me or we'll both get in trouble.'
He grinned and kissed the tip of her nose. 'That's a far cry from 'I can't let go of you.'' And he watched her with glowing eyes as she went into the house.
The next day Adeline discovered Diaz had left the ranch, despite his promise to talk to her before he went. No one could understand why she was so upset by his disappearance. When she started to complain to Ben as he strode out of Russell's office in the afternoon, he shrugged off Diaz's departure matter-of- factly.
'Most cowhands have to pick up and leave when they start to feel too settled-in. They're independent in a crazy way. They like to look out at the world from their saddles. The men out here can't stand any way of life that seems too civilized. They like things rough. They like their independence.'
'What about you?' Addie demanded. 'Are you going to pick up and leave when you start to feel shackled by a string of fences and a wedding band?'
'No, ma'am,' he assured her promptly, his eyes twinkling. 'I'm not your typical cowhand.'
Her eyes made a pointed survey of his dirt-encrusted boots, worn-out Levi's, and blue cotton