'You'll need to practice if you want to win,' Mary Ellen said. 'There are a few single women from town who are entering. Ringers, I say. They'll be tough to beat You can practice with us.'

'Or you can get one of those dishy bachelors from Bachelor Creek Lodge to help you,' Allison teased. 'You're staying there, aren't you?'

Perrie nodded.

'Lucky girl.'

Perrie arched her eyebrow. 'Lucky?'

'That's bachelor central. Three of the dreamiest guys in Alaska and they live up there.'

'If you're counting Burdy as a bachelor dreamboat, you've definitely been in the wilderness too long.'

'Oh, no. Not that Burdy fellow. I'm talking about Joe Brennan and Kyle Hawkins. And there's another one, but he just got married-Tanner is his name, I think. Linda had a date with Joe Brennan the night we arrived here.'

Perrie tried to look indifferent but her interest was piqued. Leaning forward, she asked, 'He didn't waste much time, did he?'

'He took Allison out the night after that,' Linda countered.

'He asked me out, too,' Mary Ellen admitted, 'but I had a previous engagement.'

'He was really charming, but not the marrying type,' Linda commented.

'Charming,' Perrie repeated.

'He's just so sweet and attentive,' Linda continued. 'And funny. And cute, too. He has this way about him. It's hard to explain, but it makes you want to tear off his clothes and drag him into bed.'

'Mel Gibson eyes,' Mary Ellen observed.

'A little boy in the body of a man,' Allison added.

'But definitely scared of commitment. A one-date wonder.'

'Then you both went to…' Perrie couldn't finish the question, a strange surge of jealousy stopping her words.

'Of course not!' Linda cried.

'Though I was tempted,' Allison added. 'Those eyes of his could melt a girl's panties.'

Perrie scolded herself silently. What right did she have to be jealous? Or envious? She'd pegged Joe Brennan as a ladies' man from the moment she'd met him. A confirmed bachelor who used his charm and good looks to make women weak in the knees and breathless with adoration. Even she hadn't been immune.

At least she was smart enough to see Brennan for what he was. And clever enough to keep her distance. Though it hadn't been too hard, considering she hadn't seen much of him lately.

Linda laughed. 'It took Allison about three days to evaluate every bachelor within a twenty-mile radius. She's got this down to a science.'

'I believe in being thorough,' Allison said. 'After all, I'm the one who has to look at him across the dinner table. I only want the best.'

'The only one she can't figure out is Hawk,' Linda teased.

Perrie glanced up from her notes. 'Kyle Hawkins? Brennan's partner?'

'They call him Hawk. And he's the only man who hasn't said a single word to her,' Mary Ellen said. 'He reminds me of Gregory Peck in that old movie… I can't remember the name.'

'Mary Ellen never remembers the names of movies. And if you ask me, that Hawk is a little too quiet,' Linda said. 'Maybe he's hiding a tortured soul.'

'I haven't met him yet,' Perrie admitted. 'I'm not sure I want to. Brennan is enough to deal with.'

'You're a reporter,' Allison said. 'Find out all about him and then tell us.'

Perrie slowly closed her notepad. 'I'll make you a deal,' she said with a conspiratorial grin. 'You teach me how to chop wood and walk on snowshoes and drive a dogsled, and I'll report back on the mysterious Mr. Hawk.'

Mary Ellen giggled. 'This is going to be so much fun! Just like that old movie where the three girls go to Rome and find love. The one with the fountain? Only this is Alaska and there are four of us… and no fountain.'

'I'm not in this to find a husband,' Perrie quickly explained. 'All I'm interested in is the trip out of Muleshoe.'

Joe pulled the front door of the lodge closed and dropped his sunglasses over his eyes against the sundrenched snow. The days were getting longer and the bitter cold that had marked all of January was beginning to release its grip. It would be months until the river broke up and spring came, but they were halfway through winter now and there was an end in sight.

A curse split the silent air and he turned and glanced up at Perrie's cabin. He'd spent the past five days flying supplies into the bush and hadn't had time to check on how she was doing. She and Burdy had become friends and the old guy had taken her into town for meals, but beyond that, Perrie Kincaid had been keeping herself busy with her own activities.

To tell the truth, she wasn't nearly as much trouble as he first thought she'd be. She'd obviously come to the conclusion that there was no way she'd be able to get out of Muleshoe and had decided to make the best of her free time. He casually strolled up the path toward the cabins, a satisfied smile curling his lips. He had won this little battle between the two of them and he couldn't wait to gloat.

As the cabin came into view, he caught sight of Perrie, lying in the snow, her feet up in the air. A stab of concern pierced his mind and he wondered if she'd really injured herself this time. But then he noticed she was wearing snowshoes.

'Hey!' he called. 'Are you all right?'

Perrie turned over on her side and regarded him with thinly veiled hostility. Her hair was caked in snow and her face was wet. She looked as if she had taken a header into a snowbank. 'Go away!' she cried. 'Leave me alone!'

Joe stood over her and couldn't help but laugh. She looked so darn cute, all covered with snow and ready to explode with anger. 'What the hell are you doing?' he asked, holding out his hand to yank her to her feet. He turned her around and brushed the snow off her backside. It wasn't until he'd pulled his hand away that he realized how intimate the contact actually had been.

'I'm practicing,' Perrie said, twisting away from him and finishing the job herself.

'Falling into the snow?'

'No, Mr. Smarty Britches, snowshoeing. It's just that these things are so big, and I'm supposed to try to move as fast as I can, but my feet get all tangled up. It's like running in swim flippers.'

'Why do you have to move fast?' He paused, then held up his hand to stop her reply. 'Let me guess. I assume you aren't planning to run a footrace with a stampeding moose, so I'm going to have to surmise that you've decided to walk to Fairbanks?'

She tried to move away from him, but one of her snowshoes caught the edge of the other and she began to lose her balance again. He reached out and grabbed her elbow, but as soon as she righted herself, she pushed him away. 'I'm going to enter the Muleshoe Games next weekend. And I'm going to win that trip to Cooper Hot Springs. And once I do, I'll be out of Muleshoe for good.'

Joe laughed, the sound echoing through the silent woods. 'You're going to win the brides' competition? You're not even a bride-to-be.'

Perrie bristled. 'I'm a single woman. And I'm a reasonably fit individual. I work out… sometimes. You don't think I can win?'

'Not a chance, Kincaid.'

Perrie bent down and fumbled with the leather straps on the snowshoes. She lost her balance again and tumbled back into the snow, but this time he didn't help her up. She wrestled with the snowshoes until she'd managed to pull both of them off, then scrambled to her feet. 'You just watch me,' she said, her chin tipped up defiantly. 'I've been practicing splitting wood and I'm getting pretty damn good at it. I've actually hit the log twice with the ax and I've only been practicing for an hour.'

She stalked around the side of the cabin and returned with an ax and a log as if to prove her point. He watched her push the log into a snowdrift before she hefted the ax up on her shoulder.

'Be careful with that,' he warned. 'Should you be doing that with your sore arm?'

'My arm is fine. Besides, I know what I'm doing.'

'You should set that up on top of a harder surface before you-'

Вы читаете Dodging Cupid's Arrow
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