“No,” she said, stubborn to the end. “I’m not leaving you here by yourself.”
He looked into her fierce eyes and felt more than a physical arousal. Far more. “Emily.”
“I mean, what if it’s another woman in the Casserole Brigade?” she asked.
“Then maybe I’ll get something good for dinner.”
“And if she wants something in return?”
He smiled. “Depends on how good the casserole is,” he teased to lighten the mood.
Her eyes narrowed. “That’s not even funny.”
The driver of the truck walked in wearing jeans and a police sweatshirt, hoodie up, badge and gun on his hip, carrying a brown bag in one hand, the leash to a young pit bull in the other.
Wyatt recognized him as one of the players on the police team that he occasionally played flag football against. The guy worked for the county on Highway Patrol.
“We’re just closing up here,” Emily told him. “Do you have an emergency?”
The guy gave a nod to Wyatt as he came up to the counter and leaned on it casually, smiling at Emily. “No emergency,” he said. “Just been hearing about our new vet in town. You’re as pretty as they say.”
Wyatt mentally rolled his eyes and glanced at Emily, figuring she’d be doing the same as she had a very accurate bullshit meter.
She was smiling back at the guy. WTF?
“That’s sweet,” she said.
Sweet? How about stupidly cheesy?
The cop removed his dark sunglasses and pushed back his hoodie. “Evan Russell,” he said, and held out his hand.
“Emily Stevens.” She shook the guy’s hand and looked at Wyatt. “And this is Dr. Stone.”
Evan gave Wyatt a cursory nod. “Brought you something, Dr. Pretty,” he said to Emily. “I’ve got a ranch full of animals at home, so I thought knowing the pretty vet might come in handy.” He set the bag in front of her.
“A bribe?” she asked.
He smiled. “Open it.”
She opened the bag, inhaled deeply, and closed her eyes on a blissful sigh. “Chocolate chip cookies. Heaven.”
Evan smiled. “There’s more where those came from.”
“I bet,” Wyatt muttered.
Emily looked at him. Evan didn’t take his eyes off Emily. “So how’s Sunshine been treating you so far?” he asked her.
“Well, the traffic’s not as bad as it was in L.A.”
Evan chuckled. They all knew traffic was nonexistent in Sunshine. Well, except on the days that the errant cow escaped a ranch and stood in the middle of the road. “I think we’ve got more to offer you than better traffic. You ride?”
“You mean motorcycles?” she asked.
He chuckled again, and Wyatt had to resist the odd urge to put a fist through the guy’s mouth.
“Horses,” Evan said.
“Oh.” Emily smiled. “No. Not yet.”
“I’ll take you. You live nearby?”
Wyatt shifted. If she told the guy where she lived, he was going to have to kill him.
And then her.
“Not too far,” she said, reminding Wyatt that she was no pushover. She was in fact, a city girl, smart. Wary. Tough.
But so was Evan, and he wasn’t easily deterred. “Name the day,” he said.
“I’ll think about it,” Emily said.
Evan nodded, and gestured to the bag of cookies. “Enjoy.”
“Thanks,” she said. “I will.”
He spent an extra few beats holding her gaze, and then walked out.
Emily dug into the bag and took a bite of cookie, sighed in pleasure, and then offered Wyatt one.
“You shouldn’t eat stuff from people you don’t know,” Wyatt said.
She laughed. She laughed so hard she choked on the damn cookie and he had to pound her on the back and bring her a glass of water.
When she could breathe, she grinned up at him.
“You ever worry about eating the things all those women bring you?”
“No,” he admitted. “But it seems different when it’s a guy.”
She just kept grinning. “Guess you’re not the only one getting in on the Casserole Brigade, Dr. Sexy.”
“Dr. Sexy?”
“Oh, like you don’t know it.” She took another bite of cookie.
“You didn’t give him the almost boyfriend line.”
Emily cocked her head at him. “You’re jealous.”
“Bullshit.”
“Good,” she said. “Because I’m perfectly willing to share.” She opened the bag and held it out to him, smiling guilelessly.
He stared at her, realizing they were on entirely different pages, and found himself laughing. “You don’t have a clue,” he said softly.
Her smiled faded. “A clue of what?”
He leaned in close, but not to take a fucking cookie. “That you’re the Dr. Sexy.”
The next morning Emily got up early to waste a little time online angsting over the fact that she’d upped her bid on Wyatt yet again.
She needed an intervention, she thought later as she walked into Belle Haven and, as she had since Jade had been gone, found Dell standing behind the counter, pulling out his hair. “Whatever happened to your three leads?” she asked.
He shoved his fingers through his hair. “First Choice told me there wasn’t enough money in the world. Second Choice told me that she’d love to . . . except she didn’t want to.”
Emily laughed. “And your last choice?”
Dell blew out a breath. “She’ll be here soon.”
“What does Jade say about all this?”
“She doesn’t know,” Dell said. “If I told her, she’d be home already, and I don’t want her to miss out on time with her family because of this.”
Emily smiled. “You’re sweet.”
Dell’s mouth turned up at the corners. “Hope you still think so after you have to take your shift back here.”
But she never got to take her turn behind the counter at all. Adam strode in, spoke to Dell for a terse minute, and then both men looked at her. “Field trip time,” Dell said.
“Where to?” she asked.
“Rob from Camarillo Ranch just called,” Adam said. “They need help. Three of their horses got spooked and tangled themselves in a downed barb wire fence. They need medical care ASAP.”
“It’s a good one for you to observe,” Dell told Emily. “It’ll give you a real taste of what’s out there for this type of practice.”
Camarillo Ranch was sixty miles north, and Dell contracted with them as their mobile vet care. Emily looked at her watch. “If we take a truck and go now, we could be there in an hour and a half—”
“One of the horses doesn’t have an hour and a half,” Adam said. “Brady’s readying the chopper right now. Wyatt’s already over there.”
The airport was literally across the street. “Grab my ready bag from the staff room and run,” Dell said.
She stared at him. “You want me to go in the helicopter and assist Adam and Wyatt in a horse rescue?”
“I want you to observe, and learn,” he said. “Unless you’d rather stay here and run this entire center by yourself while I go.”
Hell no. “But—”
“I’m offering, because it’s a great opportunity for you, and also with Adam, Wyatt, and Jade gone, I shouldn’t leave the center. You’ve got three seconds before I change my mind.”
Emily whirled and ran for the staff room and heard Dell’s low laugh behind her.
Twenty minutes later she was in the air, in her first chopper ride. It was terrifying and glorious at the same time. Adam was across from her. Wyatt sat next to her—Mr. Lived In Twenty Countries And Traveled The World Over—looking cool and calm.
Emily tried to look calm and cool, too. She failed. “Holy cow,” she whispered to herself as the chopper banked a hard right.
Across from her Adam grinned, and so did Wyatt, making her remember her headset.
The three guys could hear every word she uttered.
She could only see the back of Brady’s head but somehow she knew he was grinning as broad as Adam. She couldn’t find it in herself to care that they were laughing at her. She was a city girl, through and through. As a kid, once in a blue moon her parents would drive her and Sara to the mountains for the day.