It was gonna be one of those nights. Violet could feel the anticipation simmering in the hum of voices from the bleachers, see it in the quivering muscles of horses and bulls, the glint in the contestants’ eyes. From the soft, golden stillness of the evening air to the mouthwatering scent of hamburgers grilling at the concession stand, it was all movie-scene perfect. Magic time.
The cowboys rose to the occasion. Every one of them spurred and roped and wrestled like it was the last round of the National Finals. Every horse bucked like it was determined to kick the highest, score the most points. Even the buck offs were spectacular. The crowd hung on every jump, screamed and groaned and cheered like each contestant was their only child. And then the bulls rumbled into the chutes.
Through it all, Violet was intensely aware of Joe’s note in her breast pocket. Vince Grant wants video of Dirt Eater. Here’s his email. Just like that, Joe had put a lifetime dream within reach. A Jacobs bull bucking at the National Finals. It was like being picked to play on the Olympic basketball team. Joe had warned her it was only a chance, not a foregone conclusion, but Violet refused to be discouraged. Dirt Eater was good enough to be invited to the biggest rodeo of ’em all. Any fool would know the minute they saw him buck. Vince was no fool, and he would see Dirt Eater thanks to Joe.
Violet’s pulse thumped in time to the heavy rock beat the rodeo announcer’s girlfriend cued up to usher in the bull riding. Joe appeared beside her, dancing from foot to foot and shaking his hands at his sides, so charged with energy that tingles swept over Violet’s skin from mere proximity.
When the gate in front of them swung open, Joe looked up and gave her a smile that turned the tingles into a heat wave. “Party time.”
He bounded in to the announcer’s introduction and the roar of the fans. Caught up in the moment, Violet spurred Cadillac and galloped around the arena to slide to a stop in her usual position. She ignored Cole’s What the hell? look. Once in a while, a girl had to cut loose.
The bulls fed off the electricity arcing around the arena, launching their muscle-bound bodies into space, twisting, rolling, flinging dust and riders and glistening streamers of snot into the night sky. It was a beautiful thing. Joe was a flash of constant motion—darting, dancing, dodging horns and hooves and flying bodies, his eyes gleaming with an exhilaration so potent, Violet got high on the secondhand thrill. Damn, it must be something to be able to move like that.
The fifth rider out was a rookie from San Angelo. Tough kid. The kind that never let go, even when his heels were kissing the clouds and his head skimming the dirt. The bull whipped around hard to the right and jerked him down into the well on the inside of the spin. His hand wedged in the rope, and in a blink the kid was hung up on the side of a ton of stomping, hooking bovine.
Hank slapped the bull on the head as Joe threw himself onto the bull’s shoulders opposite the rider, one hand grabbing the kid’s elbow to hold him up, the other hand catching the tail of the rope and yanking. The wrap came free as the bull leapt again. The rock hard mass of its shoulder slammed into Joe and sent him flying as the cowboy tucked and rolled and hit his feet running for the fence. Joe landed on his butt and skidded across the dirt. The bull stopped, tossed his head in a gesture of pure, arrogant Take that!, then sauntered out the exit gate.
For an instant, the crowd was silent. Then Joe popped to his feet and pumped an arm over his head and the grandstand exploded, wave after thundering wave of applause washing over the arena. Violet shivered in pure delight. Nights like this should never end.
As the announcer wrapped up the show, wishing the crowd a good night and safe travels, Joe threw his head back and howled like a wolf, thumping a fist on his chest. “Now that was a rodeo!”
Violet laughed as she stepped off her horse. Hot damn. What a show. Even Cole was smiling. She peeled off her chaps and hung them on her saddle, but as she stepped toward the gate, Joe snagged her around the waist and spun her into his arms.
“Come dancing with me, Violet.”
Temptation tugged at her sleeve, whispered in her ear. How long had it been since she’d danced until closing time? She heard a wolf whistle and a couple of hoots and tried to wriggle free. “I can’t. Beni—”
“He can stay the night with us,” her mother called down from the announcer’s stand above them, where she was packing away stopwatches and clipboards. “You go. Have fun.”
Violet’s pulse jumped at the prospect, her system already revved from the rodeo. She looked down at her blue shirt and dusty jeans. “I’m not—”
“You can be by the time I get out of the shower,” Joe said.
“But I have to help—”
“Cole, take Violet’s horse,” her mother ordered. “Y’all can manage without her tonight.”
“Yes, ma’am.” Cole plucked the reins out of Violet’s hand as he passed.
Joe planted his index finger under her chin and pushed it up to look her in the eye. “Get your dancin’ shoes on, Violet. We’re gonna show this town how it’s done.”
* * *
Driving one of the Jacobs Livestock pickups, Joe bypassed the bar designated as the site of the official rodeo after-party and headed across town to a low-slung concrete block building that could have doubled as a bomb shelter, which was probably the only reason it had outlasted decades of rowdy cowboys. The infamous Bootlegger.
Violet shot him a baffled look as he pulled into a parking space. “How did you know about this place?”
“Hank told me, on orders from his sister.”
Violet laughed. “Of course. This is where Melanie and I used to go when we had serious trouble to get into.”
“Then we’re in the right place,” Joe said, with a smile so full of the devil it was probably illegal in some parts of the Bible Belt.
She stepped out into the silky evening air, almost cool enough to raise goose bumps on her bare arms. She’d changed into her best jeans and a sleeveless white blouse, and added some turquoise and silver jewelry. Boots would’ve been smarter, but she’d opted for flat black canvas shoes that made the most of the small difference between her height and Joe’s. Once in a while it was nice to feel like the girl, and she’d come prepared this weekend, not knowing what Joe’s idea of courting would necessitate.
Joe grabbed her hand and towed her through the front door, pausing just inside. Not much to see—scarred tables, scuffed floor, dingy walls. The Bootlegger never had pretended to be about anything but drinking and dancing, and since it was after eleven, the crowd had a sizable head start on them in the drinking department. Violet scanned the mass of humanity. Plenty of cowboy hats, plenty of familiar faces. Joe plowed through the crowd, dragging her in his wake. At the bar, he waved a hand at the nearest bartender, pointed at a beer and held up two fingers. The bartender nodded and grabbed a pair of glasses. While Joe dug in his pocket for cash, Violet took the opportunity to enjoy the view. He was wearing his cowboy hat, thank God. That haircut was worse than the scalping she’d given Beni with the clippers from the As Seen on TV store. Joe had worn his boots and the same jeans from Tuesday night that made his butt look so spectacular, but he hadn’t bothered with a belt and buckle or tucked in his short-sleeved sports shirt.
Wait a minute. Violet inspected him waist to collar, then leaned to the side and craned her neck to examine his chest. Not a logo in sight.
“What?” he asked.
She plucked at the silky sleeve of his shirt. “I thought you didn’t buy clothes.”
“It looked like something Wyatt would wear on a date.” He smoothed his palm over the geometric black and turquoise print. “I figured I should get something nice if I was gonna take you out dancing.”
“Oh. Thank you.”
As if he’d bought it for her. But, well, he had, and it was the sweetest damn thing any man had done for her in a very long time—except maybe the Wonder Woman underwear, and that was…well, not exactly sweet, but special. Which pretty much described Joe. At least the version of him that had been hanging around the last couple of days.
The band kicked into a better-than-average rendition of Toby Keith’s “Shoulda Been a Cowboy,” and the thump of the bass sent energy pulsing through her muscles. When the bartender plunked their beers down, Joe paid without letting go of her hand. He passed one beer to her, then took a big gulp of his own. She did the same, the first taste so cold, crisp, and perfect that she took a second, bigger gulp. She started to lick a dab of foam from the corner of her mouth, but Joe beat her to it, his tongue flicking over her upper lip. Then he moved to her ear and nipped at the lobe.
“You smell like apples. Makes me want to nibble.”
Before she could catch her breath, he kissed her. She tensed instinctively, thinking of all those watching eyes. Then she remembered she wasn’t going to worry about them anymore and kissed him back, savoring the cool-on-warm tanginess of the beer on his tongue. He pulled her closer, hip to hip, and she had to remind herself to watch where her hand wandered because she probably shouldn’t grab his butt in public. Especially this public, with all the curious eyes and wagging tongues. She dragged herself out of the kiss, resenting every millimeter of the retreat.
“I think we’re warmed up now.” Joe took another big gulp of his beer and set the glass on the bar.
Violet followed suit. Then he was off again, dragging her onto the dance floor and into a whirl of perpetual motion. The man just never stopped. At the beginning of the fourth—or maybe fifth—song, Joe twirled her, caught her close, and rocked her into a quick two-step. Violet’s head was spinning faster than the music, but she matched his rhythm without missing a beat.
He grinned his approval. “You’re good.”
“Pfft! Down here we learn the two-step in the crib.”
“God bless Texas,” he said, and twirled her again.
Like in the arena, Joe was a step quicker than anyone on the floor, his hands sure and strong, spinning her, swinging her, those laughing green eyes daring her to strut her stuff. She held back a little at first, self-conscious, but with every twirl her give-a-shit level slipped a tiny bit more until finally she just let go. The hell with it. Let the devil lead her where he would.
And lead he did. It was like jumping feet first into a tornado, bolts of lightning crackling around her, through her, sending her nervous system into overload. She was surprised her skin didn’t glow every place he’d touched her. If it did, she would have illuminated the entire bar, because there wasn’t a whole lot of her Joe hadn’t managed to brush up against. As the band crashed to the end of “Sweet Home Alabama” he spun her out, then back, and caught her tight against him on the final note, a whole lot of her parts pressed up nice and cozy against a whole lot of his. Hers lit up like a neon sign, flashing Take me now.
“Time for a break, folks,” the lead singer declared. “But we’ll be back for one last set.”
Joe’s hand splayed over her lower back, holding her so close she could see the flecks of gold around the irises of his eyes. He brushed a kiss over her mouth as the other dancers melted away toward the bar or the tables.
“Thirsty?”
“I could use a glass of water.” The colder the better. With a bucket of ice on the side to dump down the back of her shirt. She suspected it might evaporate, and only a fraction of her elevated body heat was due to exertion. Joe kissed her again, lingering for a moment, his hand curving her hips into his. Then he stepped back and all those parts of hers whimpered in protest at his absence. He steered her over to a narrow counter along the wall and commandeered the lone empty stool. “I’ll be right back.”
Then he was off, weaving and dodging through the crowd like it was an obstacle course he had to conquer. Violet grabbed a napkin from a chrome dispenser and dabbed at her forehead. Her feet throbbed like she’d run a half marathon, and the band still had another set to go.
Without Joe to overwhelm her senses, her awareness of the rest of the world seeped back in. Oh Lord. When had those three guys come in? Some of Delon’s buddies. At least one of them would be on the phone to him before closing time—assuming he wasn’t too busy with Stacy Lyn to answer. She met their gazes head on, chin up, challenging. They looked away first.
She searched Joe out in the mob and watched as cowboys passed by, clapped his shoulder, shook his hand, probably offered to buy him a beer from the way he shook his head and waved them off. There was more of the same as he edged through the crowd. He smiled and spoke to all of them, but kept moving, as if getting back to Violet was his one and only goal. When he handed her the plastic cup of ice water, she guzzled most of it without taking a breath. Lord, did that hit the spot. Joe skimmed his hand up to lift the hair from the back of her neck, his fingertips cold and damp. The brush of them sent goose bumps racing over her skin. She shifted, acutely aware that if he looked down, he might see what else had puckered.
He touched the rim of his glass to her bottom lip, like a toast. “Having fun?”
“Boy howdy.”
He laughed. She gulped down the last of her water. Joe did the same, stacked his empty plastic cup with Violet’s, and set them on the counter behind her, then nudged a space for his thighs between her knees, bracing his hands on either side of her. “You up for more?”
Oh yeah. An image of what they could do in that position if they were alone sent heat searing through her. Joe smiled as if he read her mind, his eyes glowing like a green light on the highway straight to hell. He had her surrounded, but he wasn’t touching her except for those two throbbing spots where the insides of her thighs pressed against his. The rest of her body was one giant nerve, quivering in anticipation.
Joe trailed his fingers down her bare arm and wrapped them around her wrist as the band blasted out the opening of the next song. “Time for round two.”
He yanked her off the stool and onto the dance floor and kept her there for every single song. Two-step, swing, the Cotton-Eyed Joe—they did it all. Her feet were screaming for mercy by the time the band polished off a foot-stompin’ extended version of a Turnpike Troubadours song.
The lead singer mopped his face with a towel, then said, “Hate to tell ya’, folks, but it’s time to say good night. Grab your Mr. Right—or Mr. Right Now—and let’s slow it on down for the last song.”
Not just any song. The most disgustingly romantic love song Kenny Chesney had ever recorded, and that was saying something. Violet didn’t resist as Joe molded her against him, hands on her hips, just enough taller that she could rest her cheek on his shoulder. Finally, he slowed down. Way down, the shift and sway of their bodies producing a nearly unbearable friction where they rubbed up against each other. He started to hum along, then sing, his voice low and amazingly good, vibrating against her cheek. She tilted her head back in surprise.
“What?” he asked.
Violet stared at him a beat, then said, “Nothing.”
He reached up to push a strand of damp hair off her forehead. The scratch on his wrist looked sore, puckered, and red. Without thinking, she brushed her lips across it. Joe stumbled slightly, eyes going dark.
“I was just kissing it better,” she said, embarrassed.
His smile came slow, so sweet it made her ache. “Then I expect it’ll be healed by morning.”
He slid a hand up to the nape of her neck, tilting her cheek back onto his shoulder. She closed her eyes and let herself be swallowed up by the moment—the two of them alone on the crowded floor with Joe’s arms strong around her, the lean grace of his body hard against hers, his fingers stroking circles low on her back and his voice singing softly in her ear, a song about how he could never let her go. The hunger hit her low and hard, an ache so powerful her hands clenched in his shirt. Her shirt. His arms tightened in response, and he brushed a kiss across her eyebrow, nearly taking out her knees.
Dear sweet Lord, she wanted him, with an intensity unlike anything she’d ever experienced. And with Beni safely stowed in her mother’s camper for the night, there was no reason she couldn’t have him.