âWhat exactly is it you suspect me of, Mr. Kinross?â
Rebeccaâs face was flushed.
âYouâre angry with me, and quite rightly.â Brod dropped his hand off the rail and stood straight. Another foot and their bodies would be brushing. âFrom where Iâm standing I think you might be trying to steal my fatherâs heart.â
It was a mystery to Rebecca how she kept her cool. âAll Iâm asking, Brod, is you give me the benefit of the doubt before starting to label me âadventuress.ââ
âMost women canât resist being the object of desire.â
She felt as if they were engaged in some ritual dance, circling, circling. âThatâs something I know nothing about.â Her simmering temper was making her eyes sparkle.
âQuite impossible, Rebecca.â His lips curved. âIf you put on your dowdiest dress and cut off that waterfall of hair men would still want you.â
She had the disturbing sensation Brod had reached out and touched her. Run his fingers over her skin.
Dear Reader,
Ever since I can remember, our legendary Outback has had an almost mystical grip on me. The cattlemen have become cultural heroes, figures of romance, excitement and adventure. These tough, dynamic, sometimes dangerous men carved out their destinies in this new world of Australia as they drove deeper and deeper into the uncompromising Wild Heart with its extremes of stark grandeur and bleached cruelty.
The type of man I like to write about is a unique and definable breedârugged, masculine and full of vigor. This Outback man is strong yet sensitive, courageous enough to battle all the odds in order to claim the woman of his dreams.
A Wife at Kimbara is the first of three linked books where I explore the friendships, loves, rivalries and reconciliations between two great Australian pioneering families. They are truly LEGENDS OF THE OUTBACK.
Margaret Way
BROD strode from the blinding light of the compound into the welcoming gloom of the old homesteadâs hallway. His whole body was sheened with sweat and his denim shirt covered in dust and grass stains. He and his men had been up since dawn driving a herd of uncooperative cattle from drying Egret Creek to Three Moons, a chain of billabongs some miles off.
It had been a long hot slog filled with plenty of curses and frustration as several beasts in turn tried to break away from the herd. Dumber than dumb in some situations cattle had a decided ability to hold their own in the bush.
He could do with a good scrub but there was scant time for that. His schedule was as hectic as ever. Heâd almost forgotten, the station vet was flying in this afternoon to give another section of the herd a general check over. That was about three oâclock. He had time to grab a sandwich and a cup of tea and return to the holding yard theyâd set up under the gum trees.
Now he focused on the stack of mail neatly piled on top of the rough pine bench that served as a console. No Kimbara this he thought with bleak humour. Definitely not the splendid historic homestead of his birth.
His father resided on Kimbara. Stewart Kinross. Lord of the Desert. Leaving his only son to slave his guts out running the cattle chain while he claimed all the glory. Not that there werenât quite a few people in the know. Not that it bothered him all that much he thought swivelling to throw his black Akubra onto a peg on the wall. It landed unerringly on the target as it always did but he paid no attention. His day would come. He and Ally together had quite a stake in the diverse Kinross enterprises with ancestral Kimbara, the flagship of the Kinross cattle empire the jewel in the crown.
Grandad Kinross, legendary hero, had seen to that, never blind to his son Stewartâs true nature. Andrew Kinross was long gone while his grandson lived a near outcast on Marlu for the past five years. In fact it had been since Alison, hiding her heartache over the breakup of her passionate romance with Rafe Cameron, left home for the Big Smoke, the name the Outback bestowed on big bustling cosmopolitan Sydney.
Alison said then she wanted to try her hand at acting like their celebrated Aunt Fee who had taken off at eighteen full of wild dreams of making a brilliant career for herself on the London stage. And wonder of wonders Fee had actually succeeded despite a well publicised out of control love life. Now she was back on Kimbara writing her sensational memoirs.
Fee was quite a character, too famous to qualify for black sheep of the family but with two big-time broken marriages behind her and the legacy of an exquisite English rose of a daughter. Lady Francesca de Lyle, no less. His and Allyâs cousin and from what theyâd seen of her as good as she was beautiful. Couldnât have been easy with the arty oversexed Fee for a mother.
Now Fee was telling all, convinced her biography would be a huge success in the hands of one Rebecca Hunt, an award-winning young journalist from Sydney with another well received biography of a retired Australian diva under her belt.