“You’re here for a shotgun wedding …?” she asked, her brow raised.
“Something like that,” he admitted.
Stephanie shook her head. “Thanks for stopping by, Alec. You’re an honorable man. But your baby is safe in my hands. I’ll drop you a line once it’s born.”
“Not quite the way things are going to happen,” he said as he stared down at her with intense purpose.
“Get this straight in your mind, Stephanie. You are marrying me.”
She squinted into his dark, intense eyes. “That was a joke, right?”
“Am I laughing?”
Stephanie Ryder felt a telltale breeze puff against the skin of her chest. She glanced down to discover a button had popped on her stretch cotton blouse. The lace of her white bra and the curve of her breasts were clearly visible in the gap.
She crossed her arms to block the view, arching a mocking brow at the man silhouetted in the tack shed door. “You, Alec Creighton, are no gentleman.”
Wearing a dress shirt, charcoal slacks and black loafers that were at odds with the rustic setting of a working horse stable, his gaze moved indolently from the wall of her forearm back to her eyes. “It took you twenty-four hours to figure that out?”
“Hardly,” she scoffed. “But you keep reinforcing the impression.”
He took a step forward. “Are you still mad?” She swiftly redid the button and smoothed her blouse. “I was never mad.”
Disappointed, yes. Wesley Harrison had been inches away from kissing her last night when Alec had interrupted them.
Wesley was a great guy. He was good-looking, smart and funny, and only a year younger than Stephanie. He’d been training at Ryder Equestrian Center since June, and he’d been flirting with her since they met.
“He’s too young for you,” said Alec.
“We’re the same age.” Practically.
The jut of Alec’s brow questioned her honesty, but he didn’t call her on it.
With his trim hair, square chin, slate-gray eyes and instructions to go through her equestrian business records with a fine-tooth comb, she should have found his presence intimidating. But Stephanie had spent most of her life handling two older brothers and countless unruly jumping horses. She wasn’t about to get rattled by a hired corporate gun.
“Shouldn’t you be working?” she asked.
“I need your help.”
It was her turn to quirk a brow. Financial management was definitely not her forte. “With what?”
“Tour of the place.”
She reached for the cordless phone on the workbench next to Rosie-Jo’s tack. “No problem.” She pressed speed dial three.
“What are you doing?”
The numbers bleeped swiftly in her ear. “Calling the stable manager.”
Alec closed the distance between them. “Why?”
“To arrange for a tour.” He lifted the phone from her hand and pressed the off button. “You can give me a tour.”
“I don’t have time.”
“You are still mad at me.”
“No, I’m not.”
She wasn’t thrilled to have him here. Who would be? He’d be her houseguest for the next few days, and he was under orders from her brothers to streamline the family’s corporation, Ryder International. She was a little worried, okay a lot worried, that he’d find fault with her management of the Ryder Equestrian Center.
Stephanie didn’t skimp on quality, which meant she didn’t skimp on cost, either. She was training world-class jumpers. And competing at that level demanded the best in everything; horses, feed, tack, trainers, vets and facilities. She was accustomed to defending her choices to her brothers. She wasn’t crazy about defending them to a stranger.
“Are you proud of the place?” he asked.
“Absolutely,” she answered without hesitation.
“Then show it to me,” he challenged.
She hesitated, searching her mind for a dignified out.
He waited, the barest hint of a smirk twitching his mouth.
Finally she squared her shoulders, straightened to her full five foot five and met his gaze head-on. “You, Alec Creighton,” she repeated, “are no gentleman.”