âYou trying to bribe me?â Austen asked in an unsteady voice.
Gillian smiled, slow and a little unsteady herself. âIs it working?â
Gently he lowered her to the ground, and his mouth took hers. It was a long and hungry kiss that involved grinding tongues and grinding hips, and when his hands touched her breasts, they werenât so gentle, werenât so tender. This was pain, the most beautiful sort of pain. Desire. She caught her lip between her teeth, silencing her cries, silencing her moans.
Gillian had waited years for this, dreamed of it, imagined it a hundred different waysâbeing with Austen. But this surpassed any image, any idea sheâd ever had. He was here. With her. He was finally hereâ¦and would he stay? Would she want him to?
Dear Reader,
Bon Jovi has a very cool song, âWho Says You Canât Go Home?â As I wrote this story, the melody and lyrics kept playing in my head. Austen Hart ran away to his namesake (sort of) town, Austin, Texas, trying to erase his heritage, but no matter how fast he ran, it still haunted him. The image of who we are as we grow up is a powerful thing, not easily forgotten, and it wasnât until Austen found love that he made peace with who he wasâpartly thanks to our heroine, local girl Gillian Wanamaker.
Writing about Texas is always fun for me. I get to use yâall and fixing to and all those great phrases that I grew up with when I was just a young whippersnapper. Whenever I get on the phone and use the word yâall people stop, and then I explain and it always cracks me up, because there are no good substitutes for yâall.
Anyway, I hope you enjoy the second book in the Harts of Texas miniseries. In September, yâall come back for Brookeâs story. You hear?
Enjoy!
Kathleen OâReilly
May 2001
SHEâD BOUGHT THE DRESS six months ago. The perfect halter-tied prom dress in candlelight blue and silver. It had taken her four shopping trips to Midland to find it, but when she saw it, she knew. When she walked, the flounce billowed like a cloud. The sleek bodice accentuated her chest before sliding smooth as silk over her hips. There it clung just enough to show the entire senior class just what hours of exercise could do. Lovingly her fingers had glided over the material, imagining his face when he saw her. She loved the hungry way he looked at her sometimes, as if she was more than a mere mortal, as if she was a queen.
By the ripe old age of seventeen, Gillian was accustomed to men taking a second glance, or whistling when she wore the extra short shorts, which she did on occasion because she liked the whistling, even though her Momma said it wasnât exactly proper behavior. In West Texas, the girls werenât supposed to be fast, like in Houston or Dallas, but boredom and hot nights were a fertile combination, and sometimes nature ruled. Nonetheless, Gillian had a strict code of conduct, which sheâd never been tempted to breakâ¦
â¦until now.
The sun was long gone, the moon high in a starless night. During the summer, when the dust kicked up beyond the heavens, the whole Texas sky glowed pink. Like a dream. It was nights like this that Gillian felt she was living her dreams.
He emerged from the horizon, his shoulders slumped low, until he saw her. Gillian leaned back on her elbows, breasts to the sky, posing like the pictorials in Playboy, even though sheâd never admit to studying the sultry photos.
When he saw her, she noticed his effort to act cool, but he picked up the pace. Anxious, she could tell. As he strode toward her, her heart skipped a beat, because there was no boy that was better looking, no boy that kicked up her pulse, no boy that made her ache between her thighs like he didânot even Jeffrey Campbell Maxwell III, who was the star quarterback of the Lions. Everybody expected Gillian to go to the senior prom with Jeff Juniorâexcept for Gillian. Gillianâs heart was set in a different direction. His.
He was long and rangy, not as bulked up as some of the jocks, but there was something different about him. His muscles were crafted from hard work instead of blocking linebackers. His hands were rough from metal rather than free weights.
âWhat took you so long?â she asked, wondering if he noticed that she wasnât wearing a bra under her shirt. In her mind, there might as well have been a big neon arrow pointing at her tight nipples.