Just Imagine

Just Imagine by Susan Elizabeth Phillips Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Just Imagine by Susan Elizabeth Phillips Read Free Book Online
Authors: Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Tags: Fiction, Romance, Contemporary
only to jerk to a stop when he caught her arm.
    "Oh, no, you don't!"
    "Let me go, you son of a bitch!"
    She started swinging, but Cain was holding her at arm's length. "I told you to take off those wet clothes, and you're going to do what I say so I can get some damn sleep!"
    "You can rot in hell, Yankee!" She swung again, but her blow bounced off as harmlessly as thistledown.
    "Stop it before you get hurt." He shook her once as a warning.
    "Go fuck yourself!"
    Her hat flew off as she felt herself being lifted off the floor. There was a clap of thunder, Cain sank down onto a kitchen chair, and she found herself upended over his outstretched knee.
    "I'm going to do you a favor." His open palm slammed down on her bottom.
    '"Hey!"
    "I'm going to teach you a lesson your father should have taught you."
    Once again his hand came down, and she cried out, more from indignation than from pain. "Stop it, you rotten Yankee bastard!"
    "Never cuss at people who are bigger than you are…"
    He gave her another hard, stinging smack.
    "Or stronger than you are…"
    Her bottom began to burn.
    "And most of all…"
    The next two smacks left her bottom on fire.
    "… don't cuss at me !" He pushed her off his lap. "Now, do we understand each other or not?"
    She sucked in her breath as she landed on the floor. Fury and pain swirled in a haze around her, clouding her vision, so she didn't see him reaching for her. "You're going to get out of these clothes."
    His hand clamped her wet shirt. With a howl of rage, she leaped to her feet.
    The old, worn fabric ripped in his hand.
    After that, everything happened at once. Cool air touched her flesh. She heard the faint patter of buttons skittering across the wooden floor. She looked down and saw her small breasts exposed to his gaze.
    "What in the—"
    A sense of horror and humiliation suffocated her.
    He released her slowly and took a step back. She grabbed for the torn edges of her shirt and tried to pull them together.
    Eyes the color of frozen pewter stared down at her. "So. My stable boy isn't a boy after all."
    She clutched the shirt and tried to hide her humiliation behind belligerence. "What difference does it make? I needed a job."
    "And you got one by passing yourself off as a boy."
    "You're the one who assumed I was a boy. I never said any such thing."
    "You never said any different, either." He picked up the blanket and tossed it to her. "Dry yourself off while I get myself a drink." He moved toward the hallway door. "I'll expect some answers when I come back, and don't even think about running away, because that'd be your biggest mistake yet."
    After he disappeared, she flung down the blanket and raced toward the basket of apples to retrieve the revolver. She sat at the table to hide it in her lap. Only then did she gather her tattered shirttails together and tie them in a clumsy knot at her waist.
    Cain stalked back just as she realized how unsatisfactory the result was. He'd ripped her undershirt along with her shirt, and a deep V of exposed flesh extended down to the knot.
    Cain took a sip of whiskey and stared at the girl. She was sitting at the wooden table, her hands folded out of sight in her lap, the soft fabric of her shirt clearly outlining a pair of small breasts. How could he have believed for a moment that she was a boy? Those delicate bones should have been a giveaway, along with her eyelashes, which were thick enough to sweep the floor.
    The dirt had thrown him off. The dirt and the cussing, not to mention that pugnacious attitude. What a scamp.
    He wondered how old she was. Fourteen or so? He knew a lot about women, but not about girls. When did they start growing breasts? One thing for sure… she was too young to be on her own.
    He set down his whiskey tumbler. "Where's your family?"
    "I told you. They're dead."
    "You don't have any relatives at all?"
    "No."
    Her composure annoyed him. "Look, a child your age can't run around New York City alone. It isn't safe."
    "The only

Similar Books

Texas! Chase #2

Sandra Brown

Do Cool Sh*t

Miki Agrawal

Désirée

Annemarie Selinko

Off Limits

Delilah Wilde

Built to Last

Jean Page

Pleasure Unbound

Larissa Ione

The Midnight Tour

Richard Laymon