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      “You can make book on it,” he replied, his dark eyes glaring at her.

      He’d given Kate an appraisal that spoke volumes before he turned and walked away without a single word.

      That had been six years ago. In the time that followed, Kate had gone to journalism school for a couple of years and wound up working for a Chicago daily newspaper. She hadn’t known anyone in Chicago, but Tom had a friend there, and the friend had pulled a string or two. Kate liked the big city. It was the one place she might be able to forget Jacob.

      Jacob had relented just a little afterward. Kate was still unwelcome at Warlance, of course, but he’d stopped short of forbidding Margo to talk or write to her. Once Margo had even invited her to the ranch for a weekend, apparently with Jacob’s blessing, but Kate had refused. She was still hurt from Jacob’s unreasonable treatment. She hadn’t even wanted to come to the wedding. But since it was being held in Blairsville, not on the ranch, she felt fairly safe. And Tom was with her. Dear Tom. She hated her own cowardice, but she clung to him.

      “You’re a reporter,” Tom was saying, breaking into her silent reveries. “You’ve won awards. You’re almost twenty-five years old. Don’t let him intimidate you. It will only make him worse. You can’t buckle under with people like Jacob. You ought to know that by now.”

      “Knowing it and using it are two different things. And I do hate him,” she muttered, glaring at Jacob as he turned to speak to a nearby couple. “He’s so lordly. He knows everything.”

      “He doesn’t know you’re still a maiden, I’d bet,” Tom chuckled, “or he’d never have accused you of messing around in the bathhouse with that poor nervous little boy.”

      Her face flamed. “I’ll never forgive him for that.”

      “He doesn’t know what kind of upbringing we had,” Tom reminded her. “He never knew our folks, remember. We were living with Grandmother Walker by the time you met Margo and became friends with her.”

      She smiled softly. “Granny was a character. Even Jacob Cade didn’t run over her. You remember, he tried to make her forbid me to go on that overnight camping trip with Margo just a few months before he told me to stay off the ranch forever. Granny informed him that I was eighteen and could go where I pleased.” She frowned. “I never did understand why he was so against it. We had a great time. There were college boys along, too, and chaperons… It was very well behaved.”

      “It should have been, since he went along as a chaperon,” Tom mused.

      “That was the only bad thing about the whole experience,” she muttered.

      “Liar. I’ll bet you spent hours sitting and watching him,” he whispered.

      Her eyes fell. Of course she had. One way or another, she’d spent her entire adult life mooning over the only man in the world who hated her. She wondered sometimes if she hadn’t deliberately worked toward a career in reporting just as an excuse to leave Blairsville and get away from him. Chicago was as far away as she could manage. Now that Grandmother Walker was dead and Tom was working for an ad agency in New York, there was no reason to stay in South Dakota. But there was every reason to escape; she had to keep away from Jacob. Kate had never fancied growing old with her heart in shreds from his day-to-day indifference. Living in Blairsville, she’d have seen him frequently, and heard about him even more often. That would have been too painful to contemplate.

      Her attention was caught by a flash of red as Margo’s little sports car drew up at the curb, driven by her fiancé, David. He hopped out, resplendent in his white tuxedo with a red carnation in the lapel and a red cummerbund. He was fair, tall and very attractive.

      “About time,” Tom chided as the bridegroom paused beside them. “Where’s Margo?”

      “Arriving momentarily with her grandfather. I hope,” David added with a tiny shudder. “Have you seen Hank drive?” he groaned.

      “Yes,” Tom replied with a sigh. “He’s almost, but not quite, as bad as Jacob.”

      David laughed, and Kate hated herself for hanging so eagerly on to any tidbit of gossip about the man she loved.

      “Jacob wrecked three cars before he got through college,” Tom mused. “Our grandmother wouldn’t let Kate go to Warlance unless Margo drove.”

      “I expected to see you both at the house,” David began.

      Kate was searching for an excuse when a shadow fell over her, and her heart ran wild. It was like radar; she always felt Jacob before she saw him.

      “So there you are,” Jacob said, joining the group. He didn’t even look at Kate. “Hello, Tom. Good to see you.” He extended his hand and shook the younger man’s firmly. There was only about four years between the two men—Jacob was thirty-two—but Jacob seemed a generation older in his attitudes. “Where’s Margo?” he asked.

      “On the way, with your father at the wheel, I’m afraid.” David sighed. “Well, it’s not my fault,” he added defensively when Jacob glared at him. “We couldn’t fit that expensive wedding gown you bought her into the car without taking it off first.” He grinned wickedly. “I was all for that, of course, but Margo seemed to feel that it would shock the congregation.”

      Jacob wasn’t amused, but Tom had to bite his lip. So did Kate, despite the tense undercurrents.

      “My father is half-blind with cataracts he won’t have removed,” Jacob said coldly. “He’s got no business driving at all.”

      “Hurry, let’s rush and phone the state police,” David offered. “What a great opportunity to have his license pulled.”

      Tom couldn’t help it. He laughed. “Sorry, but I have this mental picture of the entire wedding party bailing the old fellow out of jail—”

      Kate clung closer to Tom’s sleeve. “There they are,” she murmured, nodding toward the road, where a big Lincoln with Hank behind the wheel was just nudging against the curb and stopping.

      “See?” David laughed as Margo got out of the car, escorted by a tall, silver-haired man who was an older version of Jacob but without his fiery temper and cold, domineering manner. “No broken bones, no ripped fenders, everything intact. Hmm, she does look a bit pale.”

      “Probably the stark terror of realizing she’s marrying a crazy person,” Kate offered, grinning at David.

      “I’m not crazy.” David defended himself with mock solemnity. “Just because I once, only once, went with Margo to a male strip joint—”

      “A what?” Jacob demanded fiercely.

      David actually flushed. “Uh-oh.” He moved away. “Excuse me, have to rush. Getting married today, you see.” He vanished.

      “A what!” Jacob glared at Tom.

      “It’s a place where men take off their clothing while women wolf whistle,” Kate offered, adding fuel to the fire. “Very educational.” Well, she’d heard that they were, anyway. Kate herself wouldn’t be caught dead in such a place, but Jacob might as well think she would, if it needled him.

      Jacob’s dark eyes were frankly insulting. “I can’t imagine that you’d need any educating.”

      “How sweet of you to say so,” Kate said with a demure smile.

      The taller man didn’t bother to reply. “See you inside,” he told Tom, and walked off.

      “Whew,” her brother sighed as they started toward the rest of the congregation who were entering the church. “Talk about heat!”

      “He hates me,” she sighed. It had been a good act, but only an act. Inside, she was bleeding to death and no one could even see.

      “I wonder if Jacob really knows what he feels for you, Kate,” Tom remarked quietly.

      But

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