and they’ll get a posse together. And,” she added with a hot twinge of delight, “they’ll string you up from the nearest tree.”
His gaze was calm and cool, but a twitch of amusement pulled at his mouth. “I know you’d be in the front row to watch. But believe me, Daniel won’t tell a soul.”
She swayed back and gripped the desk behind her, more uncertain than ever. “Then…then my father will.”
“No,” he said, pulling his vest off the chair and sliding his muscled arms into it, “your father will go along with whatever twisted explanation Daniel gives him of your disappearance. I don’t rightly care, as long as Daniel comes to get you.” He moaned with obvious pain, and Lord forgive her, she prayed his pain would double. Then maybe they could escape.
But he seemed so sure of what he said, and this confidence, this audacity, bewildered her. “Why?”
He swung the gun toward her. “You ask too many questions. Now pull out a paper and write Daniel a note.”
She stomped behind the desk. Pulling the top drawer open, she rifled through it. “I suppose you have your story all made up. What lies do you want me to write?”
“Write the truth.”
Her gaze swung to his in surprise. She watched him calmly toss his jacket over his broad shoulders. Why was he doing this?
Money, of course, she told herself with repulsion. He wanted money for their return. That’s why he was kidnapping them. That’s what he’d taken at Daniel’s office today. He didn’t have a money bag with him, she noticed with a frown, but he’d had plenty of time to stash one.
Plopping into the chair behind the desk, Jenny dipped the quill into the inkwell and began writing, mortified at her thoughts…about their heated embrace earlier, her curiosity about being kissed. She wasn’t to blame. He’d attacked her. She thrust out her chin.
“My dearest Daniel,
A man who claims to be your friend, Luke McLintock, is holding a gun to my head—the same man who tried to rob you this afternoon. He says he’s taking me to Wyoming, along with Olivia, says you’ll know where to find us. Please find us quickly, Daniel, and if something should happen…”
She paused, then wrote “know how much I love you.”
Guilt slithered up her spine. It was the first time either one of them had mentioned the word love. And she’d done it only at gunpoint. It didn’t matter, she rationalized; these were tragic circumstances.
She blamed this cowardly man for turning her mind upside down. Well, he wouldn’t get away with it. Daniel, together with her father, would send every available man and bounty hunter after them.
“All right.” He yanked her off the chair with a muscled grip. “Let’s go.”
She’d try to stall him. Daniel and the others might already be searching. “What about my dress?”
“What about it?” His grip felt like iron. He lowered his gaze to the velvet gown, reminding her how bare her shoulders were, how much the bodice gaped without its button.
“We can’t travel in these clothes. They’re uncomfortable. We’d like to change.”
His gaze traveled to Olivia. Her poor friend stood trembling in her burgundy satin. He eyed Jenny with suspicion. “Do you have extra clothes here?”
“Well, no. But my house is only five streets over.”
He snorted. “Nice try. Forget it.”
“At least let me get needle and thread for my button. Daniel’s butler keeps a sewing basket in the kitchen.”
“I haven’t known you for very long,” he said, humor tugging at his lips, “but I do know one thing.” He raised a black brow and his charcoal eyes flashed, evoking another flash of fury. “If you do locate a needle, it’ll only wind up stuck in my eye.” His gaze skimmed her gaping dress. “I’m not letting you look for a needle. Your missing button doesn’t bother me.”
She felt her face blaze. She yanked her shawl around her.
His eyes grew wide with amusement. “As a matter of fact,” he added,