The Gamble by Kristen Ashley




  The Gamble

  Kristen Ashley

  Published by Kristen Ashley at Smashwords

  Copyright 2011 Kristen Ashley

  Discover other titles by Kristen Ashley:

  Rock Chick Series:

  Rock Chick

  Rock Chick Rescue

  Rock Chick Redemption

  Rock Chick Renegade

  The ‘Burg Series:

  For You

  At Peace

  Other Titles by Kristen Ashley:

  Penmort Castle

  Three Wishes

  www.kristenashley.net

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  Chapter One

  Timeout

  I looked at the clock on the dash of the rental car, then back out at the snow.

  I was already twenty minutes late to meet the caretaker. Not only was I worried that I was late, I was worried that, after I eventually made it there, he had to drive home in this storm. The roads were worsening by the second; the slick had turned to black ice in some places, snow cover in others. I just hoped he lived close to the A-Frame.

  Then again, he was probably used to this, living in a small mountain town in Colorado. This was probably nothing to him.

  It scared the hell out of me.

  I resisted the urge to look at the directions I’d memorized on the plane (or, more accurately, before I even got on the plane) that were sitting by my purse in the passenger seat. There was no telling how far away I was and what made matters worse was that I was doing half of what I suspected, but wasn’t sure, was the speed limit.

  Not to mention the fact that I was exhausted and jetlagged, having been either on the road, on a plane or in a grocery store the last seventeen hours.

  And not to mention the fact that, yesterday (or was it the day before? I couldn’t figure out which in changing time zones), I got that weird feeling in my sinuses which either meant a head cold was coming or something worse and that feeling was not going away.

  Not to mention the further fact that night had fallen and with it a snowstorm that was building as the moments ticked by, starting with flurries now I could barely see five feet in front of the car. I’d checked the weather reports and it was supposed to be clear skies for the next few days. It was nearing on April, only two days away. How could there be this much snow?

  I wondered what Niles was thinking, though he probably wasn’t thinking anything since he was likely sleeping. Whereas, if he was off on some adventure by himself, or even if he was with friends which was unlikely as Niles didn’t have many friends, I would be awake, worried and wondering if he made it to his destination alive and breathing. Especially if he had that niggling feeling in his sinuses which I told him I had before I left.

  I had to admit, he didn’t tell me he wanted me to ring when I got to the A-Frame safe and sound. He didn’t say much at all, even when I told him before we decided on churches and dates that I needed a two week timeout. Time to think about our relationship and our future. Time to myself to get my head together. Time to have a bit of adventure, shake up my life a little, clear out the cobwebs in my head and the ones I fancied were attached (and getting thicker by the day) to every facet of my boring, staid, predictable life.

  And, I also had to admit, no matter where I went and what I did, Niles didn’t seem bothered with whether I arrived safe and sound. He didn’t check in, even if I was travelling for work and would be away for a few days. And when I checked in, he didn’t seem bothered with the fact that I was checking in. Or, lately (because I tested it a couple of times), when I didn’t check in and then arrived home safely, sometimes days later, he didn’t seem bothered by the fact that I hadn’t checked in.

  The unpleasant direction of my thoughts shifted when I saw my turn and I was glad of it. It meant I was close, not far away at all now. If it had been a clear night, I figured from what it said in the directions, I’d be there in five minutes. I carefully turned right and concentrated on the ever decreasing visibility of the landscape, making a left turn then another right before heading straight up an incline that I feared my car wouldn’t make. But I saw it, shining like a beacon all lit up for me to see.

  The A-Frame, just like it looked on the internet except without the pine trees all around it, the mountain backdrop and the bright shining sun, of course, they were probably there (except the sun, seeing as it was night), I just couldn’t see them.

  It was perfect.

  “Come on, baby, come on, you can make it,” I cooed to the car, relief sweeping through me at the idea of my journey being at an end. I leaned forward as if that would build the car’s momentum to get up the incline.

  Fortune belatedly shined on me (and the car) and we made it to the post box with the partially snow-covered letters that said “Maxwell” signifying the beginning of the drive that ran along the front of the house. I turned right again and drove carefully toward the Jeep Cherokee that was parked in front of the house.

  “Thank God,” I whispered when I’d stopped and pulled up the parking brake, my mind moving immediately to what was next.

  Meet caretaker, get keys and instructions.

  Empty car of suitcases and copious bags of groceries, two week’s worth of holiday food, in other words stuff that was good for me, as per usual, but also stuff that was definitely not, as was not per usual.

  Put away perishables.

  Make bed (if necessary).

  Shower.

  Take cold medicine I bought at the grocery store.

  Call Niles if even just to leave a voicemail message.

  Sleep.

  It was the sleep I was most looking forward to, I didn’t think I’d ever been that exhausted.

  In order to make the trips back and forth to the car one less, I grabbed my purse, exited the car and slung my bag over my shoulder. Then I went to the boot, taking as many grocery bags by the handle as I could carry. I was cautious, the snow had carpeted the front drive and the five steps that led up to the porch that ran the length of the A-Frame and I was in high-heeled boots. Even though it was far too late, though I had checked the weather forecast so thought I was safe, I was rethinking my choice of wearing high-heeled boots by the time I hit the porch.

  I didn’t get one step across it before the glass front door opened and a man stood in its frame, his front shadowed by the night, his back silhouetted by the lights from inside.

  “Oh hi, so, so, so sorry I’m late. The storm held me up,” I hastily explained my easily explainable rudeness (for anyone could see it was snowing which would make any smart driver be careful) as I walked across the porch.

  The man moved and the outside light came on, blinding me for a second.

  I stopped to let my eyes adjust and heard, “What the fuck?”

  I blinked and then focused and then I could do nothing but stare.

  He did not look like what I thought a caretaker would look like.

  He was tall, very tall, with very broad shoulders. His hair was dark, nearly black, wavy and there was a lot of it, sweeping back from his face like a stylist had just finished coifing it to perfection. He was wearing a plaid, flannel shirt over a white thermal, the sleeves of the shirt rolled back to expose the thermal at his wrists and up his forearms. Faded jeans, thick socks on his feet and tanned skin stretched over a face that had such flawless bone structure, a blind perso
n would be in throes of ecstasy if they got their fingers on him. Strong jaw and brow, defined cheekbones, unbelievable.

  Though, in my estimation, he was a couple days away from a good clean shave.

  “Mr. Andrews?” I asked.

  “No,” he answered and said no more.

  “I –” I started then didn’t know what to say.

  My head swung from side to side, then I looked behind me at my car and the Cherokee then back around and up at the A-Frame.

  This was the picture from the website, exactly it. Wasn’t it?

  I looked back at him. “I’m sorry. I was expecting the caretaker.”

  “The caretaker?”

  “Yes, a Mr. Andrews.”

  “You mean Slim?”

  Slim?

  “Um…” I answered.

  “Slim isn’t here.”

  “Are you here to give me the keys?” I asked.

  “The keys to what?”

  “The house.”

  He stared at me for several seconds and then muttered, “Shit,” and right after uttering that profanity, he walked into the house leaving the door open.

  I didn’t know what to do and I stood outside for a moment before deciding maybe the open door was an indication that I should follow him in.

  I did so, closing the door with my foot, stamping my feet on the mat to get rid of the snow and then I looked around.

  Total open space, all shining wood, gorgeous. Usually, websites depicting holiday destinations made things look better than they really were. This was the opposite. No picture could do this place justice.

  To the left, the living area, big, wide, long comfortable couch with throws over it. At the side of the couch, facing the windows, a huge armchair two people could sit in happily (if cozily) with an ottoman in front of it. Square, sturdy, rustic table between the chair and couch, another one, lower, a bigger square, in front of the couch. A lamp on the smaller table, its base made from a branch, now lighting the space. Another standing lamp in the corner of the room by the windows made from another, longer, thicker branch with buffaloes running across the shade, also lit. A fireplace, its gorgeous stone chimney disappearing into the slant of the A-Frame, in its grate a cheerful fire blazed. A recessed alcove to the back where there was a roll top desk with an old-fashioned swivel chair in front of it, a rocking chair in the corner by another floor lamp, its base looked like a log and it was also lighting the space. A spiral staircase to a railed loft that jutted over the main living space and there were two doors under the loft, one I knew led to a three-quarter bath, the other one, likely storage.

  The pictures of the loft on the website showed it held a queen-sized bed, had a fantastic master bath with a small sauna and a walk-in closet.

  To the right I saw a kitchen, perhaps not top-of-the-line and state-of-the-art but it wasn’t shabby by a long shot. Granite counter tops in a long U, one along the side of the house, the other, a double top, a low, wide counter with a higher bar, both sliced into the open area and the bar had two stools in front of it. A plethora of knotty pine cabinets that gleamed. Mid-range appliances in stainless steel. Another recess at the back where the sink was, the fridge to the left. And a six-seater dining room table at its end by the floor to A-frame windows, also in knotty pine, with a big hurricane-lamp style glass candle holder at its center filled with sage green sand in which was stuck a fat, cream candle. Over it hung a candelabra also made from branches and also lit.

  “You got paperwork?” the man asked and I was so caught up in surveying the space and thinking how beautiful it was and how all my weeks of worries if I was doing the right thing and my seventeen hours of exhausting travel was worth getting to that fabulous house, I started then looked at him.

  He was in the kitchen and he’d nabbed a cordless phone. I walked in his direction, put the grocery bags on the bar and then dug in my purse to find my travel wallet. I pulled it out, snapped it open and located the confirmation papers.

  “Right here,” I said, flicking them out and handing them to him.

  He took them even though he was also dialing the phone with his thumb.

  “Is there a prob –?” I asked, his eyes sliced to me and I shut up.

  His eyes were gray, a clear, light gray. I’d never seen anything like them. Especially not framed with thick, long, black lashes.

  “Slim?” he said into the phone. “Yeah, got a woman here a…” he looked down at the papers, “Miss Sheridan.”

  “Ms.,” I corrected automatically and his clear gray eyes came back to me.

  It had also dawned on me, at this juncture, that he had a strangely attractive voice. It was deep, very deep, but it wasn’t smooth. It was rough, almost gravelly.

  “A Ms. Sheridan.” He cut into my thoughts and emphasized the “Ms.” in a way that I thought, maybe, wasn’t very nice. “She’s lookin’ for keys.”

  I waited for this Slim person, who I suspected was Mr. Andrews the absent caretaker, to explain to this amazing looking man that I had a confirmed, two week reservation, pre-paid, with a rather substantial deposit in the rather unlikely event of damage. And also I waited for this Slim person to tell this amazing looking man that there obviously was some mistake and perhaps he should vacate the premises so I could unload my car, put away the perishables, have a shower, talk to Niles and, most importantly, go to sleep.

  “Yeah, you fucked up,” the amazing looking man said into the phone then he concluded the conversation with, “I’ll sort it out.” Then he beeped a button and tossed the phone with a clatter on the counter and said to me, “Slim fucked up.”

  “Um, yes, I’m beginning to see that.”

  “There’s a hotel down the mountain ‘bout fifteen miles away.”

  I think my mouth dropped open but my mind had blanked so I wasn’t sure.

  Then I said, “What?”

  “Hotel in town, clean, decent views, good restaurant, down the mountain where you came. You get to the main road, turn left, it’s about ten miles.”

  Then he handed me my papers, walked to the front door, opened it and stood holding it, his eyes on me.

  I stood where I was then I looked out the floor to A-point windows at the swirling snow then I looked at the amazing but, I was tardily realizing, unfriendly man.

  “I have a booking.” I told him.

  “What?”

  “A booking,” I repeated then explained in American, “a reservation.”

  “Yeah, Slim fucked up.”

  I shook my head, the shakes were short and confused. “But I pre-paid two weeks.”

  “Like I said, Slim fucked up.”

  “With deposit,” I went on.

  “You’ll get a refund.”

  I blinked at him then asked, “A refund?”

  “Yeah,” he said to me, “a refund, as in, you’ll get your money back.”

  “But –” I began but stopped speaking when he sighed loudly.

  “Listen, Miss –”

  “Ms.,” I corrected again.

  “Whatever,” he said curtly. “There was a mistake. I’m here.”

  It hadn’t happened in awhile but I was thinking I was getting angry. Then again, I’d just travelled for seventeen plus hours; was in a different country; in a different time zone; it was late, dark, snow was falling, the roads were treacherous; I had hundreds of dollars worth of groceries in my car, some of which would go bad if not refrigerated and hotels didn’t have refrigerators, at least not big refrigerators; I was tired and I had a head cold coming on, so I could be forgiven for getting angry.

  “Well, so am I,” I returned.

  “Yeah, you are, but it’s my house.”

  “What?”

  “I own it.”

  I shook my head and it was those short, confused shakes again.

  “But, it’s a rental.”

  “It is when I’m not here. It isn’t when I’m home.”

  What was happening finally dawned on me fully.

  “So, what you?
??re saying is, my confirmed booking is really an unconfirmed booking and you’re cancelling at what is the absolute definition of the very last minute?”

  “That’s what I’m sayin’.”

  “I don’t understand.”

  “I’m speakin’ English, we do share a common language. I’m understandin’ you.”

  I was confused again. “What?”

  “You’re English.”

  “I’m American.”

  His brows snapped together and it made him look a little scary mainly because his face grew dark at the same time. “You don’t sound American to me.”

  “Well, I am.”

  “Whatever,” he muttered then swept an arm toward the open door. “You’ll get a refund first thing Monday morning.”

  “You can’t do that.”

  “I just did.”

  “This is… I don’t… you can’t –”

  “Listen, Ms. Sheridan, it’s late. The longer you stand there talkin’, the longer it’ll take you to get to the hotel.”

  I looked out at the snow again then back at him.

  “It’s snowing,” I informed him of the obvious.

  “This is why I’m tellin’ you, you best get on the road.”

  I stared at him for a second that turned into about ten of them.

  Then I whispered, “I can’t believe this.”

  Then I didn’t have to wonder if I was getting angry. This was because I knew I was livid and I was too tired to think about what I said next.

  I shoved the papers in my purse, snatched up my grocery bags, walked directly to him, stopped and tilted my head back to glare at him.

  “So, who’s going to refund the money for the gas for the car?” I asked.

  “Miss Sheridan –”

  “Ms.,” I hissed, leaning toward him and then I continued. “And who’s going to refund my plane ticket all the way from England where I live but my passport is blue?” I didn’t let him respond before I went on. “And who’s going to pay me back for my holiday in a beautiful A-Frame in the Colorado mountains which I’ve spent seventeen plus hours travelling to reach, travelling, I might add, to a destination I paid for in full but didn’t get to enjoy at all?” He opened his mouth but I kept right on talking. “I didn’t fly over an ocean and most of a continent to stay in a clean hotel with nice views. I did it to stay here.”

 
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