Home > Breaking Free (Colorado High Country #8)(58)

Breaking Free (Colorado High Country #8)(58)
Author: Pamela Clare

Her phone buzzed again.

How is your morning going?

 

 

She typed a reply.

It would be better if you were here.

 

 

Still in her bathrobe, she started toward the kitchen to make breakfast when her phone buzzed again.

Then open your door and let me in.

 

 

“What?” His message made no sense, so she read it aloud. “Open your door and let me … Oh, God!”

She hurried to the door and looked outside. “Jason!”

He stood there, handsome as sin, huddled against the cold in a denim jacket, a smile on his face.

She punched in the code to deactivate her security system and opened the door.

He stepped inside and drew her hard against him. “God, Win, I’ve missed you.”

She held on tight. “I can’t believe you’re really here. Am I dreaming?”

He stepped inside, closed the door behind him. “If you are, then we’re both having the same dream.”

He lowered his lips to hers and kissed her, deep and slow.

Five weeks of longing flared into sexual need in a heartbeat.

“I want you, Jason.”

He scooped her into his arms, carried her into the bedroom, then set her down beside the bed and began to undress. Winona let her robe fall to the floor and removed her boot, then lay back on her bed, feasting on the sight of him.

He stretched out above her and kissed her, the two of them rolling in a tangle of limbs, hands moving hungrily over soft skin, seeking to arouse and please. After so many days apart, there was no need for seduction or finesse.

Jason ripped open a condom packet with his teeth, rolled it onto his erection—and then he was inside her, his hips a piston as he drove himself into her. She came hard and fast, Jason moaning her name as he joined her.

They hadn’t yet caught their breath before they started laughing.

Then it hit her. “Did you drive all night?”

He drew her close. “I left Sells yesterday after supper. I was going to leave this morning, but I just couldn’t wait.”

“How long can you stay?” She wanted to know upfront so she could steel herself.

He grinned. “That’s the thing. I was hoping to stay forever.”

“You want to stay… forever?” Her pulse skipped. “What about your promise?”

Jason’s fingers caressed her shoulder. “At the inipi, Old Man said something that stayed with me.”

Winona couldn’t help but smile. “He’s good at that.”

“He said, ‘A promise is a sacred thing. So is the love of one’s half-side.’ At the time, it seemed impossible to reconcile those two things. But when I left you, it felt … wrong. I got back to Sells, and everything was the same—except that nothing was the same. I realized I would never again feel whole without you.”

Winona understood. “I felt the same way—as if part of me was missing. But I don’t understand. You said you would never leave your people.”

“I didn’t leave them. I brought them with me. They’re here.” He placed her hand over his heart. “They’re with me no matter where I go. I’ll keep in touch, visit when I can, and do my best to be a voice for them in the outside world.”

“What about the Shadow Wolves? What about the Pack?”

“I resigned last Friday. The Wolves understand.”

She swallowed, her throat tight. “You gave up a job you loved and moved away from your brothers—for me?”

“I had to make a choice. I chose you.”

“Are you going to ask Sheriff Pella for the job he offered you?”

“You’re looking at the newest Deputy US Marshal for the Colorado territory.”

“What?!” Winona sat up, stunned.

“That’s what I’ve been working on all this time. Staying with a federal agency enabled me to keep my salary and pension. McBride came through for me. He helped broker a deal that gives me time off for ceremonies and enables me to track for other agencies in the state as the need arises. If Megs wants me on the Team, I’m in.”

Winona struggled to keep up. “It’s like having all my wishes come true at once.”

Jason sat up, and took her hand. “I probably should have called and talked with you about it, but I didn’t want to disappoint you if things fell through. I just signed the final contract yesterday. Then I packed my shit into my truck and drove here.”

“Thank you.” Her heart melted to think he’d been in such a rush to be with her again. “It’s the best surprise ever.”

“I love you, Winona, and I want to spend the rest of my life with you. I want to be the one you reach for at night. I want to be the one who holds you when you’re sad or scared or sick. I want to be the father of your children.”

Tears filled her eyes. “Jason.”

“I know this is all pretty sudden, so if you’re not ready to live together, I can find my own place here in—”

She pressed her fingers to his lips, tears of happiness on her cheeks, her heart soaring with the eagles. “Welcome home, half-side.”

 

 

Epilogue

 

 

July 10

 

 

Winona sat on a bench beside Kat, sheltered by the new sunshade, the two of them watching while Jason, Chaska, Gabe, and the camp counselors guided a rowdy group of O’odham children through the recently rebuilt ropes course. Naomi snapped photographs for the kids to take home, little Shota in a carrier on her back.

Winona watched while Kat’s oldest showed the other kids how it was done, fearlessly crossing the high rope, a smile on her little face. “Alissa takes after her father when it comes to climbing, doesn’t she?”

“You have no idea.” Kat shook her head, her two younger children playing nearby. “She is absolutely fearless at the climbing gym. Last week, she climbed our chimney. I went looking for her and found her sitting on the roof, her legs dangling over the side. I ran for Gabe to help her climb down, but by the time we returned, she was already down.”

Winona laughed. “I’d have had a heart attack.”

Kat laughed. “I told Gabe he needs to build a climbing gym for the kids in our basement—with lots of padding on the floor.”

It was the last day of the first camp session this summer and the first session set aside exclusively for Tohono O’odham kids. Jason and Naomi had worked hard to set this up, building the curriculum around O’odham himdag with storytelling, basket weaving, tracking, gardening, and traditional games. Jason knew some of these kids and their parents personally, and it meant the world to him to give something special to his community.

He and Naomi had also set up agreements with O’odham artists—basket weavers, potters, and others—to sell their goods at Tanagila’s. Winona had made several weekend trips to Sells with Jason to sign agreements and select stock. It had opened a new income stream for O’odham artists who otherwise had to rely on tourist traffic and the casino to sell their work.

Over at the ropes course, the children lined up for their turns, some of them excited and others clearly afraid, Jason speaking to them in O’odham, while the counselors, Chaska, and Gabe spoke English, doing their best to build the children’s confidence. That was the entire point of the ropes course.

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)