
“You know how what works?”
“The inheritance. I know it goes to your wife. And I’m here to offer to marry you.”
Two
Everything inside Cole stilled.
He opened his mouth, then he snapped it shut again.
He stared at the perfectly gorgeous creature in front of him and tried to make sense out the situation. Was this a joke?
“Did Kyle put you up to this?” he asked.
“Who’s Kyle?”
“My brother.”
She shook her head and all that auburn hair fanned out around her perfectly made-up face. “It wasn’t your brother, and it wasn’t your grandmother.”
“Then who?”
“Me.”
He paused again. “You seriously expect me to believe you came all the way from New York-”
“Yes, I do.” She reached into her clutch purse and pulled out a business card.
He read it. Sure enough, Laurent Museum. Okay, now he was just getting annoyed. The Thunderbolt wasn’t a commodity to be bartered. It was a trust, a duty. “So was that breakdown nothing but a setup?”
“What breakdown?”
“Your car.”
“My car is fine.”
“Your car is fried.”
“You know, I just proposed to you.”
He stood up. “And you thought I’d say yes?”
“I’d hoped-”
“In what universe?” His voice rose, bouncing off the cabin walls. He was offended, offended on behalf of his grandmother, his ancestors and his heirs. “In what universe would I agree to marry a complete stranger and give away a family heirloom?”
She stood, too. “Oh, no. I didn’t mean-”
“I have horses to shoe.” He was done listening. She could fix her own car for all he cared, or call a taxi or hoof it up to the main road.
“Right now?” she asked.
“Right now.” He scooped a battered Stetson from a hook on the wall and stuffed it on his head.
Sydney watched Cole march out of the small log cabin. Okay, that hadn’t gone quite as well as she’d hoped. But then again, he hadn’t really given her a chance to explain. She wasn’t trying to steal the Thunderbolt. She merely wanted to display it for a few months.
