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CHAPTER SIXTEEN
NATHAN waited in his office for the call he was expecting from Tommy. The weekend was over and he was content he’d made the most of it with Miranda, but he wanted to be sure there would be no comeback from the man who’d driven her into his life in the first place. He was certain now that Hewson was out of her heart, but he wanted her mind clear of him, as well—the past completely past.
It appalled him that he himself had briefly cast Miranda in the role Hewson had maliciously painted—a woman on the make, uncaring whom she hurt. Lies…yet that morning at Cathedral Gorge, he had let his own frustration and her choice of words weave such a false picture.
Completely false.
And he’d hated Hewson for coming up with the same sexual scenario out of spite. All too easy to target a woman who had no back-up. But, by God! there would be no lack of back-up in this instance.
The telephone rang.
He snatched up the receiver, automatically noting the time—8.41—which more or less placed the proposed Monday morning departure on schedule.
“Nathan?”
“Here.”
“The Hewson charter flight is lifting off as I speak,” Tommy announced smugly. “The birds have flown.”
“You saw them onto the plane yourself?”
“No. I sent Sam to do that. I’m watching it from the homestead verandah.”
“Dammit, Tommy, I asked you.”
“Calm it, brother. No love lost between Sam and the Hewsons. She would have hog-tied them and hauled them into their seats if they’d so much as hesitated. And quite frankly, I’d had enough of them.”
“Is the problem cleared?”
“Oh, I think we established a pertinent understanding and Jared will make it stick during their stay in Broome.” He chuckled. “By the time Bobby-boy pays out there, I rather fancy he’ll want to forget he ever came to King’s Eden.”
“What payment are we talking about, Tommy?”
“Now, Nathan, you got the kudos for whizzing Miranda out of harm’s way. I deserve the kudos for clearing the decks. Bring her back now and I’ll tell you all.”
The call was disconnected before Nathan could press the point. He hoped Tommy’s confidence was not misplaced. A snake had a habit of wriggling and spitting venom even when it was spiked. Still, Tommy should know his own business. It was not only a matter of protecting Miranda. The resort was his baby.
Nathan smiled to himself as he moved out of the office and headed down the hall to Miranda’s room where she’d gone to pack her clothes, ready to leave. He didn’t mind the resort any more, despite the occasional irritation of tourists wandering where they shouldn’t. It had brought him the gold he’d thought he’d never find. True gold. And he’d staked his claim to it. His charming and gregarious brother could win as many kudos as he liked. It wouldn’t win Miranda. She was his and his mind was set on keeping her his. Whatever it took.
He knocked on her door, the memory of last night’s love-making fresh in his mind. Sleep had been minimal but he didn’t feel tired. He’d never felt more vibrantly alive, excitement stirring through him again as she called out, “Come in,” the words reminding him of her sexual openness, inviting all he wanted of her and revelling in every intimacy.
He stepped into her room, itching to hold her once more, and the anxious eyes she turned to him spurred him on.
“Is it all right? Have they gone?”
“Yes.”
She sagged into his embrace, her arms winding around his neck so the full lush femininity of her was pressed against him. He couldn’t resist flattening his palm across the pit of her back, fitting her even closer as he lifted his other hand to stroke away her worry lines.
“Tommy assures me Hewson won’t be coming back. It’s safe for you to return to the resort.”
“How did he handle it?” she asked, uncertainty still clouding her eyes.
“He insists we come and find out.” He smiled to reassure her. “Tommy enjoys a bit of boasting.”
She sighed, her breasts heaving sensuously. He’d never been so horny in his entire life. Difficult to push temptation aside but it was time for business now and Tommy would not appreciate being kept waiting.
“I just hope there aren’t any nasty repercussions,” she said, still fretful.
“Not on King’s Eden, Miranda,” he promised with absolute confidence, and kissed her frown away. “Ready to go?”
“Yes.” Trust and courage glowed in her eyes.
His heart kicked into a joyous beat at this further evidence that his instincts had been right all along. It had simply been a matter of breaking through her barriers for her real character to be revealed and everything made sense to him now. Whatever had made Miranda Wade, the result was she was made for him. There was not one response from her that didn’t fit want he wanted, what he craved.
With this assurance dancing through his mind, he broke away and picked up her bag. He would take her back to the resort and this tourist season would be long enough for her to know the life she would be taking on with him, but he had little doubt about the choice she would make. It had to be.
He took her hand. She looked at him. It was more than a physical link and she knew it. The bonding was there in her eyes. However many partings there would be, Nathan told himself none of them would change what they were to each other, and his soul filled with happiness at the thought. He would not be walking alone through life. Miranda would walk with him.
The drive back to the resort reminded Miranda of the drive away from it on Friday night…the confusion and fear that had churned through her then. The weekend had certainly sorted out where she stood with Nathan and she could almost bless Bobby Hewson for having unwittingly forced an outcome she hadn’t dared to believe in a few days ago. Nevertheless, anxiety still fretted at the edges of her happiness.
She had brought this trouble to King’s Eden. Inadvertently, but nonetheless irrevocably. She would feel responsible if Bobby did some damage to the resort’s good reputation and she couldn’t bring herself to believe he wouldn’t. It was impossible to trust the man or his word.
Unlike Nathan. She feasted her eyes on him as he drove, loving every aspect of him. He wasn’t just big on the outside. He was big all through. Her skin prickled in sensual delight, just remembering the pleasures they’d revelled in last night, how she’d felt so wonderfully enveloped by him, safe and cossetted, belonging to him and with him.
He hadn’t said he loved her, but wanting her to think of sharing his life—all the years ahead of them—and hoping she wanted to be the mistress of his heart…why would he crave her love, if he didn’t feel love for her? The words would come—she was sure of it—when he felt the time was right. Though she didn’t really need until the end of the tourist season to know what she already knew…that nothing was going to change her mind or heart. Nathan was the man for her.
Though she did owe an obligation to Tommy, to work out her contract at the resort…if he wanted her to. It might be better if she didn’t, should there be any risk of Bobby spreading damaging lies about the resort because she was the manager. Were Nathan and Tommy right in believing they had fixed the problem?
She hoped so.
It would be good to lay the past to rest, knowing it could never come back to hurt her or those she cared about, and that included everyone who’d supported her at King’s Eden. As Nathan drove through the resort to the homestead, she felt she had established herself as a person in her own right here. Maybe that was the effect of the outback, bringing out one’s inner resources to meet the challenge of it.
Sam and Tommy were waiting on their arrival, their stances on the homestead verandah reflecting the sparring mood typical of any conversation between them. However, attention was instantly focused on Nathan and Miranda as they alighted from the Land Cruiser. All personal wrangling halted as the new couple were scrutinised for sexual signals.
“Well, before I skip off,” Sam addressed them, “you’d better tell me if I’m to damp down the rumours or let them fly. That sleazy creep, Hewson, yapped on about Miranda, having her claws into you, Nathan, and I told him flat that if she did, it was precisely where you wanted her claws to be because no one got to you unless you opened up to them.”
“How very perceptive of you, Sam!” Nathan answered good-humouredly.
“So?” She gave him a piercing look. “What am I to say?”
“That I take intense pleasure in every one of Miranda’s claw-marks and can’t wait for more.”
“What?” Sam’s eyes goggled at Miranda. “You two truly are an item?”
“Yes,” she answered, casting a chiding look at the man beside her. “Though I’m not really into clawing.”
“Oh, boy, this is good! This is really good!” Sam enthused, then turned an arch look to Tommy who had apparently taken the news with bland equanimity. “Looks like you’ll have to make do with Celine thinking you’re adorable. And that will only last until she hooks up with Jared in Broome and gets her lustful little hands on him.”
“I couldn’t give a damn about Celine,” Tommy retorted with a bored look. “It was just part of the game.”
“And you’re such a good game player!”
Sam stepped off the verandah and pasted a brilliant smile on her face for Nathan and Miranda. “I’m glad for both of you.” She clapped Nathan’s shoulder in passing. “I’ll try to get Miranda to let her nails grow, Nathan. If ever a man deserves what he wants, it’s you.”
With that final little snipe at Tommy, she walked off jauntily, leaving him glaring after her.
“One of these days when that little witch gets off her broomstick…”
“You’ll beat her with it?” Nathan drily surmised.
Tommy huffed feelingly. “You couldn’t even beat submission out of Sam.”
“You don’t want submission, Tommy,” Nathan said knowingly.
It won a crooked smile. “No, but a bit of respect would go a long way.” His eyes flashed satisfaction. “Which is what I taught Hewson. As well as ramming it home that nobody does us a damage without paying a price.”
“I haven’t had a chance to thank you for taking over for me, Tommy,” Miranda breathed, acutely aware of what she owed both brothers.
His face broke into a cheerful grin. “One of the best moments of my life…Nathan actually asking me to stand shoulder to shoulder with him against the enemy. For that alone, you’re always going to be special to me, Miranda.”
He stepped back and waved them onto the verandah. “Let’s go inside and park your bag. Time’s moving on. I’ll have to be leaving myself in a minute.”
“Not before you tell us the nuts and bolts,” Nathan said as they entered the homestead.
“Just got to collect my stuff from the office.”
“Tommy…”
“Now, Nathan, give me credit,” Tommy crowed, wagging an admonishing finger as he headed them towards the hall leading to the administration wing. “I can spin a story better than most.”
“True.”
“And our guests love outback stories.” His eyes twinkled with teasing triumph. “So over dinner on Saturday night, I regaled them with the legend of Lachlan’s law.”
“Lachlan’s law?” Miranda queried.
Tommy waved dismissively. “Nathan can tell you.”
“A marked change of attitude on Sunday?” Nathan quizzed his brother.
“Like magic it was,” Tommy assured him. “Sam had the highly questionable pleasure of being the Hewsons’ guide all day Sunday, and she reported there was no further mention of Miranda and no digs about management. Of course, I did finish up my story with the reflection that you, Nathan, were made in the same mould as our father and held in the same regard by Albert’s tribe.”
“Albert?” Miranda couldn’t help asking, not understanding what the Aboriginal guide and didgeridoo player had to do with this.
“A particularly vivid touch of reality to the story since they’d met him that morning,” Tommy remarked smugly. He grinned at Nathan. “Then last night I laid the pearls on Celine, shovelling the pitch that her skin was made for them, the perfect sheen for her beguiling perfection, etcetera etcetera and offering up Jared to show her the best in the world. And that, my dear brother, is guaranteed to cost Hewson many, many thousands of dollars.”
“The price of pride!” Nathan said, and laughed. “I salute you, Tommy. Forget the shoulder to shoulder. You can stand in front of me any time.”
“I shall take that accolade and shove it down Sam’s throat on some appropriate occasion,” Tommy said with relish. “Meanwhile—” he lowered his brows at both of them as they turned into the administration wing “—am I going to have to rearrange management here?”
“You can count on one season, Tommy,” Nathan answered. “The rest is up to Miranda. Her choice.”
“Right!” he said in some relief, halting at the office door and gesturing them on to Miranda’s private quarters. “I’m off then. No playing on my time, Nathan.”
“Your time is much appreciated.” A pause for a warm handshake. “Thank you.”
“You’re welcome.”
Tommy disappeared into the office and Nathan walked on with Miranda who was silently rejoicing in how clearly and openly he had declared his interest in her, both to Sam and to Tommy. One season…then the choice was hers. No backing off from him. This wasn’t pillow-talk. This was real.
She unlocked her apartment door. Nathan followed her in with her bag, moving to place it on the bed, ready for her to unpack.
“What was Lachlan’s law?” she asked, closing the door to seal the privacy she wanted for just a few more minutes before taking up the reins of management again.
He set the bag down and turned around, a curious, assessing look on his face as though wondering how she would react to it. “Our family has a long history of driving serpents out of Eden, Miranda,” he said, eerily conjuring up the thought she’d had about Eden on her journey here.
“In the old days, there was no law in these parts, except what we instigated and practised ourselves,” Nathan went on. “For any isolated community like a cattle station to work well, a harmony had to be maintained on all levels. That remains true. Always will.”
She nodded. “It’s true of this resort, too, maintaining a good morale amongst the staff. I appreciate how important it is, Nathan.”
“Critical to holding the right balance,” he agreed. “The outback strips us of easy escapes. We have to live with what’s here. And from the beginning, the Kings forged a close connection to the local tribe of Aborigines. It was of mutual benefit. They were always assured of food and shelter, and having a natural affinity to the land, they were by far the best stockmen we could have working the cattle.”
“This is Albert’s tribe you’re talking about?”
“Yes. Twenty-seven years ago, Albert’s father was the foreman at the station, a highly respected tribal elder whom my father trusted to carry through any task. A drifter arrived one day, asking for a job, said he was a trained mechanic. My father set him to work repairing machinery. A few weeks later, when the men were out at the stock-camps, he broke into the supply store, stole a bottle of whisky, got himself drunk, then bashed and raped Albert’s mother.”
“Oh, no!” Miranda groaned, hating the thought of any woman being so brutally victimised.
“Albert, who was eight at the time, helped her up to the homestead. My mother took her in, and sent both Albert and me out riding for my father. All the men came in because justice had to be seen to be done, especially when it involved a white man against a black woman. The rapist displayed the attitude that any abuse against Aborigines was acceptable and shouldn’t be punished.”
“How can people think like that?” Miranda cried.
“It was not how any of us thought on the station and if a strong stand wasn’t taken on it, there would have been a very serious breach of trust amongst our people. I hope you can see that, Miranda, because King’s Eden runs on the understanding—forged through generations—that the Kings look after their people.”
She gave a wry smile. “Since I’ve just benefited from that principle, I’m hardly likely to criticise it, Nathan.”
He returned her smile. “Well, just remember what I’m telling you happened almost thirty years ago, and the justice meted out was for the ultimate good of the community.”
“You’re warning me it was harsh?”
“More…primitive. But then the outback is primitive.”
“Go on,” she urged.
“To teach the man respect for the race he belittled, my father ordered that he be taken out to the most barren section of the King Leopold Range in the middle of the Kimberly, where he was to be left to survive on his own, as the Aborigines had for thousands of years.”
“Did he survive?”
Nathan shrugged. “The story goes he’s still wandering around the wilderness. There have been sightings of a feral white man over the years.”
“Cast out of Eden,” Miranda murmured.
“He’d destroyed his right to stay. There’s a lot of greys we can accommodate, but once the line of respect is abused, appropriate action has to be taken.”
“So that’s Lachlan’s law.”
“And mine,” he said quietly.
“I know. And Tommy’s. And Jared’s. Your father passed it on to all of you, didn’t he?”
“As it was passed to him.”
Family lore…survival built on support and integrity.
“It’s good, Nathan,” she said in a burst of heartfelt belief. “I like your world.”
His face lit with a smile that grew in warmth as he crossed her sitting area to where she still stood by the door. “I like…everything about you, Miranda Wade.” He lifted a hand and stroked his finger down the slight cleft in her chin. “Do you feel okay about Hewson now?”
“Yes. He can’t win. He won’t want to invite more defeat.”
“So you feel safe again.”
“Very safe.”
“I’d better go and let you get on with your work.”
“Yes.”
“I’ll call you tonight.”
“Please.”
“I hope you keep liking my world, Miranda.”
How could she not with him in it? But he kissed her before she could speak, kissed her with slow, beguiling sensuality, with the simmering promise of much more to come…for both of them.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
“A WEDDING!” Elizabeth King repeated, trying to contain the delight swelling her heart.
“Yes. Seven weeks from now,” Nathan instructed. “The weekend after the resort closes. Will you do it? I know Miranda wouldn’t ask but I want it for her. The whole big production…a marquee on the lawn by the river…”
“Nathan, I haven’t even heard of an engagement yet. Have you asked Miranda to marry you?”
“Not in so many words. I’ve been waiting on the ring. Jared brought it with him today.”
“You’re sure of her answer?”
“Absolutely.”
His eyes flashed with an indomitable arrogance that was pure Lachlan, and for a moment Elizabeth was transported back to the night when her husband-to-be told her she was his woman, and not to give him any runaround about it because that would just be wasting time better spent together.
“I want you to stand in for her mother, since Miranda no longer has one,” Nathan went on. “Do all the wedding arrangements, take her to buy the dress, make her feel like a bride planning her big day. She’s had none of the family support we take for granted. I want you to offer it to her tonight, convince her it’s what you want, too.”
“It is!” Elizabeth laughed in a burst of elation. She’d got it right…bringing Miranda into Nathan’s life. It had worked! “My first daughter-in-law…”
“So you’ll do it?” Nathan pressed.
“Of course. Any dream Miranda has I’ll do my best to fulfil.” Because she will fulfil mine.
“Good!” Nathan’s face lit with satisfaction. “Then what I plan is this…”
Miranda felt increasingly nervous as she drove over to the station homestead for dinner with the King family. She hadn’t seen Elizabeth or Jared since the night early in May, when she’d revealed her own lack of family. That was five months ago…five months of learning everything about King’s Eden, and loving every minute of it.
But they hadn’t witnessed that, hadn’t seen as Tommy had, how much she’d taken to this outback life. However, they surely knew of her current relationship with Nathan and Nathan was not about to hide it. Nor did she want him to. Jared’s reaction didn’t worry her, but Elizabeth’s…
Miranda couldn’t help wanting her approval. Not that it would change her feelings for Nathan. It would just be so much nicer if his mother could readily accept her as part of Nathan’s life. An integral part, Miranda hoped.
He must have been listening for the Jeep to arrive. Miranda had no sooner pulled up beside the bougainvillea hedge, than Nathan was striding down the path. She simply sat and watched him, her man coming to claim her, emanating the force of energy that always entranced her. He collected her from the Jeep, swept her with him onto the verandah, but instead of taking her into the house, led her around to the west side of it.
“What are we doing? Is something wrong?” she asked, apprehension skittering through her.
“Absolutely not.” He grinned, the sparkle in his eyes denying any trouble whatsoever. “Just wanted a few private minutes with you. I find that lemon dress very fetching.”
She laughed, relaxing against him as he drew her over to the verandah railing. This side of the house faced the river, which was shining like a ribbon of yellow glass, reflecting the last vibrant rays of the sun as it slipped below the horizon. Nathan slid behind her, curling his arms around her waist, rubbing his cheek against her hair.
“A golden river, a golden sky, a golden woman,” he murmured.
“And you said you were never romantic,” Miranda teased.
“Ah, but I am, when I truly feel it in my heart. Look what I have in my hand, Miranda.”
He held it out as she glanced down. It was a grey velvet jeweler’s box—a ring box!
Her heart stopped, then catapulted around her chest. Was this it…the commitment of forever?
“Open it!”
The soft pulse of his words in her ear made her dizzy. Her hands trembled as they moved to obey his command. For a moment, the spring lid of the box seemed to resist the pressure of her thumbs and fingers. Then it opened and she gasped at the splendour of the ring twinkling up at her—a huge oval yellow diamond surrounded by smaller white diamonds, set on a band of gold.
“Wear this and the sun will never set on my love for you, Miranda,” Nathan murmured as he lifted the ring from its satin slot. “Will you marry me?”
“Yes,” she whispered, spreading her left hand so he could slide the ring onto her third finger. It fitted perfectly. She couldn’t stop gazing at it, stunned by the sheer magnificence of his choice for her.
“Do you like it?”
Her heart too full to speak, she whirled around and let her eyes speak for her as she flung her arms around his neck and pulled his head down for all her feelings to be expressed in a kiss. She loved him so much, unequivocally, had done for a long time, and for this proposal to come now, before the season was over…and such a fabulous ring would have been ordered even earlier. Nathan had to believe they were truly made for each other and nothing would ever break the bond they shared.
“I take it that means yes,” he said happily, his eyes shining into hers.
“The sun will never set on my love for you, either,” she promised huskily. “I’ll die with your ring on my finger, Nathan.”
He laughed. “I’d rather you marry me first. If it’s okay with you, that will be a week after the resort closes.”
“Anything you arrange is okay with me,” she said blissfully.
“Then let’s go and get my mother moving on it.”
“Your mother?”
“She never had a daughter. You’re it, Miranda. Her first bride in the family. She can hardly wait to arrange a wedding to remember.”
“Really?” Miranda had never allowed hope or imagination to zoom that far. “I was worried she might not approve of us.”
“Big wedding! Huge celebration to welcome in the new mistress of King’s Eden. Brace yourself for the inevitable, my love! No escape from it.”
She didn’t want to escape from it. At long last she truly belonged somewhere…to this man, this place, this family…and their wedding would put the final seal on the sense of belonging.
Elizabeth watched them enter the sitting-room, hand in hand, their faces aglow with happiness…a very well matched couple, she thought with satisfaction. The party of people Nathan had invited to celebrate the engagement thronged around them, showering congratulations and good wishes—all the station community and the friends Miranda had made at the resort, most of them radiating pleasure in the announcement.
Though not quite everyone…
A wistful look on Sam’s face, Elizabeth noted. And a touch of envy on Tommy’s. Nothing like seeing two people really getting it together to bring home one’s lack of success in that area. Perhaps Nathan and Miranda’s wedding could be used to promote the match that should have been made years ago, but for two very stubborn and proud personalities.
Tommy as best man.
Sam as chief bridesmaid.
The goodwill of the day rubbing off on them.
Some discreet meddling.
Oh, yes, this was going to be a big wedding.
Elizabeth had the next generation of Kings right in her sights!