Chapter One
The moment the black-and-gray helicopter swooped
into sight and landed behind the Golden Slipper ranch house, a half-mile down
the road, Josie Wyatt knew that trouble was on the way. And sure enough it arrived
on her doorstep in the form of Houston multi-millionaire Wade McCabe several
minutes later.
He drove up in a black Ford Expedition truck and
parked adjacent to the four Wyatt Drilling Company trailers and the towering,
twenty-eight-foot rig. Her heart pounding, Josie watched as the ruggedly fit,
six-foot-plus businessman-investor climbed down from the truck and started across
the gravel parking area.
For a moment he simply stood there in the hot
Texas sun, hands braced on his hips, staring in mute disapproval at the ancient
rotary-drill oilrig. Josie heard him mutter several choice words before he swung
around and strode toward her in a grim-faced, take-charge, all-male way that
made her throat go dry.
He was wearing black jeans, a pale sage-green
silk-linen shirt and darker sage-green tie. A creased black Stetson was pulled
low across his brow. Sexy aviator sunglasses shaded his eyes. High, flat cheekbones
framed a blade-straight nose, and the masculine set and shape of his jaw indicated
this was not a Texan to be messed with.
His sensually chiseled lips curving slightly upward,
he clasped her hand in his. "Wade McCabe. I'm looking for Big Jim Wyatt."
Josie had been afraid of that. And unfortunately,
she thought, as tingles of sexual awareness swept all the way up her arm, since
she was momentarily the only one on the drilling site, it was left to her to
deliver the bad news. Giving him a welcoming smile, Josie extricated her much
smaller hand from his.
"Big Jim is in South America, " she
replied, keeping her eyes on his.
This was not what Wade McCabe wanted to hear, Josie knew.
"And he didn't even call me to let me know he was leaving the country?"
Wade demanded irately as he whipped off his sunglasses and tucked them in the
pocket of his shirt.
Josie tried not to get her dander up as she stared
into the most beautiful pair of dark brown eyes she had ever seen. "He
left on very short notice, but there's no cause for concern. There's still a
four person team working on your site, including me."
Wade McCabe shook his head in barely suppressed
aggravation, swept off his Stetson and slapped it against his thigh. Still looking
her over from head to toe, he drawled sarcastically, "And have you struck
oil yet?"
Josie ignored the utter lack of confidence in
Wade McCabe's tone as she squared her slender shoulders to face off with the
owner of the land. "It's gonna happen any day now," she stated firmly.
"Uh-huh." His eyes still locked with
hers, Wade McCabe blew Out a disbelieving breath and Swept a hand through the
rumpled ash-brown layers of his hair. He set his hat on his head and tugged
it low across his brow. "Get Big Jim On the phone," he ordered, closing
in on her. "Now."
"I can't." A warm flush filled Josie's
cheeks as she backed toward the trailer that was serving as their on-site office
and laboratory.
"Why not?" Wade McCabe snapped, keeping
pace, as Josie headed up the steps.
"Because he's in a remote jungle that's miles
from any phone, Josie replied, ignoring the calmly assessing glint in his chocolate-brown
eyes. She held the door, ushering them both into air-conditioned comfort. "In
fact, it's impossible for me to even get a message to him until he gets to a
place where he can call in again."
Wade McCabe blew out a frustrated breath as he shut
the aluminum door behind them and braced his broad shoulders against the frame.
"And he didn't see fit to let me know any of this, even after I'd signed
and returned the drilling Contract?"
Big Jim didn't know about this Contract. It had
come in after he'd taken the rest of his crew with him to South America and
left Josie in charge of the Midland-Odessa office.
"You know you can trust Wyatt Drilling," Josie
said. In fact, in the Past Big Jim had done plenty of drilling Contracts with
Wade McCabe and had quickly and efficiently struck oil with every discovery
well he drilled for him.
"I sure as heck thought I could," Wade returned
as he shoved away from the door. "Otherwise I never would have just signed
the papers and sent them back with a hefty check to begin operations, without
at least first talking to Big Jim."
Josie stacked the sample logs that she had been studying
on her desk. "I'm sure your faith hasn't been misplaced," she said
stubbornly.
Finished, she folded her arms in front of her.
"I might believe that, if a modern jackknife
derrick were sitting on my property," he replied, raising his voice. "Which
brings me to my next point. Where in blue blazes did y'all get that hunk of
metal out there?"
Josie glanced out the window at the drill that
was - even now - grinding away, rhythmically digging into the earth. The steel
A-frame structure looked much like a radio tower and was topped off by a crown
block that was threaded with long steel cables that held the traveling block
to which the hook, swivel and drill were all attached. Two sets of metal stairs
ran up the sides of the derrick to the metal platform that served as the derrick
floor. On that were two small shed-size buildings. One was the tool house. The
other contained the powerful engines that ran the rig. At ground level were
the slush pit and mud pump. None of it was pretty, shiny or new, but it was
doing its job, and for a fraction of the cost of a new rig. As far as Josie
was concerned, that was all that counted.
"That hunk of metal-as you so unkindly put
it-came from Big Jim's warehouse," she said as she held Wade McCabe's steady,
probing gaze. "And. I'll have you know, it has quite a history."
Wade rubbed his jaw with the flat of his hand
and glanced out the window at the grunting, groaning machinery. "I'll bet."
"Big Jim found his very first producing well
with that rig." Josie was hoping-for reasons that were both practical and
sentimental-that it would also help her strike oil for the first time. "Furthermore,"she
added, "you should be pleased to know that this particular rig is costing
you only one-tenth of the expense of the rig we've used in the past on your
various leases." That ought to appeal to a man who spent all his time making
money.
He squinted at her, taking his time about it,
before he returned his insultingly frank gaze to her face, "What'd you
say your name was again?"
She hadn't, Josie thought, swearing inwardly.
But she would have to now. "Josie. Josie Lynn Corbett," Josie replied
reluctantly, deliberately leaving out the last part of her hyphenated last name,
which was way too long, anyway, thanks to her parents, who'd never been able
to agree on anything even before she was born.
"Well, Josie," Wade McCabe drawled,
"you tell Big Jim I've never been one to drill down a dry hole for long.
Never mind with substandard equipment and a second-string crew! And that being
the case, I'm pulling out now."
Josie's mouth fell open. "Wait a minute,"
she protested hotly as she circled around her desk and grabbed him by the arm.
"You can't do that!"
Wade looked askance at the feminine hand curved
around his bicep. "Watch me!"
Josie moved to block his way, putting herself
between Wade and the door. "Quitting now would be like throwing all this
hard work we've done away!"
"And speaking of that, exactly what part
do you play in this?" Wade demanded.
Josie stepped past the dual phones, computer,
printer, fax and copier and plucked the drilling and billing records for the
site from her desk, which she promptly handed over. "I'm acting site coordinator,
and I'm also handling the financial end of things plus all the record keeping
and necessary paperwork."
Wade carefully perused the drilling and billing
records she'd handed over. Apparently unable to find anything amiss, he finally
looked up. His glance swept her from head to toe, taking in every inch of her
snug-fitting blue jeans, electric blue T-shirt and dusty red cowboy boots before
returning with slow deliberation to her face. "I've never known Big Jim
to employ any women."
As his gaze settled on the delicate features of
her oval face, Josie did her best to suppress a moue of regret. "Unfortunately,
in the past that's been true."
"Then why did he hire you?" Wade persisted
as their eyes clashed and held.
Feeling her abilities were in question, Josie
lifted her chin defiantly. "Because I'm an aspiring land woman myself."
She wanted to be able to find the land, acquire the mineral leases and put the
deals together. And then make it all work. "And I told him I wanted to
learn all about the oil business from the ground up from the very best locator
of wildcat wells in Texas. I'm persistent as all get-out when I want something,
and I talked him into it."
Seeing the start of an appreciative face, Josie
settled on the edge of her desk continued more easily. "And, to be perfectly
blunt, with Big Jim and most of his regular crew in South America on that emergency,
they needed some additional hands-on help on this project for Gus, our resident
equipment expert, Dieter, our geophysicist, and Ernie, our petroleum engineer."
Overall, the experience for her had been invaluable.
"Couldn't they have hired another roughneck
for that?"
"I'm perfectly competent to help out the guys in any number of ways, I
assure you." In fact, she was more than competent. And furthermore, Big
Jim would have seen that firsthand when she'd started working for him six months
ago, Josie thought irately, if he'd just taken into account her wide range of
experience and given her half a chance, instead of relegating her to answering
phones and doing silly errands and filing papers for him.
"Yeah, well," Wade McCabe continued
to glance at Josie skeptically, "be that
as it may, I'm still pulling out."
Was the trailer smaller with him in it or was that her imagination? "Now
wait just a minute," Josie countered, irked to find McCabe every bit as
chauvinistic in his attitude toward her as her very own father. "Wyatt
Drilling has always struck oil for you in the past, haven't they?"
Wade McCabe nodded. "Which is why I hired
Big Jim Wyatt and not someone else to do the drilling. 'Cause I didn't want
to pour thousands of dollars down some dry hole in a vain search for black gold
where none was to be found."
"There is oil on this property," Josie
announced adamantly."
"I don't doubt that for a moment," Wade agreed complacently. "Otherwise
I never would have bought the property for myself and acquired the lease. But
if you and Big Jim and the rest of his outfit think I'm gonna just empty my
pockets while Big Jim's second-string stand-ins fumble around finding it for
me, while he and the rest of his regular top-notch crew are off in South America,
working for somebody else, you are sadly mistaken. So you can tell Big Jim if
and when he calls-" Wade took the contract signed with Big Jim's scrawled
initials, JLW , and his own name out of his back pocket, and tore it in two.
"That I'm invoking the quit clause, and the deal is off. Now."
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From the book: Wildcat Cowboy By: Cathy Gillen Thacker Imprint and Series: Harlequin American Romance Publication Date: October 1999 ISBN: 0373167938 Copyright© 1999 By: Cathy Gillen Thacker ® and are trademarks
of the publisher
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From the book: Wildcat Cowboy
By: Cathy Gillen Thacker
Imprint and Series: Harlequin American Romance
Publication Date: October 1999
ISBN: 0373167938
Copyright© 1999
By: Cathy Gillen Thacker
® and are trademarks
of the publisher
The edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
For more romance information surf to: http://www.eHarlequin.com