Always Enough (Meet Me in Montana 2)
After about ten minutes of just watching her sleep, I got up and checked on the soup. Then I pulled out my phone and sent my father a text.
Me: I came over to Kaylee’s place to make sure she was set for this storm. She fell on the steps and I’m pretty sure she bruised her tailbone.
He replied almost instantly.
Dad: Poor thing. You didn’t leave her, did you?
Me: No. She’s asleep on the sofa and I made her some vegetable soup.
Dad: Have you checked the weather, Ty? It’s gotten worse, the snow is coming down even harder. I don’t know if you want to leave her tonight, especially if she’s hurt.
My eyes widened in shock as I read his text. “Stay the night?” I said with a laugh. “Is he insane?”
Me: I’ll make sure she’s set up with everything, then head back to my place. I’m sure once the ibuprofen kicks in, she’ll be fine.
When my phone rang, I knew I was about to get a lecture.
“Hey,” I said, wincing as I prepared for his verbal reprimand.
“Ty Shaw, you cannot leave that girl there alone with a huge storm coming and a bruised tailbone. You can stay there one night . . . the girl doesn’t bite.”
“That we know of,” I shot back.
He let out a frustrated sigh. “What is it with you two?”
“Nothing. I’ll stay, don’t worry.”
“Thank you. Tell her that your mother will be over in the morning. She has a new knitting project she wants to start Kaylee working on.”
I rolled my eyes. Not only had Kaylee infiltrated all my thoughts but she’d also made my mother fall in love with her. She was actually teaching Kaylee how to knit, getting her prepped for her spring garden, and teaching her to make soap. How she had time to undertake all these projects on top of remodeling this house was beyond me.
“You still there, Junior?”
“Yeah, I’m here, Dad.” I rubbed the instant ache in my neck. “Maybe I’ll run back to my place and grab an overnight bag.”
“No, you can’t risk getting stuck and then leaving Kaylee alone.”
Laughing, I walked over to the back door just off the kitchen. “It can’t be snowing that hard. I just—”
I stopped midsentence as I saw the snow coming down in sheets.
“The power might—”
My father’s voice cut off.
“Dad? Dad?”
During heavy snowstorms, our cell coverage sucked. I sighed and dropped my head back as I gazed up at the ceiling.
A moment later, the power went out.
I closed my eyes and cursed. “Fucking great.”
No power meant no heat. That meant I’d have to keep the fire going and stay in the living room with Kaylee all night.
Glancing over to the stove, I let out a sigh of relief. At least the stove was gas, and that still worked without power.
I turned on the flashlight on my phone and got busy looking for candles. This was going to be one hell of a long night.
I placed a few more logs onto the fire and sat back down in the chair. The one that faced Kaylee. She was out, which was probably good. I knew she was in pain, so the longer she slept, the better.
Taking a long pull of beer, I kept my gaze on her. She was so damn beautiful.
Finally, her eyes opened, and in the firelight I could just barely tell she was looking directly at me.
“Ty?”
“Yeah, it’s me.”
“Why are you sitting in the dark?” she asked, slowly trying to sit up. “Oh, wow, okay, that hurts.”
I stepped over to the sofa and helped her to stand. Once she was up, her body relaxed.
“It’s probably only going to hurt when you go to sit and then stand back up—at least from my experience, that is,” I said.
“Great,” she replied as she looked around the house and pulled a deep breath in through her nose. “So, I have to ask again, why are you in the dark, and what is that amazing smell?”
“The power went out, and that would be vegetable soup.”
She turned and looked at me. The flames from the fire danced in her eyes, and my cock hardened. Bastard.
“We’re going to have to sleep down here if the power doesn’t come back on.”
Kaylee’s mouth opened, then closed. Then she shook her head and asked, “We?”
“I’m not leaving you when you’re hurt, and the snow is coming down so bad I wouldn’t even be able to see to drive back home. Roads are already snowed over anyway, and not a chance in hell snowplows are out in this mess.”
She stared at me with a confused expression, as if she was trying to piece together a puzzle or something. “So, you’re staying here? All night?”
“Until my mom comes over in the morning, or whenever Dad or Brock can get the ranch roads cleared. She said she has some knitting project she wants to show you.”