Busted (Promise Harbor Wedding)(10)
He had to jump to reach the closest branch, leaving him to wonder how Hayley had done it when she was a few inches shorter than he was. His foot slipped off the bark the first time he tried getting higher in the tree, and his chin scraped the branch.
“Maybe you should call Matt instead.”
“I’ve got it,” he growled, finally managing to maneuver a little higher.
He moved another branch aside and got his first clear look at Hayley through the leaves. Her dress was hiked almost to her hips and she crouched on a limb close to the trunk, long tendrils of hair draping the branches behind her like a golden spider web. The curves of her breasts spilled from what probably wasn’t supposed to be such a low-cut neckline.
He wasn’t about to complain though. It was the best view he’d had in ages.
A few inches to the right of her bare foot sat the ugliest—and that might be too generous—kitten he’d ever laid eyes on.
Splotches of mud-brown and burnt orange peppered his scrawny body, some long and fluffy and other patches buzzed down like he’d been shaved for surgery. A stubby black tail whipped back and forth, and two green eyes, one swollen like he’d been in his own bar fight, glared at Jackson.
“Has he had his rabies shot?” He ducked under branches to reach Hayley.
“He’s harmless.”
The warning hiss from the kitten said otherwise. “How did that little thing get up here?”
“The thing’s name is Copernicus and a dog probably chased him. He has a bad habit of goading them.” She tried to move and winced.
“A cat named after a Renaissance astronomer?” He glanced down at the kitten again and shook his head.
Both brows shot up. “You know who Copernicus was?”
“Discovery Channel,” he explained, ignoring the dig. “What exactly seems to be the problem?” Although most of her problem probably had to do with climbing the tree in the first place.
She gestured to her head. “I’m tangled.”
Getting close enough to untangle her hair required crouching opposite her, leaving nothing between his back and the wide open space beyond the tree branch, except a few handfuls of twigs that wouldn’t hold up a squirrel—or a near-rabid kitten—let alone him.
“Too bad that I forgot my scissors in the car.”
Hayley gave him a dirty look.
He grinned. “Would have been easier.” His knee bumped hers, throwing him off balance, and she immediately clamped a hand on his wrist to steady him.
A whole different kind of warmth hit his veins.
The breeze kicked up and the smell of her shampoo—apples and some kind of flower—intensified the warming deep in his gut.
He concentrated on freeing her hair, apologizing when a tricky spot made her wince.
“Why did you ever want to dye this black? I think women would kill for hair the color of sunshine.”
Hayley’s eyes were unreadable when they shifted to meet his.
Sunshine? Jesus. Why didn’t he just grow a vagina if he was going to be so damn girly?
She lifted a shoulder, her hand moving to tug at the drooping neckline. Apparently he wasn’t fast enough to pretend his attention hadn’t strayed in that direction.
“Enjoy the view while it lasts, Knight.”
He laughed, then shifted his weight back to his heels. “I think I got it all.”
She moved a fraction of an inch, her hand grasping her dress. “Still stuck.”
He leaned closer, looking down over her shoulder. He spotted the problem. “It snagged your bra.” It also scratched her, and a few drops of blood dotted her back, which as it turned out revealed almost as much skin as her chest.
Balancing as best he could, he reached around her, wondering if he imagined the shiver than ran through her.
“Running down thieves and scaling trees in a dress to rescue kittens. You like to set the bar high for yourself, don’t you?”
“I was even thinking of helping a few seniors cross the street to round out my day.”
He almost had it… “That’s not the Hayley I remember.”
She tipped her head back, and he could read the skepticism that he remembered anything about her at all.
“The Hayley I remember was too busy dodging the cops to help out anyone.”
She scoffed. “I wasn’t that bad.”
“Didn’t you steal a truck and almost wreck it?” He was too busy trying to untangle her to recall the details.
“It was my friend’s dad’s truck—”
“From his construction company, right?”
Hayley ignored him. “—and it was just a few scratches.”
A vague memory of the newspaper images of the smashed truck popped into his head. “And Gretzky was just an average hockey player.”
She opened her mouth to argue, but he finally worked her free of the branch. Unfortunately he also unhooked her bra in the process. He managed to capture the lacy black ends before they disappeared under her dress.
“Little complication.”
Trying to look over her shoulder, she said, “The other team stealing the puck is a little complication. A strapless bra coming undone is a serious dress malfunction.”
An image of Hayley in nothing but the strapless bra shot through his mind faster than a breakaway play.
“Jackson?”
He cleared his throat, forcing his hands to move again. “I’ve got a bit more experience taking these off than putting them back on.”
“Why am I not surprised?”
He refastened her bra. “I’m not nearly as shallow as you think.”
“Says the man who was disappointed I was wearing panties.”
“Good point.” He smiled. “Guess it wouldn’t hurt to mention that if you ever want some firsthand expertise with taking this off—”
“I’ll call Eric.”
“That douche?” he snapped, not catching sight of Hayley’s grin until the last second.
“Here.” Hayley scooped up the kitten and shoved him at Jackson.
The furball hissed and dug his back claws into Jackson’s side—son of a bitch—but didn’t try to squirm free.
“Hold on to him while I climb down.” She edged out onto another limb to get around Jackson.
The fugly kitten stared up at him, opening and closing his mouth in a silent hiss that more closely resembled a guppy.
Hayley’s hand shot out as she lost her balance, and thankfully she got a good grip on Jackson.
Too bad Jackson didn’t have on good grip on anything except the kitten when Hayley pulled him out of the tree.
Chapter Three
Hitting the ground from a ten-foot drop felt pretty damn close to getting sandwiched between two burly defensemen.
Staying on his feet wasn’t an option, not when Jackson had tried not to land directly on Hayley or the kitten. He would have cursed at the little f*cker’s claws digging into his chest if he could breathe. Oxygen was slow to reinflate his lungs.
Unfortunately, the second he could suck in a breath, pain pushed hard into his awareness, radiating up his spine. The ache in his side felt like he’d taken one too many dives across the ice. And then there was the stinging in his chest—
Jackson released the kitten, trying not to outright toss the furball across the grass. Ten seconds ago he would have traded his favorite jersey for the kitten’s ability to land on its feet.
“Sweet Jesus.” He rolled to his side and found Hayley in the same position facing him, cradling her wrist to her chest.
“You okay?”
She looked at him and burst out laughing. Almost immediately, she winced. “Shit, that hurts.” She laughed again. “Last night I arrested you and just now made you fall out of a tree, and you’re asking if I’m okay?”
Despite the teeth-gritting ache in his bad knee, he smiled. He could almost appreciate the pain being brought on by something other than a careless mistake that had ruined more than just the ligaments in his knee.
“Eric was right. Any sane guy would have wanted to get far away from me.”
“I’ll consider bolting when I’m sure I can stand.”
Hayley surveyed him from head to toe, her brows scrunched together in an adorable frown. “You didn’t break anything, did you?”
He’d earned his share of sprains and fractures over the years, and nothing felt anywhere close to that kind of pain at the moment. Still, his body had taken one hell of a hit. “Don’t worry. My hockey career is already over.” Saying as much aloud always sucked, but he was a little too distracted by the worry in her eyes to get hung up on it this time.
“Sorry about that.”
“Not your fault the stupid cat climbed a tree.” The same stupid cat that sat licking its paws only a few feet away.