offering a friendly gesture to one of his neighbors. But if he expected me to wave back like we were friends, he could forget it. The only kind of gesture I was willing to give him consisted of one finger and wasn’t usually considered all that friendly. The jackass.
I turned my back on him for breaking my heart and started inside.
But before I made it through the door, his truck screeched to a halt just past my driveway. I whipped around to see him throw it in reverse and drive backward into the middle of my yard. Cowboy jumped out of his truck, glaring at the Barlow boys as they made their way back to the porch. “You two get the hell out of here and leave Anna alone!”
“Whoa!” Joe said, as he reached the top of the stairs. “We’re not here to cause problems. We’re helping Miss Anna load up these boxes. Why don’t you chill the hell out, dude?”
Cowboy marched past Clay and clomped his way up the stairs where I stood with Joe and Bobbie Jo.
I put my hands on my hips and glared at Cowboy. “That’s not a parking spot!”
“Oh, yeah? Well, it is now!” he sneered.
“God, you’re an even bigger asshole than I thought.” I turned and marched inside, flapping my arms in frustration.
A growl burst from his throat. “Get back here,” he demanded.
Surprisingly enough, I made it to the kitchen without him manhandling me. I’d fully expected him to be on my heels, but when I stopped and spun around, he wasn’t there. Peeking around the corner, I found out why.
He had tried to follow me through the open door, but Joe had stepped into Cowboy’s path and was now poking one large finger into his chest. “I think the lady wants you to leave.”
I stood off to the side, just out of their field of vision, but where I could see and hear both of them. With rage burning in his green eyes, Cowboy measured up the big guy in front of him. “If you want to keep that finger attached, I suggest you remove it.”
They stood there in an intense, heated stand-off that looked like it would never end. Thank goodness Bobbie Jo intervened, patting Joe on the arm. “It’s okay, Joe. I’ve got this. Why don’t you give us a minute?”
Joe nodded and walked by Cowboy, purposely bumping his shoulder as he passed. Cowboy rolled his eyes and started inside, but Bobbie Jo wasn’t having it. She put her arm up and blocked the door, scowling at him. “You really did it this time, didn’t you, Cowboy? Put your foot in it good.”
“Ya know, I’d love to stand around here talking about how I screwed up, but I have something more important to do.”
But Bobbie Jo persisted. “What do you want with Anna?”
Oh, I love having such protective friends.
“I just want to talk to her.” He peered over Bobbie Jo’s head and caught a glimpse of all the cardboard boxes in the living room. “What the hell is going on? Why are the Barlows loading boxes into Anna’s car?” He ran a hand over his distraught face. “Sonofabitch. Don’t tell me she’s leaving town.”
Bobbie Jo shrugged nonchalantly. “What does it matter to you? It’s not like you care.”
“What? I do care! Now let me in.” But Bobbie Jo didn’t budge. “Damn it, I need to find her. Get out of the way or I’m going to pick your ass up and move you.”
Something resembling a smirk lifted the corners of her mouth. “She’s probably in the kitchen packing up more boxes,” she said nonchalantly, dropping her arm from the doorway.
As Cowboy stepped inside, I slipped out of view and pretended to be busy.
“Anna…?”
I poked my head out of the kitchen and frowned at him. “Why are you still here?”
“I want to know where the hell you think you’re going.”
“Beg your pardon?”
“You heard me.”
I glared at him. “I’m no longer your concern, remember?”
Cowboy counted slowly under his breath, trying to gain control of his temper. “Stop this nonsense, woman. I won’t sit by and let you leave town all because I—”
“Because you what? Used me? Took what you wanted and moved on? Guess you were bored with me. Isn’t that how you put it?”
“That wasn’t true and you know it.”
“No, I don’t know. As far as I’m concerned, that’s exactly what happened. Now, get out.”
“I need to talk to you. To tell you something. At the very least I owe you an