Wild Men of Alaska Collection - By Helmer, Tiffinie Page 0,30
the paint-scraped, dented, weary-worn canoe. Yeah, she’d give this a chance. Just like she realized, she’d give him a chance.
“Okay, what do I do?” she asked.
“First—” he held up a yellow lifejacket “—you have to put this on.” He held the vest out for her like a gentleman holding a coat for her to slip into. Once she had the lifejacket on, she faced him, looking down at the zipper and clips, not knowing what to snap, zip, or buckle first. Turn out that wasn’t something she needed to worry about as he went about securing the lifejacket tightly to her torso. His hands were all business until he finished with the belt around her waist, then they fell to her hips and just stayed there warming her from the inside out. His eyes met hers, and heat simmered between them. Just like that her internal temperature rose, and she wanted the jacket off. Wanted to strip all her clothes off and his too.
His nostrils flared, and he leaned closer, stopping just before his lips would have taken possession of hers. “If I kiss you, we won’t be canoeing.”
A large part of her was perfectly fine with that. Another, the more sensible part—damn it—insisted she step back. “So...” She bent down and picked up a paddle. “Show me how to work a canoe.”
He cocked his lips in a smile that had her wishing she’d taken him up on that kiss instead of the canoeing. But if she was going to live here in the wilds of Alaska she needed to know a few things. From what she could tell, people did a lot of outdoor activities.
Like canoeing.
“Second rule of thumb. Do not stand up in the canoe. When you feel comfortable enough with everything else, I’ll show you how that can be safely accomplished. Just know that if you stand up, you will most likely dump us both in the water. Third, we don’t want to be dumped into the water. Average temperature of the river is roughly ten degrees above freezing this time of year. By the end of summer it might be fifteen degrees above freezing.”
“I have no plans to get wet.”
“I’ve heard it before. Let’s just plan it now and hope for the best.”
“I’m not an idiot. I know what hypothermia is, and I have no plans to experience it first hand.”
“Good. Fourth—”
“How many rules are you going to name? This is going to take all day.”
“You want to learn as we go?”
“At least we’ll be going somewhere,” she muttered.
He pursed his lips.
Guess she’d pissed him off. She was good at doing that. Impatience was one of her strong suits.
“Here.” He handed her a can of bug spray.
“There’s DEET in this thing. Have you heard the statistics of what it can do to you?”
“Less harm than the mosquitoes you will encounter today.”
“You’ve got to be kidding me?”
“One of the ways they used to punish a criminal back in the gold rush days was to tie the perp naked in a canoe and launch him on the Yukon. The man would jump into the freezing, silt-filled water with his hands tied behind his back, knowing full well he’d drown, to escape the mosquitoes.”
She arched a brow in disbelief. “That’s some tall tale.”
He stared at her for a long silent minute, and then stepped back and sprayed himself down, adding a healthy coating to his hands and wiping the stuff onto his face and neck, making sure he covered his ears too. She started to rethink her need for bug spray. He did live here. He wouldn’t be messing with her, would he?
“Fine, give me that.” She exchanged the paddle for the can and gave herself a light dusting.
He smirked and packed the can in the backpack he carried. “Let me know when you need some more.”
“What? Are there vamp mosquitoes out there?” Geez. She wasn’t that naive.
He ignored her and positioned the canoe to launch. “Go ahead and get in. Face the front, and I’ll give us a push.”
She climbed in, her arms flaying wide when the canoe rocked under her feet and quickly took a seat. She gulped. Maybe this wasn’t such a good idea.
“Here’s your paddle.” Lynx handed it back to her. She took it not knowing what he expected her to do with it. Maybe she should have let him finish his never-ending list of rules.
But how hard could it be? People canoed all the time.
Lynx stepped in behind her. She dropped the paddle as