Searching for Always (Page 64)

Kate sniffed. “You’re right. Thanks for being the bitch in the relationship, Ken.”

“Welcome.”

Arilyn laughed as her friends disappeared. Now all she had to do was take their advice and ask Stone Petty to the wedding.

Her heart beat so hard it almost exploded out of her chest. Half of her prayed he’d just beg off with a polite excuse and they’d never mention it again.

But it was the other half that hoped he’d say yes that disturbed her the most.

LATER THAT DAY, SHE was still trying to get the courage up to ask him after anger management class. Ugh. Like a prom date after the bell rang. She was humiliated.

She walked through Animals Alive and checked on her crew. They came to the shelter for a session once a week to walk and socialize the dogs. Luther and Eli seemed enthusiastic about returning, but Stone seemed stressed. She wondered if he was still leery about being around the dogs, even though he had done well with Pinky last week.

Anthony was giving them a lecture on the horses, so she decided to allow Stone to move to the carriage house. It was hard dealing with a dog bite from childhood and not fair for her to push him. She paused at the door and studied them. They worked hard, and she’d seen some huge leaps with Luther and Eli regarding their anger. With half the course behind them, the next three weeks would consist of drilling in the proper techniques they’d been learning.

Her gaze greedily took in Stone. The familiar Yankees cap was perched on his head. Today, his wardrobe consisted of a long-sleeved blue T-shirt proclaiming I GOT YOUR BACK. The kicker was the stick figure sketched out with no back. Total guy humor. His jeans were so tight and worn, Arilyn wondered if he’d had them for the past decade and refused to get rid of them. His five-o’clock shadow mixed with his goatee and added to that almost dangerous, criminal look he did so well.

Now she knew how his beard scratched against her skin. How soft his lips were, and how his experienced tongue drove into her mouth. She knew the hard strength of his thighs anchoring her to the wall, and the delicious grace of those fingers when he skimmed her bare skin. She knew that his ass, which was perfectly on display right now in those jeans, was as tight and firm as it looked.

She wanted to know so much more.

“Arilyn?”

She refocused. Her students were all gazing at her, waiting for an answer when she hadn’t heard Anthony’s question. “Sorry?”

Stone gave her a slow, smug smile, as if he knew she’d been caught staring at his ass. She fought a blush. “Everyone’s ready. Luther wants to go to the horse stalls today, so I’ll oversee him if you’d like.”

“Great. Stone, you can follow them. Eli, why don’t you go ahead and check which dogs need working.”

Anthony motioned Stone and Luther toward the door. “I’ll catch up with you two in a minute. Can I talk to you for a minute, A?”

“Sure.” She turned her back on Stone’s ferocious frown, wondering what had suddenly pissed him off, and grabbed some dog treats. “What’s up?”

“Pinky.”

Her stomach tightened. She’d been hoping the dog would be better, but it was a slow process. Her breakdowns around the other dogs in the kennel made it difficult to rehabilitate her, especially with so little space. Anthony pushed his fingers through his hair with frustration. “I gotta be honest. I have the word out to other shelters to take her in, but so far, no offers. I lost my behaviorist, and we’re looking to rehire. I can’t keep her too much longer. Can you foster her until things calm down?”

Arilyn bit her lip. “I can’t. I’m watching my friend’s dog for the next two weeks and my place is too small to keep them separated. What about the Trumans? Can they take her?”

Anthony shook his head. “Nope, they already took three in. My fosters are filled up, and I’m out of room. I can squeeze a few more days, but then I have to put her somewhere.”

She dug her fingers into her neck to try to ease away the muscle ache. What was she going to do? They couldn’t advertise too publicly because she’d literally stolen her. She racked her brain for candidates, but not one came up. “Let me work on this. Maybe I can find someone to get her off the grid for a while until we come up with a solution.”

“Okay. I’m sorry. I know you took a risk saving her. Look, even if I have to ship her out of state, we’ll make sure she stays safe.”

Arilyn knew that with dogs this severely traumatized, sometimes the journey didn’t go well. Time was ticking, and she needed to learn to trust someone. Her world begged for stabilization and a shred of kindness so she could reset and decide if she wanted to fight.

Arilyn sensed Pinky was a fighter.

Shoulders slumped, she headed out to the horse barn with Anthony to help. Luther was checking out the two horses in the stall, one blindfolded from eye surgery, the other sporting a bum leg because his owner had thrown him out after proclaiming him a useless racehorse. “Where’s Stone?”

Luther shrugged. “He took off. Said he was heading somewhere else.”

Anthony cocked his head. “Probably with Pinky. He’s been showing up here on a daily basis—his name is always on the sign-in sheet.”

Shock cut through her. “What? He’s been coming on his own?”

“Yep. Our volunteer, Natalie, saw him in Pinky’s cage. It’s too bad he couldn’t foster her—he seems to be the only one making progress with her.”

“Yeah, too bad. I’ll be back.”

Her boots crunched on the gravel. She walked down the path, past the woods, and headed down the private road where Pinky’s kennel was located. Sure enough, Stone was in the same position as last week. On the ground, back against the cage. She heard a low murmur as he spoke. Holding her breath, she moved silently over the grass until she got close.