A Montana Born Christmas Boxed Set
Publication date: October 20th 2015
Genres: Adult, Romance
Publication date: October 20th 2015
Genres: Adult, Romance
Ready to two-step under the
mistletoe with a hot cowboy? How about a gorgeous tycoon? Spend a white
Christmas in Montana with eight heartwarming, contemporary romances.
This limited edition collection features sweet and sexy holiday stories
from bestselling and award-winning authors. You’ll find eight romantic
heroes to fall in love with in A Montana Born Christmas boxed set. And
all for less than a dollar!
Christmas at Copper Mountain by Jane Porter
Life has been tough at Copper Mountain Ranch and widower Brock Sheenan’s kids have never had a proper Christmas. His new housekeeper, Harley Diekerhoff, is determined to change that–but she doesn’t count on falling in love with her taciturn boss.
Come Home for Christmas, Cowboy by Megan Crane
Christina Grey Cooper has finally given up on her marriage and returned home to Marietta to lick her wounds. But Dare can’t let the love of his life go, even if what’s standing in the way of a true holiday miracle is himself… Can the magic of a White Christmas in Montana help him save what he’s nearly lost forever?
A Cowgirl’s Christmas by CJ Carmichael
Betrayed by her father, Callan Carrigan has to decide what matters most to her. Fighting Court McAllister to get back the family ranch, or giving Court what he really wants—her heart.
A Cowboy for Christmas by Katherine Garbera
Back in Marietta, disgraced, the last person Annie Pruhomme wants to see is hunky Carson Scott. Does he hold a grudge, and why does he still look so hot?
Mistletoe Wedding by Melissa McClone
An instant family isn’t on ranch foreman Tyler Murphy’s Christmas list, but event planner Meg Redstone’s kisses are. Getting her under the mistletoe, however, is going to take a miracle…or help from Santa.
A Sweet Montana Christmas by Roxanne Snopek
A marriage in jeopardy, a decrepit honey farm and an unexpected birth on a dark, snowy night. All they need to rediscover their love is a Christmas miracle.
Blame the Mistletoe by Dani Collins
Commiseration over being alone for the holidays turns to a holiday fling, making Liz Flowers think Blake Canon is giving her the Best Christmas Ever. But when family secrets are revealed and their children arrive home early, will they be able to keep the season bright?
Her Mistletoe Cowboy by Alissa Callen
Ivy Bishop plans to spend Christmas holed up on an isolated Montana ranch far from the city and her ex-fiancé. But the more time she spends with the workaholic cowboy next door the more she realizes her heart isn’t actually broken – yet.
Christmas at Copper Mountain by Jane Porter
Life has been tough at Copper Mountain Ranch and widower Brock Sheenan’s kids have never had a proper Christmas. His new housekeeper, Harley Diekerhoff, is determined to change that–but she doesn’t count on falling in love with her taciturn boss.
Come Home for Christmas, Cowboy by Megan Crane
Christina Grey Cooper has finally given up on her marriage and returned home to Marietta to lick her wounds. But Dare can’t let the love of his life go, even if what’s standing in the way of a true holiday miracle is himself… Can the magic of a White Christmas in Montana help him save what he’s nearly lost forever?
A Cowgirl’s Christmas by CJ Carmichael
Betrayed by her father, Callan Carrigan has to decide what matters most to her. Fighting Court McAllister to get back the family ranch, or giving Court what he really wants—her heart.
A Cowboy for Christmas by Katherine Garbera
Back in Marietta, disgraced, the last person Annie Pruhomme wants to see is hunky Carson Scott. Does he hold a grudge, and why does he still look so hot?
Mistletoe Wedding by Melissa McClone
An instant family isn’t on ranch foreman Tyler Murphy’s Christmas list, but event planner Meg Redstone’s kisses are. Getting her under the mistletoe, however, is going to take a miracle…or help from Santa.
A Sweet Montana Christmas by Roxanne Snopek
A marriage in jeopardy, a decrepit honey farm and an unexpected birth on a dark, snowy night. All they need to rediscover their love is a Christmas miracle.
Blame the Mistletoe by Dani Collins
Commiseration over being alone for the holidays turns to a holiday fling, making Liz Flowers think Blake Canon is giving her the Best Christmas Ever. But when family secrets are revealed and their children arrive home early, will they be able to keep the season bright?
Her Mistletoe Cowboy by Alissa Callen
Ivy Bishop plans to spend Christmas holed up on an isolated Montana ranch far from the city and her ex-fiancé. But the more time she spends with the workaholic cowboy next door the more she realizes her heart isn’t actually broken – yet.
Purchase:
--B&N: http://www. barnesandnoble.com/w/a- montana-born-christmas-jane- porter/1122614965?ean= 2940152333510
--iTunes: https://itunes. apple.com/us/book/a-montana- born-christmas/id1035458791? ls=1&mt=11
Excerpt
for Christmas at
Copper Mountain by
Jane Porter
“You
okay, Miss Diekerhoff?”
Turning
quickly, potato skins still dripping, Harley blinked back tears as
she spotted Brock Sheenan standing by the fireplace, warming his
hands.
Brock
was a big man. He was tall–six one or two—with broad
shoulders, a wide muscular chest, and shaggy black hair.
Harley’s
late husband, David, was Portuguese and darkly handsome, but
David was always groomed and polished while the Montana rancher
seemed disinclined to comb his hair, or bother with a morning shave.
The
truth was, Brock Sheenan looked like a pirate, and never more so than
now, with tiny snow flakes clinging to his wild hair and shadowed
jaw.
“I’m
fine,” she said breathlessly, embarrassed. “I didn’t hear
you come in.”
“The
faucet was on.” He rubbed his hands together, the skin red and
raw. “You’re not….crying…are you?”
She
heard the uncomfortable note in his voice and cringed a little.
“No,” she said quickly, straightening and squaring her shoulders
as she dumped the potato peels into the garbage. “Everything’s
wonderful.”
“So
you’re not crying?”
“No,”
she repeated crisply, drying her hands. “Just peeling
potatoes for dinner.”
Her
gaze swept his big frame, seeing the powdered snow still clinging to
the hem of his wrangler jeans peeking beneath his leather chaps and
white glitter dusting his black brows. His supple leather chaps
weren’t for show. It was frigid outside and he’d spent the
week in the saddle driving the last herds of cattle from the back
country to the valley down below so the cows could take shelter
beneath trees. “Can I get you something?”
“You
don’t happen to have any coffee left from this morning that you
could heat up?”
“I
can make a fresh pot,” she said, grabbing the glass carafe to fill
it with water. “Want regular or decaf?”
He
glanced at the clock mounted on the wall above the door and then out
the window where the snow flurries were thickening, making it almost
impossible to see the tall pine trees marking one corner of the yard.
“Leaded,” he said. “Make it strong, too. It’s
going to be a late night for me.”
She
added the coffee grounds, and then hit the brew button. “You’re
heading back out?”
“I’m
going to ride back up as soon as I get something warm in me.
Thought I’d take some of the breakfast coffee cake with me.
If there was anything left.”
“There
is.” She’d already wrapped the remaining slices in foil.
He wasn’t one to linger over meals, and he didn’t like asking for
snacks between meals, either. If he wanted something now,
it meant he wouldn’t be back anytime soon. But it was
already after four. It’d be dark within the hour. “It’s
snowing hard.”
“I
won’t be able to sleep tonight if I don’t do a last check. The
boys said we’ve got them all but I keep thinking we’re missing
one or two of the young ones. Have to be sure before I call it
a night.”
Harley
reached into a cupboard for one of the thermoses she sent with Brick
on his early mornings. “What time will you want dinner?”
“Don’t
know when I’ll be back. Could be fairly late, so just leave a
plate in the oven for me. No need for you to stay up.”
He bundled his big arms across his even bigger chest, a lock of thick
black hair falling down over his forehead to shadow an equally dark
eye.
There
was nothing friendly or approachable about Brock when he stood like
that. His wild black hair, square jaw, and dark piercing gaze
that gave him a slightly threatening air, but Harley knew better.
Men, even the most dangerous men, were still mortal. They had
goals, dreams, needs. They tried, they failed. They made
mistakes. Fatal mistakes.
“Any
of the boys going with you?” she asked, trying to sound casual as
she wrapped a generous wedge of cheddar cheese in foil, and a hunk of
the summer sausage he liked, so he’d have something more
substantial than coffee cake for his ride.
He
shook his head, then dragged a large calloused hand through the
glossy black strands in a half-hearted attempt to comb the tangled
strands smooth. “No.”
She
gave him a swift, troubled look.
He
shrugged. “No point in putting the others in harm’s way.”
Her
frown deepened. “What if you get into trouble?”
“I
won’t.”
She
arched her brows.
She
ought to be intimidated by this shaggy beast of a man, but she
wasn’t. She’d had a husband—a daring, risk taking husband
of her own—and his lapse in judgment had cost them all.
Dearly.
“It’s
dangerous out there,” she said quietly. “You shouldn’t go
alone.”
Excerpt for A
COWBOY FOR CHRISTMAS
by Katherine Garbera:
Marietta,
Montana did Christmas in a big way with all the storefronts on Main
Street draped in garland and twinkle lights. The Main Street Diner
wasn’t any different with its rustic wreath made with layers of old
ropes and decked with red poinsettia leaves and Rocking Around the
Christmas Tree playing merrily on the jukebox as Carson Scott opened
the door.
No
one was exactly sure how the Wednesday night tradition had started,
not even
Carson, but he knew that his brothers had done it for him. It had
been in the dark time right after Rainey had been killed in a head-on
collision out on highway 89 on her way back from Livingston. He’d
sat at home every night with baby Evan drinking too much Red Bull.
His oldest brother Alec had insisted that they all meet in Marietta
at the diner for dinner.
Alec
had thick blond hair like their momma and piercing blue-gray eyes
that Carson had heard more than one girl describe as colder than the
glaciers in Glacier Park. But Sienna, Alec’s wife, had said that
she knew how to warm him up. Which had led to a lot of ribbing by
Carson and his other brothers. Alec needed to be taken down a peg or
two at times.
But
not on Wednesday nights. Carson showed up here after he dropped Evan
off at his maternal grandparents’ house and ate chili and cornbread
with his brothers. There were five of them all together and
sometimes Flo, who ran the grill, gave them a hard time about being
carbon copies of their dad, but that didn’t bother any of them.
Their old man cast a long shadow and had a reputation for being
honest and hard-working. There were worse things a man could be
known for.
There
were only five weeks left until Christmas and Evan was being cagey
about what he wanted from Santa this year. He’d hinted he wanted a
mommy that wasn’t in heaven. And the last thing that Carson was
interested in was dating any woman, much less one to become Evan’s
new mommy.
“Isn't
that Annie waiting tables?” Alec said as they entered the diner.
The walls were heavy red brick and the floor solid wood. There was a
counter with red leather-covered stools bolted to the floor in front
of it, and for as long as Carson could remember beehive-haired Flo
was standing at the grill cooking delicious food, trading gossip, and
flirting with any man who entered.
“Annie
who?” he asked. He was holding the door open for his younger
brother Hudson who had a shopping bag from The Mercantile in one hand
and his Stetson in the other.
“Prudhomme.
Is there another Annie you’d care about?” Alec asked.
“I
thought she'd left town for good,” Hudson said.
Annie.
Here. Wow.
Why?
How?
When?
It
didn’t make sense. He ate here every Wednesday with his brothers.
She hadn’t been here last week. Why was she here now?
Carson
craned his neck around his brothers’ shoulders to look at the
waitress.
Goddamn it. She hadn’t changed. She was still the same slim
pretty girl he remembered. She wasn't tall but had long legs and
dark brown hair that hung to her shoulders and curled slightly at the
ends. He stared at her until she turned and he met those pretty gray
eyes that he had thought he’d never see again.
He
hardened his heart. If there was one thing he knew without even
talking to her it was that this was a temporary move. He doubted she
was back to stay. That wasn’t her style and Marietta wasn’t her
town.
At
eighteen it had felt like he'd never love again when she'd left
Marietta – and him – all in the same cloud of dust. But at
thirty-three he knew that was a lie. He had loved again and married
and had a chance for real happiness. But now he wondered –was that
another lie he’d told himself to make Annie’s leaving him okay?
“Yup,”
he said, answering his brothers as he turned back to the laminated
menu, trying to be blasé when inside he wanted to go and talk to
her. Go and find out why she was back and what it meant. Had life
turned that ballsy, sassy girl he’d loved into a bitch or tamed
her?
But
he kept his head down studying the laminated menu like his sanity
depended on it. It wasn't as if he didn't know what he was going to
order.
He
always got the same thing when he and his brothers came into town to
eat on Wednesday nights. His son was visiting his maternal
grandparents at their home on the modest section of Bramble Lane.
Rhett and Lily had moved out to Marietta after Rainey had died to be
closer to Evan and they said having Carson around made it hard for
them to bond with Evan.
The
thing Carson was proudest of was his son and how well he and the
six-year-old had grown up together after Rainey died.
“Yup?”
Alec asked.
“That
girl—” Hudson said.
“I
know. I'm surprised she's here too,” Carson said trying to play it
cool. But the thing with brothers was they always knew when he was
bullshitting them. “But let’s face it... everyone ends up back
here eventually. You said Pop wanted some help with something?”
Alec’s
brother nodded. “He's determined we need to get that old red barn
renovation finished by the New Year. I could use some extra help to
finish the work.”
“I'll
send my hands over tomorrow. Is he still planning to sell it?”
“You
know Pop, if you can't ranch it then it's a bad investment. And he
bought it for Trey to live on with his wife but they aren't
interested in
settling
down here.”
“What’s
his hurry then?”
“Lane
has a friend who is looking for a place out this way.”
“You
do?” Carson asked Lane. “I thought all your buddies were career
military.”
“He's
retired,” Lane said. “Like me.”
“Is
he like you?” Carson asked. Lane had lost the bottom half of his
left leg in an IED explosion in Iraq and now had prosthetic leg.
“Why?”
Lane asked.
“Just
wanted to know if we should make the halls and bath a little bigger
in the house,” Carson said. “Maybe we should anyway”
“Nah,
he’s still got both his legs,” Lane said.
“How
old is he?” Alec asked.
“Barely
thirty but all that fighting has taken it out of him,” Lane said.
“We
were lucky to get you back when we did,” Carson said.
“Thanks,
boys. Good to know you care,” Lane said.
“Ah,
they all care about youngest Scott boy,” Annie said coming over to
their table.
She
walked toward them wearing the traditional Main Street Diner white
apron over her own clothing. There was something almost defiant in
her manner. It had to stick in her craw that she’d left here to
make it big and now she was waiting on all of Marietta.
Her
brown hair swung around her high cheekbones with each step she took.
A pair of faded denim jeans hugged her legs and the tips of her worn
brown boots were scuffed. Her smile didn’t reach her eyes and
she’d managed to chew off most of her lipstick.
Hellfire.
It had been fifteen years and one look at Annie was all it took to
get him hot and bothered. It wasn’t that she was the most
beautiful woman he’d ever seen. She had an attitude bigger than
the Montana sky, but she’d always just had something that made him
stand at attention.
“We
care about all the Scott boys,” Alec said pointedly. “Even
Carson here when he was dumb enough to fall in love with a girl
intent on leaving.”
“Sorry,”
she said.
There
was something her eyes that made her seem… more than sorry, almost
sad and he cautioned himself about feeling anything for her, even
pity.
“Really?”
Carson asked.
“More
than you can know,” she admitted. “But you boys didn’t come
here to hear about my mistakes. You want dinner, right?”
“We
sure do. Did Flo make her jalapeno cornbread today?” Hudson asked.
“Yes
she did,” Annie said, taking a pen from the pocket of her apron and
holding up her notepad.
“Chili
and cornbread for me and root beer,” Alec said.
“Same,”
Hudson said.
“Same
again,” Lane said.
She
looked at Carson and for a moment he remembered the last time he'd
held her in his arms, but he'd known then she was leaving. She was
always on her way out of Marietta.
“I'll
have a Sprite instead, but otherwise the same,” Carson said.
“Still
don't like caffeine?” she asked.
“Nope,”
he said.
She
nodded and walked away and all he could do was watch her. And admire
the way those faded jeans hugged her butt. Maybe it was just
physical… his reaction to her had always been strong. He realized
his brothers were watching him watch her and he cursed under his
breath. The last thing he needed was Annie back in Marietta this
close to Christmas. Christmas always made him wish for things that
couldn’t be.
Annie
Prudhomme was definitely something that wasn’t meant to be. She’d
proven that the day she drove out of town and left him the dust.
“Wednesday
dinners just got a little more interesting,” Hudson said.
He
punched his brother in the arm, but he felt it as well. There was
something about that woman that always made the world seem a little
brighter when she'd been in the vicinity. And he knew he couldn't be
stupid again. Couldn't let himself get involved with a woman who
clearly wasn't long for Montana.
The
front door opened, bringing a burst of cold air and the jingling of
the sleigh bell wreath on the door. They all smiled and waved as
Paige Joffe walked in with her two little ones, six-year-old Addison
and five-year-old Lewis. For a while the town matchmakers had tried
pairing the two of them up but both Paige and Carson had resisted.
She was nice enough and pretty, but just not the woman for him.
He
didn't know her story except she'd come to Marietta from somewhere
in
California
and had the misfortune to move in during a bad snow storm last
February. But she seemed to be adjusting to it. Addison was in the
same class as Evan at school.
“Evening
Scotts,” she said with a friendly wave. Her shoulder-length
straight dark blonde hair was pulled back in a low ponytail. She had
a strong chin and dimples when she smiled, which she didn’t do that
often. He’d really only seen her smile when her kids made her
laugh.
“Ma'am.”
“How's
my new waitress treating you?” she asked.
“She'll
do,” Carson said, but he didn’t want to talk about Annie. And it
was obvious she didn’t want to talk to him either. She’d pretty
much avoided their table after she’d dropped off their food.
“Don't forget to come out to my place this weekend to pick out your
tree. The best ones are going fast.”
“Can
I come by Saturday morning, first thing?”
“Yes,
ma'am,” he said. “We're going to have sleigh rides for the
little ones too.”
“I
spoke to Nate. He’s got his foreman’s sister staying with him
for the holidays. She’s trying to get a baking operation off the
ground. I hate to stick my nose in where it doesn’t belong, but I
wondered if she might come out to the tree lot. Maybe sell some
gingerbread house kits?”
Carson
was all for helping out a neighbor and he knew Ty Murphy and
respected him. “Sure. Give her my number and we’ll get it all
set up. I’ve asked Sage to send Rose Linn out to sell hot
chocolate.”
“You
just didn’t want to have to drive to town to get some for
yourself,” Hudson said.
“You
got me,” Carson said with a grin.
Paige’s
phone vibrated and she glanced at it before smiling at their table.
“Sounds delightful.”
Paige
waved goodbye and moved toward her office at the back of the diner.
The evening dinner crowd was thick but not too bad and a few times
Carson glanced at Annie as she carried dishes to the tables. When
she caught him looking she stood straight and gave him a cheery
smile. But when she didn’t notice, he saw fatigue in her every
move. Whatever she’d come to Marietta for, she hadn’t planned on
waiting tables.
“Hard
to believe Mama's little tree farm has grown so big,” Hudson said,
pulling his attention from Annie. “Remember when she used to make
us water them?”
“Yes.
She loved her trees,” Carson said. Their mother had been Montana
born and
bred but instead of ranching she'd always had her mind set on growing
trees and preserving wildlife. Their father had given her all of his
support and turned fifty acres into a forest where she started her
no-cut Christmas tree program in the nineteen-seventies and it was
still thriving forty years later. They had to move some of the trees
by pallet truck and forklift now, but the families that owned them
wouldn’t have it any other way.
Carson
did a traditional cut-tree service for the town as well and he was
happy to be the caretaker of his mother's trees.
After
they ate their dinner and his brothers left, Carson sat there nursing
his Sprite and pretending he was waiting until it was time to pick up
Evan. A smart man would be on his feet and down at Grey’s Saloon
instead of sitting in a corner booth watching the one who got away.
Excerpt for Mistletoe
Wedding by Melissa
McClone
A
bag of coal settled at the bottom of his stomach.
Talk
about an over-the-top, Christmas-gone-wrong nightmare. Whoever did
this had missed the memo about less was more when decorating. Ty
scuffed the ball of his boot across the dirt floor. This was not how
he wanted to start the day. At least he knew the first thing to write
on his chore list today—redecorating.
“What
do you think?” a female voice asked, her tone hopeful.
A-ha.
He knew who was to blame for making a Las-Vegas-strip-worthy
spectacle of his
barn. Meg Redstone, the newest addition to the Bar V5 staff, in
charge of guest services and event planning, a Montana native who’d
spent the past five years working at hotels and inns in the Midwest.
Nate must have added holiday decorator to her job description. This
looked like something a city girl might do.
Ty
would be careful with what he said. The last thing he wanted to do
was upset a new employee. He faced the full-size elf, not surprised
she wore a reindeer antler headband over her fleece hat.
Her
gaze met his. The hope he’d heard in Meg’s voice matched the
expression in her milk chocolate eyes.
His
heart lurched. Not the reaction he expected or wanted, but she
looked . . . good.
She
wore a forest green parka with a Bar V5 emblem on the upper left
side, insulated pants, gloves and boots. Dark blond strands of hair
stuck out from her hat. Only the skin on her face was exposed. The
cold temperature tinged her cheeks and nose pink. Pretty, if you
liked soulful brown eyes and a generous mouth. He did.
She
smiled tentatively, as if on display and awaiting approval. Not her,
the decorations. “Good morning.”
“Hey.”
He would be interested in getting to know her outside of work, except
for one thing. A six-year-old girl named Brooklyn who was Meg’s
daughter. A nice kid, but moms were to be avoided at all costs. Hell,
women who wanted kids, too. Non-negotiable. “Up early.”
She
nodded. “So . . . Christmassy enough for you?”
He
looked around, not seeing anything specific except for a blur of
colored lights. “You’ve been, uh, busy.”
She
bounced from foot to foot, moving her hands. Excited or too much
caffeine? He’d go with the first.
“I
started as soon as Thanksgiving dinner finished.” Meg patted her
stomach. “A good thing, because after your sister’s amazing meal,
I needed to work off calories. And I wanted to surprise you.” She
raised her gloved hands. “Surprise!”
So
eager to please. A hard worker. And . . .
Shut
up.
So
what if Meg was attractive? Or she fit in with the staff as if she’d
worked at the Bar V5 for years, not weeks? Three to be exact. She had
a kid. A cute one, but a child in need of a father.
Not
going to happen.
“You
succeeded. Very . . . Christmassy.” Ty had won his
fair share of poker games, but he wasn’t that good an actor. Best
not to say too much. “Though glass balls and barn cats are never a
good combination. I cleaned up the mess and took the others off
before they broke.”
“I’ve
never had a cat. Sorry.” She sounded contrite. “What about the
rest of the decorations?”
“Never
seen so many lights in a barn before.”
Meg’s
forehead creased. “The lights were in the plastic bins sitting with
the decorations.”
That
explained why there were so many. “Those lights are for the entire
ranch.”
Meg’s
smile disappeared. “Oh.”
The
one word said more than twenty could. He pressed his lips together,
glimpsed the bottom of a ladder. She must have worked through the
night putting up the lights and decorations herself. He might not
like what she did, but he appreciated the effort.
“No
worries.” He had none. Summer, their busiest season, had been a
sellout. Reservations for next year looked solid. Livestock sales had
been good, too. Finances and impending foreclosure were no longer
concerns, unlike a few years ago when Ralph Vaughn, the late owner of
the Bar V5 and Nate’s father, nearly lost the ranch. “We can buy
more lights. Maybe some of the LED ones.”
She
nodded, but the sparkle in her eyes had dimmed. She dragged her teeth
over her lip.
Damn.
Ty knew that look. Rachel’s initial failed cooking attempts had
brought about the same expression. Granted she’d been a kid at the
time, and he’d eaten the over-or-undercooked food so she would feel
better. He didn’t want Meg to feel bad, even if her decorating
was . . . well, not to his liking. Someone might find
all the flash fun. She needed to smile.
“Look
at Onyx.” He pointed to the black cat peeking through the Douglas
fir’s branches. “He loves the Christmas tree. There’s another
cat on the backside of the tree climbing around. Bet they forget
about the upholstered cat tree in my office until after the
holidays.”
As
if on cue, a bell crashed to the ground.
“A
good thing those are metal and don’t break,” he added.
She
half-laughed. “You’re right, but I’m not sure what that means
for the life expectancy of the tree.”
Good.
Her sense of humor was intact. “That’s a barn cat for you.
Decorations, unless edible or fun to play with, are lost on them.”
Meg
raised her chin, a hint of challenge in her eyes. “What about
wranglers?”
“I
won’t speak for the others, but I love Christmas. Been looking
forward to this one since last year. Having guests around will be
different. This is usually a quiet, get-the-work-done kind of time.”
“You
never know, having guests at the ranch could be better.”
Nate
had been pushing for guests year round, and Rachel agreed. A feeling
in Ty’s gut had made him the sole holdout. He’d finally relented,
but he would withhold judgment on the decision for now.
He
adjusted his gloves. “Hope so.”
“Well,
I’m going to do my best to make this Christmas perfect for both the
guests and the staff.”
Excerpt from A
Cowgirl’s Christmas
by C.J. Carmichael
All
day long Callan had been growing more anxious and uptight. She had a
really bad feeling about this meeting with the lawyer. And she felt
even more nervous about meeting Court McAllister.
“We
should put out some snacks. I have more chocolate in my car. I’ll
grab a fresh box.” Her sister Sage reappeared a moment later with a
large-sized, copper-colored box filled with her fruit and nut bark.
After arranging the chocolate on a pretty plate, she placed the plate
on the table in the family room, where they’d decided to hold their
meeting.
Meanwhile,
their other sisters, Mattie and Dani washed grapes and put them out
with cubes of cheddar and Swiss cheese.
At
four o’clock, precisely, Callan heard Ren Fletcher’s vehicle pull
up in the gravelled driveway.
All
four sisters gravitated to the foyer, but they let Callan open the
door. She understood why. This home had belonged to all of them, but
her sisters were acknowledging the fact that it was Callan who had
stayed and made the ranch her life.
Two
men emerged from the dusty SUV. Callan barely glanced at Ren
Fletcher, whom she’d known most of her life. It was the other man
who drew her eyes. Almost as tall as Ren, he had a lean build and a
smoothly handsome face. She could see nothing of Hawksley in him.
Despite his faded jeans and the worn leather of his boots, he looked
like a man from the city to her. For one thing, his skin was too
pale.
“My
condolences, Callan.” Ren was the first up the porch steps. He
didn’t hug her, just took her hand and squeezed her shoulder
gently, before moving on to greet her sisters.
Callan
was left to face Court. Up close she was struck by his beautiful blue
eyes and disarming smile. Paradoxically she felt an immediate
dislike. It felt wrong, having this man she’d never met before
taking part of such a personal, family gathering.
“I’m
Callan.” She offered him her hand, reluctantly.
He
looked taken aback, as if he’d expected someone different. “Callan.
Good to meet you, finally, though the circumstances could be better.
Sorry for your loss.”
He
looked like he wanted to say more, but she didn’t want to encourage
further conversation. She stepped back, letting Mattie move forward
into the void.
“Hi,
Court, welcome to the Circle C. We’ve heard so much about you from
our father. It feels strange that we’ve never met before.”
Yes,
that was the right thing to say. But Callan didn’t care if she’d
been rude. She just wanted this whole thing to be over, for these men
to get out of her house, and leave her and her sisters alone.
It
was Sage who ushered the guests to the family room, Mattie who
offered coffee, and Dani who sat down with paper and a pen, prepared
to take notes. Callan hung on the periphery, pouring herself some
bourbon over a glass full of ice.
“That
looks good. May I have a bourbon, too?” Court was watching her,
from his seat by the fireplace.
Damn
it, he was sitting in their father’s favorite leather chair.
Reluctantly she dropped ice into a second glass, poured in the
bourbon, then passed it to Mattie to give to Court. She dragged a
chair from the kitchen so she could sit on the edge of the action.
Now
she noticed Court taking in the view of the fields stretching out to
the Gallatin Mountains in the west. Even that annoyed her. Then
again, if he’d sat there staring at the tips of his boots, she’d
probably find that aggravating as well.
“Okay,
I’m going to get straight to the point, beginning with your
father’s wishes regarding his end of life,” Ren said. “Callan
was talking to me earlier about a funeral—”
“We
covered that this afternoon,” Dani flipped back a page in her
notebook. “We’ll bury dad next to mother’s marker in the family
plot. Probably have a short service, with lunch to follow in the
church basement.”
Ren
frowned and glanced at Callan. Too late she remembered him advising
her not to do any planning until he’d had a chance to talk to them.
She’d forgotten to pass this on to her sisters.
“I’m
afraid that isn’t what your father wanted, Dani,” Ren said, his
tone gentle, but firm. “He said no service, no celebration of life,
nothing like that. He just wanted—” Here Ren paused, taking a
deep breath before going on. “—to be cremated and have his ashes
scattered. He wanted Callan and—” Another pause. “And Court, to
ride up to the foothills and scatter his ashes there.”
The
room was quiet, for only a second. And then everyone was talking.
Callan sank back against her chair, too stunned to do more than
listen.
“But
what about the rest of us?” This was Mattie, sounding affronted.
“That
old bastard,” Dani said with disgust.
“This
is too much. Even for Hawksley.” Sage, who was sitting next to Ren
on the couch, put a hand on the lawyer’s arm. “Did Dad tell you
why he wanted only Court and Callan to spread the ashes?”
“I’m
sure he didn’t mean it as a slight or an insult. He just didn’t
want any fuss. You know your father.”
“Yeah,”
Dani said. Her voice made it clear this wasn’t a good thing.
Callan’s
gaze slid over to Court, and found him, likewise, looking at her.
There was something of an apology in his eyes, as if acknowledging
the inappropriateness of her father’s request. But there was
something else, too. A challenge?
“Have
you even been on a horse before?” She glanced from his smooth, even
complexion, to his soft, white hands.
“I
may not have grown up on a ranch. But I can ride.”
She
looked at him doubtfully. “What is it you do again?”
“I’m
an accountant.”
She
raised her eyebrows and gave a slight shake of her head. Then she
returned her focus to Ren. “Dad may not have wanted a funeral. But
he can’t stop us from having one, if we want to.”
“That’s
true,” the lawyer agreed. “I told Hawksley that, as well. But he
just wanted to let you know what his wishes were.”
“I
think we should respect them,” Sage said. “To a point. Callan and
Court can spread half of his ashes up on the foothills. Let’s bury
the rest by Mom, and have a small interment service, with just
immediate family.
“Court
isn’t immediate family,” Callan was quick to point out. “Will
he be invited?”
“Yes,”
said Sage, Mattie and Dani, speaking over one another is their haste
to be polite.
But
Court took no notice. He was still looking at Callan. “If you’d
rather I wasn’t present, I won’t be offended.”
His
polite words, for some reason, sent her temper flaring. “Really?
But then you’d be missing the point.”
“Callan!”
Mattie, appalled, was quick to reassure Court that he would naturally
be welcome to attend, if he chose.
“That’s
very kind,” Court replied, politely. “But perhaps you should
suspend your invitation until you hear the rest of what Mr. Fletcher
has to say.”
In
a flash everyone turned to Ren Fletcher, who made a show of
straightening the papers he’d earlier removed from his briefcase.
Despite his efforts to remain calm and professional, a sheen of
perspiration had appeared on his forehead. Callan knew then, that her
earlier anxiety had been well founded and some awful surprise was in
store for them this afternoon.
“Should
I get on with the provisions of the will, then?” Ren asked.
“Yes.”
Callan couldn’t take the tension and stress of waiting any longer.
Excerpt for Blame
The Mistletoe by
Dani Collins
“The
air smells good out here,” Liz told him, straightening away from
the warmed sheepskin against his back, so she could properly drink in
the pure Montana air. It was cold enough to make her nostrils sting,
but she’d never encountered anything like this. No pollution. No
dumpsters or dank storm sewers or even the humid tang of the ocean.
“I’ve
heard people say before that they could smell snow and I always
thought they were joking, but I can smell it. It’s sweet. And it’s
so quiet.”
She
spoke in a hushed voice, listening to the brush of the horse’s legs
through the snow and the squeak of his hooves with each step. The air
was still, the world silent to the point of reverence. The saunter of
the horse rocked her gently, like a mama with a cradle, lulling her.
As
they moved into the trees, a chilled pine scent closed around her.
Drifts of snow slid from branches with almost musical notes and
percussive thumps. Powder poofed in clouds that sparked with rainbow
colors in the weak sunlight.
“The
other reason I bring the horse,” Blake said, “is to drag the
tree. They’re heavy.”
She
let herself cuddle against him again, just because she liked it.
“I’ve been using the same fake one for years. This is definitely
better than digging a box out of the attic.”
They
wandered the grove of trees for a while, debating shapes, eyeing
rabbit tracks and a deer path. All these years, Liz had thought the
accouterments of Christmas a bit phony and clichéd, but today she
saw the reality that inspired all of it. The holly tree with its
bright red berries, the snow-frosted pine cones hanging like baubles.
She could have stayed out here forever, drinking it in.
Christmas
might come once a year, but this one—she realized like an
epiphany—would never be here again. She had to savor every second
and tuck the precious memories somewhere safe.
But
the window of milder temperatures was short. Within the hour, clouds
had gathered to hide the sun and a snap grew on the air. A few tiny
flakes drifted around them.
“This
one?” Blake said, circling the horse around a tree.
They
agreed on its perfection and both dismounted. Liz stretched her legs
while Blake chopped, axe ringing and releasing a pitchy, wood scent
into the air.
“I’m
warm,” he said as he wiped his brow and roped the tree.
Looking
around the little clearing they occupied, she had a feeling both
peaceful and awed, yet wistful and melancholy.
“You
know how lucky you are to live here, don’t you? It’s genuinely a
wonderland.”
“I
do,” he said, taking a moment to gaze upward at the cathedral like
treetops. “I hope I can keep it. Stay here forever. Might need a
Christmas miracle, though,” he said with a wryness that wasn’t as
light as it could be.
A
few minutes later, he mounted Rocky and looked down at where she
still stood on the ground.
She
puzzled her brows. “No fence out here, partner. How do I get up
there?”
“I’ve
done this before you know.” He kicked his foot free of a stirrup
and pointed at it. “Put your foot in there.”
“When
you say you’ve done it before, do you mean you’ve brought other
women out here?” she asked, not sure she liked that.
“I’ve
doubled,” he clarified. “But yes, I’ve brought women out here
to choose a tree. My mother and sister.”
“Okay
then,” she said, sheepish under his amused grin, then making a face
as he dragged her up from her high step into his stirrup. “Oof.
That wasn’t nearly so graceful as from the fence,” she said after
she’d gathered herself into position behind him.
But
she was more comfortable up here now. She snuggled into him for
warmth, not worried she’d take a tumble. She’d never felt so safe
as she did with him.
“This
has been fun. Thank you for bringing me. This is shaping up to be the
best Christmas of my life,” she told him.
“Me,
too.” His hand covered hers where she’d slid it under the fold of
his coat into the heat against his stomach. “I talk a good game
about not letting things worry me, but I’d be brooding if you
weren’t here, keeping me thankful for what I’ve got.”
She
inched a little closer to him, saying nothing. Just holding onto him
and what they had.
Excerpt
for Her Mistletoe
Cowboy by
Alissa Callen
She
was only staying for one night.
It
didn’t matter how much Rhett repeated the thought on the walk from
the main ranch house to his log cabin, the tension constricting his
ribs refused to ease. His self-preservation had already earmarked
Ivy’s pretty face and strong spirit as a distraction. A distraction
he simply couldn’t have. He had to remain focused on the end game.
He had a new ranch to establish and a deathbed promise to honor.
It
also didn’t seem to matter how casual he kept their banter as they
collected Ivy’s bag from her car, the closer they walked to his
house the more the spark in her eyes dimmed. She was running on
empty. He needed to get her and Milly inside, get them warm and fed
and ignore the voice that said to load them into his pickup and head
to his family ranch where Peta and Kendall would take over.
After
all, it was only one night.
But
as he opened the side door to his cabin he couldn’t let go of the
feeling he was opening the door into his life.
“Thanks,”
Ivy said, her tone quiet as she entered the mudroom. He followed, set
her bag on the floorboards and removed his boots. She bent to do the
same.
“It’s
okay. Leave yours on.” He hung his hat and coat on the hook to his
left. “You’ll stay warmer if you take your boots and coat off in
front of the fire.”
“Are
you sure? I don’t want to tramp snow inside.”
He
looked at her city footwear and grinned. “You have as much snow on
your boots as Milly would have on her paws.”
Canine
nails clipped across the floorboards as Rusty, his faithful aged
Australian Shepherd, left his dog bed in the far kitchen corner to
join them. Milly popped her head out of Ivy’s coat and whined. Ivy
placed the pup on the floor. The little Jack Russell launched herself
at Rusty and engaged him in a doggy wrestle.
“I’d
run now, Rusty, while you can,” Ivy said, laughing. “Once Milly
starts playing she doesn’t have an ‘off’ button,”
Rhett
concentrated on the two tussling dogs and not on the smiling woman an
arm’s distance away. Ivy’s husky, musical laughter reached a
place inside him he didn’t even know was lonely. A place he didn’t
want to awaken. The path he’d plotted to achieve his goals was a
single-track only.
He
swung away to collect a small stool and moved it close to a sofa
chair near the fire. “Here, take a seat and rest your feet on this
to warm them while I rustle up some coffees.”
“I
really don’t want to be a bother.” She pushed back the
fur-trimmed hood. “I’d rather help than sit.”
“It’s
fine, I’ll get the coffees,” he said, already at the kitchen door
and in sudden need of air.
Wearing
her hood, Ivy had been beautiful. Without it, she was pure
distraction. Her fawn-brown hair was thick and glossy and longer than
he thought. When not wearing her hooded-jacket it would reach halfway
down her back.
He
grabbed for the coffeepot. He wasn’t even going to think about her
mouth. Even devoid of color, her full lips made a man wonder if they
tasted as sweet as they looked.
He
reentered the living room, coffees in hand. He had to focus on being
neighborly and not on the fact that over near the fire Ivy shrugged
off her jacket. Coffee slopped from a mug and burned his left hand as
he side-stepped the playing dogs. He’d been too distracted by the
perfection that lay beneath Ivy’s coat to notice where he walked.
Taking
her and Milly to Bluebell Falls Ranch to be fussed over by his
sisters had to be the best option. The alternative was to spend the
next twelve hours in close proximity with a woman dressed in fitted
jeans, knee-high black boots and some sort of tiny white fluffy
cardigan that clung to her curves like a second skin. Small pearl
buttons drew his gaze exactly where it shouldn’t go, the top button
having worked itself free and giving him a glimpse of the smooth skin
at her throat. As she bent to drape the jacket over the arm of the
chair, her heavy hair slid over her shoulder. Again he caught the
scent of vanilla mixed with something sweet. All Ivy needed was a
pair of wings and she’d rival any beautiful Christmas tree angel.
Teeth
clenched, he set the steaming coffees on a nearby table. He hadn’t
even been around his unexpected houseguest for an hour and he’d
become as sidetracked as a hormonal teenage boy.
Ivy
sank into the huge chair, its size making her look almost …
fragile. She closed her eyes and turned her face toward the fire’s
heat. The bruises he’d noticed earlier beneath her eyes were now
dark crescents. Again he had the impression the cold wasn’t the
only reason for the weariness that seemed to weigh her down. Her
saying she’d had a bad six months must have been an understatement.
“Here,”
he said softly, as he passed her a coffee.
He
wouldn’t be taking her anywhere. She was too exhausted. He might be
many things, but he wasn’t a coward. He’d suck up his misgivings
about having her stay and look out for her as any good neighbor
would. He glanced at her chin that still retained its stubborn tilt
even when she relaxed. Well, that was if she’d let him.
Her
lashes swept open. The green flecks in her hazel eyes the only color
in her wan face.
The
corners of her mouth curled. “Perfect timing. Without caffeine I
don’t think I could get out of this chair.”
She
took a sip of coffee and placed the mug on the small table he
positioned beside her. She then leaned forward to remove her boots.
Rhett
moved away to scoop up Milly as she chewed Rusty’s tail. He didn’t
need to see Ivy’s small and dainty feet. As it was, his dreams
would be filled by angels with long, silken hair, curves in all the
right places and a waist he could span with his hands.
He
carried Milly into the kitchen and busied himself giving her and
Rusty an early dinner and on heating the ham and split pea soup he
had in the freezer.
When
he returned to the living room carrying a laden tray, Ivy had settled
on the stool she’d dragged closer to the fire.
“Whatever
is in those mugs smells good,” she said, with a grin.
“Let’s
hope it tastes good.” He sat the tray beside Ivy’s half-drunk
coffee on the small table. In his peripheral vision he caught the
flicker of firelight over her pink, varnished toenails. He passed her
a mug of thick soup. “I’m the first to admit I don’t have time
to be a gourmet chef.”
Her
eyes smiled her thanks.
He
collected his own soup mug and sat a safe distance away on the sofa.
From in the kitchen doggy growls sounded as Rusty and Milly resumed
their wrestling.
He
took a swallow of too-hot soup and sought for something to say. His
sudden awkwardness highlighted how long it’d been since he’d been
on a date or talked to a woman he hadn’t grown up with. On the
rodeo circuit, women hadn’t exactly been interested in his
conversational skills.
“So …
where are you from?” It was the best line he could think of.
But
it was enough. The faint crease between her brows cleared.
“Atlanta.
I’m a corporate analyst.” She hesitated. “Well, I was and will
be again when I establish my own consultancy business.”
“From
here?”
“To
be honest, I haven’t decided, but I doubt it. I’m not sure there
are many corporations needing financial advice in Marietta.”
He
grinned. “We do have a rodeo committee who needs help balancing
their budget.”
She
matched his grin. “There you go. There’ll be plenty of work for
me.”
All
the reasons as to why he needed to go outside and fix the tin
flapping on the barn emptied from his head. The hot soup had added
color and shine to her curved lips and the fire’s heat had flushed
her cheeks.
Her
smile slipped. “After Christmas I’ll think about the future.
Right now I just want my power on and time to … regroup.”
He
nodded. He might know a little more about her, but it was what she
didn’t say that spoke volumes. Her life was in turmoil and she’d
come to her mountain holiday home a month before Christmas to lick
her wounds. She’d removed her gloves, and even though her ring
finger was bare, his gut told him the reason shadows lurked in her
eyes had to do with a man.
Excerpt from Come
Home for Christmas, Cowboy
by Megan Crane
“You could smile,” she told
him. “It won’t kill you.”
“It might.”
“You’re the one who wanted to
pretend we were happy together,” she reminded him, and there was no
particular accusation in her voice. It was simply a fact. “This was
your idea. You could have been sitting at home in Denver all by
yourself if you wanted. You probably shouldn’t have come all the
way up here and agreed to lie about your feelings if it’s this hard
for you to crack a single freaking smile.”
“It’s never just a smile,
though. Is it?”
And the situation got out of
hand, just like that.
“Dare…”
But she was whispering, and she
had no idea if she was warding him off or begging him to come closer.
“First it’s the smile,” he
said, his voice a husky thing in the momentary privacy of the back
hall. “Then all the things that come with it. You make me imagine I
can be that man you smile at, Christina. You make me think that if I
play him long enough, I’ll turn into him one day. But what happens
if I don’t?”
“I have no idea what you’re
talking about.”
She also didn’t care. The
hallway was dimly lit, his mouth was so close to hers as he stood
there in front of her that it was the only thing she could think
about. Then he flattened his palms on the wall on each side of her
head and the world disappeared into that gaze of his, smoky and
intent.
“You know where I come from,”
he said, his voice like a dark throb along the surface of her skin,
then deep beneath it. “You know what that makes me. Why do I have
to keep reminding you?”
“You were a kid who deserved
better and a man who overcame a deeply crappy start,” she said, not
following him. But it was hard to follow anything just then that
wasn’t his mouth. “You were also an awesome husband for a while,
but then you went deep freeze on me. That’s on you, Dare.”
“You’re drunk.”
“I’m tipsy. Slightly tipsy.
And what does that have to do with anything?”
He leaned closer and Christina
trembled, thinking he would put his mouth to hers again. But he
didn’t. He angled himself so his mouth was right next to her ear,
so that when he spoke his voice shivered over her and into her as if
his hands were running along her skin.
She wanted that more than she could bear.
She wanted that more than she could bear.
“That’s too bad.”
“Why?” She hardly recognized
her own voice. Tight and needy and breathless besides. “I thought
you told me not to get drunk.”
“But if you were, I might tell
you all the ways I want you, because you wouldn’t remember. You
wouldn’t hold me to it in the light of day.” His breath fanned
over her skin and she wanted. She’d wanted him forever. She thought
she always would. God save her from the things she wanted. “You
wouldn’t know.”
“I already know.” She didn’t
mean to move, but then her hands were at his hips, touching him as if
she’d never lost that right. As if he’d never shut her out. As if
his body was as much hers as her own had always been. She’d
forgotten how good that felt. How right. “But that doesn’t matter
if you won’t do it, does it?”
“Christina.” Her name was
like fire. It streaked through her, searing her to the bone. “I try
so hard to keep you safe, especially from me, and yet all I seem to
do is hurt you.”
She wasn’t drunk, but she
wasn’t thinking particularly clearly, either. And maybe that was a
good thing. She wrapped her arms around that lean waist of his,
luxuriating in the feel of those hard muscles she loved so much even
through the long sleeved shirt he wore. The exquisite perfection of
his finely-hewn back. He sucked in a breath and she tipped her head
back, her face still caged between his hands on that wall on either
side and her arms caging him in turn, and their gazes tangled. Held.
“Then stop it,” she
suggested, and then she lifted herself up the remaining distance,
high up on her toes in her favorite old boots, and kissed him.
Austin set the aluminum tub on
the butcher-block table in the kitchen.
“Come here,” he said.
Melinda looked at him with
caution, but he could feel excitement, thrumming like a field, around
her like a field.
Fear and temptation.
She stepped up to him and he
handed her a towel.
He wanted to unzip that thick
hoodie and pull it off. To lift up the shirt beneath, little by
little, revealing her creamy torso by inches, until he could see the
lower swelling of her breasts.
“Eyes up, big guy.”
He jumped. “Sorry.” He
laughed shakily. “Habit.”
He gestured to the chair. “Sit.
Put this around your neck. I’d ask you to take off your top, but…”
To his surprise, she slipped out
of her hoodie. Underneath, she wore a tank top and it was
fantastically obvious that she was braless.
Her breasts looked larger, the
nipples pink and straining through the thin fabric.
He adjusted his pants. This was
going to be harder than he thought, pun intended.
“Are you going to wash my hair,
Austin?”
She asked it in a smoky voice
that might have come straight out of an old western saloon. Low and
slow and smooth as honey.
“I am.” He helped her lean
back and draped her hair into the small tub. “Comfortable?”
“I’m okay.”
He scooped a bowlful of water and
poured it over her head, being careful not to get any in her eyes.
She groaned, deep in her throat,
a sound that sent more blood rushing southward, a sound he’d only
heard when she was in his arms, sweaty, sated and limp with pleasure.
He stroked her hair, lifting it
and continuing to pour, getting every bit saturated.
Then he squirted a handful of
shampoo and began massaging it into her head. He’d never done this
before and water splashed onto the table.
A bit of foam dripped onto her
throat, then slid slowly toward the neckline of her tank top. She
lifted her hand and caught it, without looking. The sight of her
fingers, caressing her skin, so close to those rosy nipples…
“Ow!”
The towel beneath her neck
slipped, allowing the sharp edge of the tub to bite into her skin.
“Damn, sorry, baby,” he said.
He tried to tug it up but his soapy hands slipped. He bumped the tub
with his elbow and suds splashed onto the table.
Way harder than he expected. In
every way.
Suddenly he was aware of Mel,
giggling. She put her hand to her mouth, trying to hide it, to let
him carry on.
Then she grasped the back of her
head and sat up, dragging the towel with it, laughing freely.
He felt like an idiot. Washing a
woman’s hair was supposed to be a sensual thing, not a comedy show.
She leaned forward, laughing with
her whole body now, and he felt the humor tickle him, too.
“That,” she said, between
gasps, “was the single best shampoo… I’ve ever had.”
“Liar,” he said. But her joy
unlocked something inside him and before he knew it, the two of them
were bracing themselves against each other, bent over at the waist,
howling, while water dripped onto the floor and Mel’s still-soapy
hair sagged onto her shoulders.
“We’re going to have to heat
more water,” said Mel, when she got her voice back. “I need a
rinse.”
Her face was flushed and her now
mostly-transparent tank top had slipped off one shoulder. Dark hair,
red lips, those pink nipples. She looked like a strawberry sundae,
with chocolate drizzle and whipped cream on top and yeah, he wanted
to eat her up.
“There’s enough hot water,”
he said, taking her hand, “to do this properly.”
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