Red Hot Texan

Home > Other > Red Hot Texan > Page 1
Red Hot Texan Page 1

by Katherine Garbera




  Red Hot Texan

  A Corbyn Sisters of Last Stand Romance

  Katherine Garbera

  Red Hot Texan

  Copyright© 2020 Katherine Garbera

  EPUB Edition

  The Tule Publishing, Inc.

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  First Publication by Tule Publishing 2019

  Cover design by Lee Hyat at www.LeeHyat.com

  No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  ISBN: 978-1-952560-28-6

  Keep Up with your Favorite Authors and their New Releases

  For the latest news from Tule Publishing authors, sign up for our newsletter here or check out our website at TulePublishing.com

  Stay social! For new release updates, behind-the-scenes sneak peeks, and reader giveaways:

  Like us on

  Follow us on

  Follow us on

  See you online!

  Dedication

  This one is dedicated to my fellow bookworms who grew up living in fictional worlds. Thanks to the authors (Judy Blume, Baroness Orczy, Johanna Lindsey, Jayne Ann Krentz…just to name a few!) who fired my imagination and set me on the path to become one.

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Dear Reader

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Recipes

  The Corbyn Sisters of Last Stand series

  More books by Katherine Garbera

  About the Author

  Acknowledgments

  Special thanks to Meghan Farrell who is just one of the nicest people I’ve ever met and supportive and professional.

  Dear Reader:

  I’m so excited to be heading back to Last Stand, Texas and my Corbyn sisters. When I was originally discussing Last Stand and creating the families who would be the core of my stories, I had two distinct ideas—the Dangerous Delaneys, outlaws who were used to taking what they wanted and the Corbyn Sisters. The sisters actually were who I had first three girls who were collectively known as the brain, the beauty and the bitch. I have two sisters and we’ve all been labeled those things a time or two. I wanted to write about the sister bond and how when everyone refers to you by a collective name…Corbyn Sisters you fight to find your own identity.

  Of course, the more I delved into them Amelia’s parentage become a central element in defining the sisters as they had a family secret that wasn’t public knowledge. To the world they seemed like the perfect family, but inside the walls of the Corbyn mansion that secret was reshaping them.

  This is Emma Corbyn’s story. She’s the brain, town librarian who lives her life in her imagi­nation. And Red Aldean, her complete opposite. He’s an outdoorsman who is dyslexic and lives his life large and with no apologies. If you’ve read my other Last Stand stories, you probably noticed them flirting and dancing around each other. I hope you will enjoy their story!

  Happy reading,

  Katherine

  Picking the right bait is essential to a successful fishing expedition.

  ~A Texan’s Guide to Fishing

  Chapter One

  Red Aldean had never met a river he couldn’t fish, a rapid he couldn’t expertly navigate through or a problem he couldn’t solve. At least that was what he’d thought before he’d started falling for Emma Corbyn. She was just a girl. Yeah, he knew it wasn’t PC to call them that, but his dad always had referred to all women as girls—even his mom and Red had picked up the habit.

  It was July in Last Stand, Texas, and as his granny used to say hotter than Hades. Everyone he knew was paired up and he felt like he should have said yes when his parents had asked him to come and spend the summer with them in Seattle. But that would have felt like giving up. Plus, he couldn’t leave Texas until his delicate legal matter was taken care of.

  He’d been determined to get Miss Emma Corbyn to notice him since Christmas. So far, he’d tried some of the advice his best friend Braden had given him. But that hadn’t worked. Emma wasn’t like all the other girls. She was…special. There was something about her that had always made him take notice. So he’d pulled out his trusty A Texan’s Guide to Fishing and had started applying it to Emma.

  The first tip was to find the right bait. Unlike a bass or a carp or a gar, Emma wasn’t like the other women he’d dated. He’d been watching her to get ideas. He knew she loved books but hadn’t been able to find the exact right one yet. He’d overheard her mention yellow roses but he knew it was too soon to send them to her. But lavender lemonade…well that was just about right. And perfect for this hot, summer day.

  He’d had to go to her grandmother to get the recipe, which Priscilla Corbyn was happy to supply in exchange for a few fillets of bass that he’d caught and cleaned fresh for her. So now he had a thermos, full of her favorite drink, but was waiting for the best moment to bring it to her.

  “Damn, boy, either ask her out or go get laid,” Braden said as he handed him a beer and sat down next to him on the bleachers for the Last Stand Fourth of July rodeo.

  “Who?” he asked, playing it cool, because Braden Delaney could suck it. Braden wasn’t as smart as he liked to think. He might be the COO of Outlaw Tequila but he didn’t know everything.

  Braden punched him in the shoulder and shook his head. “Red, don’t even pretend. You haven’t taken your eyes off Emma and her little band of rodeo cowboys and queens since we got here.”

  “Maybe I was…hell, Bray, I keep waiting for the right moment. Finn said timing was everything and gave me some other advice,” Red admitted, still staring at Emma.

  She wore a denim mini skirt and a pair of Kelly Boots made in nearby Whiskey River. She had on a white shirt with little flowers on it—he couldn’t see the flowers from here but he’d been in Yippee Ki Yay when she’d shown it to her mom. Her long, brown hair was pulled back in a braid and she had a straw cowboy hat on her head. And her rodeo queens were duded up like her and the little boys were dressed as cowboys.

  “What did Finn suggest?” he asked. “He was damned lousy with advice when I was trying to convince Lea to fall for me at Christmas. I think he got lucky when Lancey fell in love with him.”

  “Me too. He said to make Emma jealous by dating other women,” Red said. Which was counter to the fishing guide. Fish didn’t pay that much mind to other fish. But Finn had always been successful with women, so he’d asked out a woman he’d met at the saloon. “It didn’t work. She just told me how nice she thought Ariana was and that I should bring her to her folks’ Fourth party.”

  Braden threw his head back laughing.

  Red felt some genuine hatred for the other man. Everything had always seemed so easy for Braden with women…well they had always been hard for Red. Give him an impassable trail and he could find his way through it, but women…Emma was a mystery.

  Sure, it was eas
y to laugh at him, but wooing Emma had turned into an obsession. He’d canceled a fishing trip with some buddies to Alaska to just stay closer to Last Stand and deal with another matter but Emma was providing the right distraction he needed this summer. Emma was the head librarian and pretty much never left their hometown. She was busy with her community projects, library projects and just being a Corbyn. Her daddy and his people had owned the People’s Bank of Last Stand for…well forever.

  Red’s family showed up a bit later than the battle of Last Stand, but they were trappers and guides. He was proud to carry on that tradition. He liked the expedition company that he’d inherited and slowly been growing since he’d taken over when his dad retired.

  In fact, until Braden and Lancey had hooked up and settled down to coupledom, Red would have said he was living his best life with his best friends. But of course, now he was aware that he was alone. That all his friends were showing up to every damned event in Last Stand—and there was a heck of a lot of them—with a partner and Red was still going stag.

  “Finn was yanking your chain,” Braden said. “Remember he said don’t front when the woman is important. Don’t do what normally works…I thought you were trying the fishing thing.”

  He took another swallow of his Lone Star beer and nodded. “Yeah, I am. She’s like Big Bertha.”

  “The legendary Guadalupe bass?”

  “Yes. I know she’s there. I know I’ll catch her but she’s making me wait. I figured Finn’s advice was a bit like trying another spot if you’re not getting a bite. But now I’m not so sure.”

  “Just ask her out,” Braden said. “Stop trying to come up with a plan and just do it.”

  “Just do what?” Lea Dunwoody asked as she joined them. She had a big diamond on her ring finger that winked in the sunlight, pronouncing to the world that she and Braden were engaged.

  “Ask Emma out,” Braden said.

  “Shut it. I don’t want every busybody in Last Stand to know I like her.”

  “Dude, the only one who doesn’t is Emma,” Braden said.

  “What do you think, Lea? Should I ask her out?” Red asked.

  “What have you got to lose?”

  “If she says no then I can’t ask again. I won’t be that guy. And I’m not sure I’m ready yet. I’ve been collecting ideas…”

  “She’ll probably say yes,” Lea said. “A lot of women down at the saloon think you’re hot. I even heard someone talking about you in Booze’s Place last week when I was over in Whiskey River having lunch.”

  He shook his head. He needed to get out of here. But they were right as well. He needed to stop trying to make something happen with Emma. He’d never been the kind of man to make plans and then hesitate. Not before her.

  Yeah, he thought. This was probably what he should have done back in January. He finished his beer with a long swallow and stood up.

  “You getting another round?” Braden asked.

  “Yeah. After.”

  “After?”

  “It’s time to cut bait or go home.” He picked up the thermos with the lavender lemonade and headed to the staging area.

  *

  Emma Corbyn could remember when she and her sisters had dressed up for the rodeo queen pageant. These days it was more of a little parade than an actual beauty pageant, but back in the day her sister Amelia had won the title of Miss Last Stand three years running. She and Delilah were always in the “court” but it wasn’t the same. When she’d advanced the idea of having a parade of the rodeo queens instead of a pageant the community advisors had agreed. They’d also opened it to anyone. It was a chance for the kids to dress as cowboys.

  “The little rodeo queens are having a blast,” Amelia said as she handed out refillable water bottles to the kids.

  “I’m glad. I was a little afraid that our town might not be as progressive as I hoped it was,” Emma admitted.

  “Me too,” Amelia said. “I’ve got Cal on standby to take down anyone who says anything untoward.”

  “You’ve been reading again,” Emma said with a laugh.

  Amelia laughed along with her. “I have. You won’t believe it, but this is the first chance I’ve had to use untoward since I read it almost two months ago.”

  “I would believe it. I struggle to use vex all the time,” Emma said with a smile.

  “I don’t. My older sisters constantly vex me,” Delilah said as she came up next to them. She had a Cassidy Crane woven basket that Emma would bet good money was filled with chocolate chip cookies.

  Cassidy was a local Hill Country weaver who’d started a small shop online that had been noticed by Reese Witherspoon and now everyone wanted her baskets.

  “Whatever, D. Glad you could make it. Lancey is going to do some trick riding and shooting during the break after these guys get up on stage and do their number,” Emma said.

  “Me too. I didn’t want to miss seeing my favorite kiddos,” Delilah said. “Can they have a cookie before they go up there?”

  “What do you think?” she asked Joey who was helping her with the kids.

  “Yeah, give them a treat. We all need more sweet things in life,” Joey said. “Dang, it’s hot today.”

  “It is. Why are we doing this in July?” Amelia asked.

  “It’s patriotic,” Emma said. “Remember? That’s what we do.”

  “It is,” Lancey said coming over to them. “Thought I’d grab a cookie before I go out there. Had to dodge Finn. If you see him pretend you don’t know where I am.”

  “First of all, why? Also, he knows where you’ll be,” Emma said to her friend. Last year Lancey’s brother had been killed in a tragic accident that had also taken the life of Rose Delaney, leaving their child Lane orphaned. But Lane was surrounded by aunts and uncles who were raising him together. Lancey and Finn had gotten together last summer and the two of them had been married in April. Since then things had been dicey between the former NASCAR driver and the police officer. No one really knew why but Finn was suddenly overprotective, which wasn’t his normal MO at all.

  “He’s just worried about me. Didn’t want me to ride. I’ve been practicing for eight months and the man thinks I’m just going to sit it out. He’s crazy,” Lancey said.

  “That is crazy,” Amelia said. “Um…I think you should know that he’s told Cal why he’s being so…not Finn.”

  “What? That jackass. We were keeping it quiet,” Lancey said.

  “If it’s any consolation he is truly worried for you,” Amelia said.

  “Can we know? Are you sick? Do you have a health issue?” Emma asked, looking over at Joey who was watching the kids as she and Delilah kind of moved Lancey and Amelia to a more private area.

  “I’m pregnant,” she blurted out. “You know the Maverick in me is freaking out because that’s usually when the mister leaves, but another part of me is really excited. A baby of my own. I haven’t had a family really until Finn so expanding it is great.”

  Lancey kept on talking and Emma hugged her friend. Pregnant. That was wonderful. Lancey was going to have her own family. “Finn’s not going anywhere.”

  “I know. He’s practically become my shadow,” she said. “He’s worried I’ll fall off the horse or shoot myself… He actually said that to me.”

  Delilah shook her head. “You’re not going to shoot yourself. That man.”

  “What man?” Finn asked coming up to her.

  “Yeah, what man?” Lane asked, hugging Lancey’s legs. “We was ’fraid we’d missed you.”

  Lancey squatted down to be eye level with her nephew and hugged him tight. “I wouldn’t go into the ring without seeing my two best guys.”

  “I made you this,” Lane said, handing her a paper rosette ribbon that read THIS COWGIRL IS TAKEN.

  She took it from him and used the straight pin to attach it to her western shirt. “Thanks, Lane.”

  She kissed him and stood back up.

  “You feel okay?” Finn asked.

  “E
xcept for being annoyed with my husband, yes,” she said.

  “I’m not annoying,” he said, pulling her into his arms and kissing her.

  Emma and the others turned away and she took Lane’s hand. “Want a cookie?”

  She led him over to the other kids and Delilah came with her, handing the little boy a cookie. Since her sister was married to Lane’s oldest uncle—Cal—both she and Delilah considered themselves to be aunts to Lane by marriage.

  “Red is watching you,” Delilah said after they gave a cookie to Lane.

  “What?”

  “He’s standing under the metal bleachers and looking over here. I know he’s not looking at me,” Delilah said.

  “How do you know that?” she asked.

  “Because he likes you,” Delilah said.

  “You’d be wrong. He was with some blonde that he met in the saloon last week. And he wasn’t just showing her how to fish,” Emma said. Not that it bothered her. Red Aldean could date whomever he wanted to. She thought there was something between them back at Christmas, but he’d sort of shifted into low gear and started dating around town. So, she’d read him wrong. Which was fine. She should stick to books instead of men.

  Really.

  “I don’t think so,” Delilah said. “He’s walking this way. Oh ho, so is Gavin Rooney. Looks like you are the rodeo queen after all.”

  *

  Red acknowledged to himself that the problem with Emma was that she was just so…Emma. Even now in the hot, July summer she looked just sort of perfect. She’d pulled her long brown hair into a braid, but tiny little wisps escaped to frame her heart-shaped face. She had a straw cowboy hat perched on her head and an easy smile for everyone. He stood in the shade sweating as if he’d run a marathon instead of just walked the few yards from the bleachers to the staging area.

  Of course, he wasn’t the only man to have noticed her. So, it seemed, had Gavin Rooney. He was all duded up to look like a Hollywood version of a cowboy. He didn’t wear Kelly Boots; they were a national brand that Red thought had sold out a long time ago. He wore a pair of jeans that looked brand new…heck, Red was pretty damned sure he could still see the crease in them. He was heading straight for Emma.

 

‹ Prev