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She Dreamed of a Cowboy

Page 20

by Joanna Sims


  Hunter wrapped his arms around her, hugged her tightly and then kissed her gently on the lips.

  “Thank you for my proposal do-over, Hunter,” she said between kisses.

  “Anything for you, my love.” Her dream cowboy said, “Anything for you.”

  Epilogue

  Theirs was a simple ceremony beneath the canopy of the ancient oak trees where they had first fallen in love. Dr. Bonita DeLaFuente-Brand, Gabe’s wife, arranged for her father’s private jet to bring Molly, Chase and Chester to Bozeman, Montana, for an early fall wedding. The air was crisp and Skyler, to Hunter’s mind, was the most beautiful bride Montana had ever seen. Her simple, unembellished white satin gown, complete with pockets, emphasized her narrow waist and complemented her short reddish-gold locks. His mother had handcrafted a pair of white leather moccasins, at Skyler’s request, for the wedding. It was a gesture that had touched Lilly’s heart, as it had touched his own.

  Together, they stood hand in hand beneath the oldest of the ancient trees on his hill, with his family standing in a circle around them while the pastor had them read their vows. While Skyler was reading her vows to him, all Hunter could do was focus in on the softness of her lips, the pertness of her small nose, the little freckle on her left cheek and the darkness of her long lashes surrounding her unusual lavender-blue-gray eyes. She was the true love of his life—his first, only and forever.

  “I now pronounce you husband and wife,” the pastor said. “Hunter. You may now kiss your bride.”

  She smiled at him, her smile so warm and full of promise of the good years to come. He leaned down and pressed his lips to hers. It was a sweet kiss, tender and kind.

  “I love you,” Skyler said, holding his gaze.

  “I love you,” he said, stealing one more kiss before they faced, for the first time, their friends and family as husband and wife.

  The Rocking R Ranch was right now, but one day, they would build their dream home right here on this hill. One day, their children would race across those fields, carefree and completely loved. One day, Hunter would meet his grandchildren—a new generation of Brands with his determination and Skyler’s kindness.

  They had decided on a picnic-style reception at the main house. Next to Skyler, Hunter sat at a table for two at the top of a horseshoe shape of tables.

  “What did you get Skyler for a wedding present?” Savannah called out to him.

  “I got her what she asked for,” he said, and Skyler was beaming as she thought of her wedding present. “I got her a skid steer.”

  “It was the best present of my life!” she called out to her friends and family. As their wedding party laughed, Skyler turned her pretty violet eyes to him.

  “This feels like a dream,” his bride said with a happy sigh.

  He took her lovely face in his hands, her eyes so full of love for him. Hunter said, “My beloved Skyler. You are my every dream come true.”

  * * *

  For more sweeping Western romances, try these great stories:

  His Forever Texas Rose

  by Stella Bagwell

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  Their Night to Remember

  by Judy Duarte

  Available now wherever Harlequin Special Edition books and ebooks are sold.

  Keep reading for an excerpt from Their Night to Remember by Judy Duarte.

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  Their Night to Remember

  by Judy Duarte

  Prologue

  Clay Hastings sat at the massive dark oak desk in his personal office at the family ranch, going over a legal brief. He was knee-deep into the document when the door creaked open and his father walked in without knocking, a crystal glass of his favorite bourbon in his hand.

  In true Adam Hastings–style, he didn’t apologize for the interruption. He merely launched into his reason for it. “You need to fly to Randolph, Colorado, tonight, Clayton. I told the pilot to file a flight plan and fuel the plane.”

  “What’s up?”

  “I just got off the phone with my private investigator. He told me Alana Perez is attending a cattle symposium there. I’ve approached her with several generous offers to buy her ranch, but she’s turned her nose up at each one. And now she’s not taking my calls.”

  Clay leaned back in his desk chair and crossed his arms. “Apparently, she doesn’t want to sell.”

  “I get that. But the investigation revealed that the Lazy M is run-down and needs a lot of work. On top of that, this Perez woman doesn’t know squat about ranching. It makes no sense for her to hold on to a property she can’t afford. So I want you to meet with her in person and convince her that it would be in her best interest to sell.”

  Clay’s father had built a cattle dynasty in Texas, which was impressive in its own right. But for some reason he’d yet to reveal, he was hell-bent on picking up multiple ranch properties near some out of the way town in Montana.

  Most people who worked for Adam Hastings didn’t question his orders, but then again, Clay wasn’t like most people. And the youngest son of the Hastings family felt his differences every single time he talked to his father.

  “What’s so important about the Lazy M?” Clay asked.

  “That particular ranch is the key to my new real estate venture. The state is very likely to build a new highway through that area. And if that happens, a couple more towns are bound to pop up and the land values are going to quadruple—at the very least.”

  So, that’s what he had on his mind. “I take it the locals don’t know about the highway.”

  “No.” His father lifted his glass and swirled the bourbon, ice cubes clinking. “At this point, it’s just a strong hunch on my part. So keep your mouth shut.”

  That made sense, but his father’s plans often tended to straddle the line, and it was Clay’s job as the family attorney to make sure his old man didn’t take a step on the wrong side.

  “All right, Dad. I’ll go to Randolph. And I’ll do what I can.”

  His father chuffed. “I’m not asking you to give it a try, Clayton. I’m telling you to close the deal.”

  Other than the tick-tock-tick of the clock hanging on the wall, the room went silent. Clay merely studied his father.

  When Adam Hastings wore his gator-skin, custom-made Lucchese boots, like he did today, he stood nearly five foot nine. And thanks to a private gym on the ranch and a paleo diet, his weight never topped 156 pounds. Yet the cattle baron didn’t need to be a big man to command—and demand—respect. Needless to say, when he gave an order, he expected it to be followed.

  “The private investigator sent me Alana’s picture. I’ll send it to you along with the PI profile.” His father took out his iPhone, pulled up a saved photo and sent it to Clay in a text. “She’s a brunette, unattached and damn good-looking. Charm her. Do whatever it takes. Just convince her that it’s in her best interest to take the money I’m offering her and buy a nice place in town, something she won’t have to repair or renovate. I’ll be doing her a favor.”

  Clay reached for his own cell, opened his father’s text and studied the photo of a pretty woman in her late twenties or early thirties standing next to a dented old pickup, which was parked near a feed store. She wore a pair of faded jeans and a red plaid blouse. It was hard to tell how long her hair was. Long enough for her to pull it back in a messy ponytail. But there was no denying it. Alana Perez was attractive.

  His father eased closer to the desk and placed his hand on the back of a tufted-leather chair, where he sometimes sat when discussing
a lawsuit or a contract. He pointed to the brief. “What are you working on?”

  “That countersuit against Ray Jennings and the Graham Group.”

  “That can wait.” His father glanced at the clock on the wall, an antique that had been in the Hastings family for generations. “It’s getting late. You’ve got a long drive back to Houston.” Then he said, “I’ll never understand why you refuse to move back home. There’s more than enough room for you to live on the Double H.”

  True. His father had plenty of space for Clay in the sprawling ranch house, but he’d never been able to find much room for him in his heart. As a kid, rather a teenager, Clay once had tried to earn that kind of relationship with his father. It hadn’t worked. But now he’d settle for his respect. If he pulled off closing this deal, his dad would be more than pleased. And deep down, Clay wanted nothing more than to oblige the father he’d hardly known until he’d turned thirteen, and he’d been trying to live up to his new surname ever since. And to prove he was more than a dirty little secret.

  “I prefer living in the city,” Clay said. But in all honesty, putting some distance between his family, his work and his personal life had been one of the smartest things he’d ever done.

  “I still think it’s foolish for you to waste the time and the gas on an unnecessary commute. You spend a lot of your free time out here anyway.”

  That’s because, while Clay may have implied that he liked nights on the town, he’d much rather unwind on a Friday evening by riding Titan, the gelding he kept in the Double H stables.

  But there was always a trade-off with his father, wasn’t there? Life seemed to be one negotiation and compromise after another with the man that he never really felt like he understood. After all, he was the illegitimate son—the black sheep who’d been hidden from the rest of the family.

  His father pointed to the legal brief resting on Clay’s desk. “Put that countersuit on hold. I want you in Colorado tonight. So go home and pack.”

  Clay sucked in a deep breath and blew it out softly as he pushed aside the paperwork and got up from the desk. If truth be told, attending that symposium would be a lot more interesting than being cooped up in his office.

  He gathered the papers on his desk and slipped them into the file. “Whatever you want.”

  “This land deal is very important to me,” his father added. “And to this family. Just make it happen. I don’t care how you do it. Hell, charm the pants off of her.”

  Clay’s gut clenched. He’d never resort to that tactic. Using a woman—or anyone, for that matter—went against his moral code, which he must have inherited from his mother, since neither of his two half brothers would have balked at the assignment.

  “I’ll close the deal,” Clay said. “But I won’t resort to seduction.”

  “Dammit, Clayton. Don’t get your hackles up. It’s just a figure of speech. The last thing I want you to do is hop into bed with that woman.”

  That was the last thing Clay wanted, too.

  Chapter One

  Bent over the porcelain throne in the guest bathroom and holding her long black hair out of the way, Alana Perez lost her breakfast once again.

  Callie, her best friend and roommate, stood beside her, a cool, wet cloth in her hand, securing her role as the best friend ever.

  Puking her brains out was a pain, but Alana didn’t mind the inconvenience. When she was twenty-two, she’d had a tubal pregnancy and an emergency surgery. Losing the baby she’d dearly wanted had broken her heart. But there’d been complications and an infection. And when the surgeon told her it was unlikely that she’d ever conceive again, she’d been crushed.

  For the past ten years, she’d never had a reason to question that diagnosis, but during one romantic evening in Colorado, a handsome stranger named Clay had swept her off her feet and proven the doctor wrong.

  As the dry heaves came to an end, Alana felt Callie’s fingers splayed gently on her back.

  “Are you okay now?”

  Alana swiped the back of her hand across her mouth, then nodded and straightened. Her gaze sought Callie’s. “This part of pregnancy really sucks. Tell me it’ll be over soon.”

  “That’s right.” Callie wiped her brow with the soothing cloth. “Just a few more weeks. Then you can enjoy the second trimester.”

  “Believe it or not, I’m enjoying the first one.” Alana flushed the toilet. “Well, not this part of it. But the doctor told me the baby looks good and the pregnancy appears to be normal. So I have no complaints.”

  “I’m happy for you,” Callie said. “I know how badly you’ve wanted a baby and a family of your own.”

  After washing her face and hands at the sink and drying off, Alana followed Callie out of the bathroom and into the small, cozy living room with its scarred hardwood floor, dingy white walls that could use a coat of paint and rustic fireplace, the stones stained from smoke and soot, the mantel a rough-hewn beam.

  “Your baby will never want for love and a happy home,” Callie said, “like you and I did.”

  Alana smiled. “That’s true. I just...” She sighed. “I wish I had some way to tell Clay about the baby. I don’t expect anything from him, but he deserves to know that he’s going to be a father. Unfortunately, that’s out of the question.”

  “You can’t remember his last name?” Callie asked.

  “No, it never came up. And I was too dazzled by his smile, by the fact a gorgeous and apparently rich guy would want to buy me a drink in the hotel bar. I knew nothing could possibly come from that night. He’s an attorney, and I barely finished high school.” She sighed. “You should have seen the expensive clothes he wore—from his Stetson to his fancy boots. And I barely have a pot to pee in or a window to throw it out of. Besides, we live in different states, and I had a ranch to run. So I didn’t want to jinx it.”

  From the moment he’d caught her eye, something wildly romantic had sparked between them, shooting off a flurry of pheromones to dance in the candlelight, sending her hormones spinning dangerously out of control.

  She could blame it on the drinks, on the fact that he seemed to be nearly as mesmerized by her as she was by him, but she’d known exactly what she’d wanted and how she’d hoped the night would end.

  And it had.

  Now here she was, three months later—pregnant with a baby she’d never imagined possible.

  She’d told herself that the memory of a magical night with a handsome stranger would be enough for her. But it hadn’t been. She’d regretted her decision to slip out of his room the next morning without talking, without getting his last name—or giving him hers.

  But she’d come away with more than a memory of that night; she’d been given a miracle to have and to hold.

  “Where does Clay live?” Callie asked.

  “I’m not sure.” Alana plopped down on the faded tweed recliner that had been her grandfather’s favorite chair. “All I know is that he lives someplace in Texas. He told me he was an attorney, but I don’t know what his specialty is.” Alana shot a glance at Callie. “I’d like to tell him about the baby, but I have no way of finding him.”

  “Hmm,” Callie said. “Maybe we can come up with another way to find him. Did he mention which law firm he belonged to?”

  Alana slowly shook her head. “Not that I remember anyway. I have to admit, I was a little dazed that night—and clearly running on hormones alone. So he might have said something, but if he did, it went poof.”

  Admittedly, she’d known leaving—not just his room but the hotel—and heading to the airport in the wee morning hours before he’d woken up had been stupid. But making love with him hadn’t been a mistake. Their meeting had been predestined, it seemed. Because Alana was having a baby, a wonderful surprise—a gift—and she would finally have the biological family she’d always wanted.

  * * *

  Clay
sat behind the wheel of the black Range Rover he’d rented at the airport in Kalispell and headed toward Fairborn. His GPS wasn’t tracking the Lazy M—which he’d learned one fateful night in Colorado was also called Rancho Esperanza—so once he was in the general vicinity, he’d have to stop along the way and ask one of the locals for directions.

  He should have made this trip to Montana three months ago, but he’d convinced himself that he’d done the right thing by waiting to contact Alana. And at the time, it probably had been the best move.

  Having sex had been her idea, and she’d clearly meant it to be a one-night stand. That was all well and good, but Clay should have been a gentleman and suggested they wait until morning, when their heads were clear and he could reveal who he really was and his purpose for finding her. Unfortunately, several glasses of Patrón on the rocks had affected his better judgment.

  And so had Alana, with her silky dark hair that sluiced over her shoulders, emerald green eyes with a fringe of black lashes and that pretty, waiflike smile. At that point, his moral compass had gone wonky, his libido had taken over and he would have followed her anywhere.

  He could still see her lying on the bed, her face flushed with desire, her arms raised to him, inviting him to join her. Lust burned in her eyes, lighting him on fire. His hands explored each of her sexy curves. He’d never forget her sweet taste as his tongue sought hers or the sound of her soft mewls as she pressed her sex against his, rubbing. Needing.

  Even if he’d wanted to forget about the woman who’d crossed his eyes and curled his toes, that scene continued to play on a continuous loop in his mind.

  Damn. You’d have thought the memory would have paled by now, but it hadn’t. Making love had been nothing short of amazing, and their chemistry had been off the charts.

  Lulled by a soul-strumming afterglow, he’d fallen asleep while she cuddled beside him. Fully sated, he’d slept better than ever before. But when he’d woken up the next morning, the only thing he’d held in his arms was her pillow, where a hint of her floral scent lingered.

 

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