Brotherhood Protectors: Tempting Montana (Kindle Worlds Novella) (The Martin Family Book 4)

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Brotherhood Protectors: Tempting Montana (Kindle Worlds Novella) (The Martin Family Book 4) Page 1

by Parker Kincade




  Text copyright ©2017 by the Author.

  This work was made possible by a special license through the Kindle Worlds publishing program and has not necessarily been reviewed by Mary Jernigan. All characters, scenes, events, plots and related elements appearing in the original Brotherhood Protectors remain the exclusive copyrighted and/or trademarked property of Mary Jernigan, or their affiliates or licensors.

  For more information on Kindle Worlds: http://www.amazon.com/kindleworlds

  Tempting Montana

  by Parker Kincade

  Dedication

  For Dodie, who inspired this story with a chainsaw. I love you, girl.

  And for Booker. You’re welcome.

  Books by Parker Kincade

  The Martin Family Series

  One Night Stand

  Shadow of Sin

  No Control: An Omega Team Kindle World Novella

  Tempting Montana: A Brotherhood Protectors Kindle World Novella

  Ties That Burn (Coming 2017)

  Game On Series

  Spring Training

  Southern Heat

  Shadow Maverick Ranch Series

  White Collar Cowboy

  Borrowed Cowboy

  Cowboy Redeemed

  White Collar Wedding (short story)

  Short Stories

  Devlin

  Two of Cups (Love in the Cards Anthology)

  Standalone

  Dare’s Wild (A Dare to Love Kindle Worlds Novella)

  Subscribe to Parker’s newsletter for news about latest releases, giveaways, appearances, and more!

  http://www.parkerkincade.com/Newsletter

  Find Parker on the web:

  Parker’s Website: www.parkerkincade.com

  Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ParkerKincade/

  Twitter: https://twitter.com/parkerkincade

  Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/parkerkincade/

  Email: [email protected]

  Prologue

  Hoping her smile sounded more genuine than it was, Judith Abernathy answered her ringing desk phone with a pleasant, “Owen Jennings’ office.”

  “Judith. It’s Owen.”

  No shit, Sherlock. And because Owen wasn’t in the office where he could see, Judith took great delight in performing a monumental eye roll. After eight years as the executive assistant to the senior partner of Jennings, Bradford & Mosley law firm, Judith could recognize Owen’s number when it popped up on caller ID with nothing more than a glance. God forbid she break protocol by answering with a cheerful, personalized greeting when she knew it was him calling. She’d tried that once. There was a slip of paper in her employment file that ensured if she wanted to keep eating, she wouldn’t try that nonsense again.

  “Good afternoon, Mr. Jennings.” Another ridiculous job requirement. It was okay for him to refer to himself as Owen when speaking to her, but she must address him formally. Because his money, power and position demanded more respect than her hard work and sweat.

  “The courier,” he said without preamble. “The flash drive…,” the cell connection wavered, “left…desk. Have … deliver … Elizabeth King.”

  Judith read between the lines. Owen—Mr. Jennings—wanted her to get the flash drive from his desk and send it to Elizabeth King via courier. She’d done the task a hundred times before, but usually Mr. Jennings handed her the flash drive personally. He didn’t like anyone in his office when he wasn’t there, including his personal assistant.

  Mr. Jennings just granted her a limited key to the kingdom, making Judith wonder if he had a glass or two of wine at lunch.

  “I’ll take care of it, sir. Anything else?” Oops. She hadn’t meant to sound so terse.

  “Yes, Judith. Several things,” he replied in staccato, letting her know he noticed. “I need a moment to park.”

  “Of course.” After all, she didn’t have anything better to do.

  Judith glanced at the stack of work she had to finish before she left for the day. She’d be lucky to make it home before dinnertime.

  Mr. Jennings’ voice boomed through the line again. “Make inquiries into upgrading Elizabeth’s internet service to a speed sufficient enough to receive and send files in an timely manner.”

  She won’t like that any more than she likes being called Elizabeth, Judith thought as she jotted down the task on her notepad. At least the cell connection had strengthened so she wouldn’t have to ask him to repeat himself.

  “Of course.” Her standard reply. “I will email the information to you.”

  “On second thought, don’t bother. I don’t have time to deal with installers. Just take care of it. Find the fastest, most reliable service and see that the upgrade is done immediately.”

  Treading carefully, Judith said, “Whichever service I select will need Ellie’s authorization to upgrade the service at her house. Is that going to be a problem?”

  Judith suspected it would be, but as always, she kept her opinion to herself.

  “Since the firm is paying for the service, Elizabeth will give the authorization.”

  “All right. I’ll take care of it.”

  “See that you do. Also, I’ll be taking her to dinner tomorrow evening. Call Truluck’s and tell them to reserve my usual table. Seven o’clock.”

  She won’t like that, either. Nor will the people who will get their reservation at the premier seafood and steakhouse bumped.

  “Yes, sir.” And by sir, she meant asshole.

  “I’m due in court.” He hung up.

  “You’re welcome,” she snarked into the dead line. “Happy to be of service.”

  Judith sighed. Food. Mortgage. Electricity. The firm paid her well, which was the primary reason she tolerated Owen’s holier-than-thou attitude.

  Dreading the next task, Judith punched the button for an open line and called the restaurant. By the time she finished commiserating with the hostess over thoughtless males, Mr. Jennings had his reservation.

  She couldn’t help feeling a bit sorry for Ellie, the name Elizabeth preferred to be called. Ellie had been Mr.—to hell with it—Owen’s assistant before Judith. Eight years ago, Ellie’s mother developed a debilitating, terminal disease. Refusing to allow strangers to care for her mom, Ellie struck a deal with the partners to take on all the transcription work for the office—making her a hero among the assistants—provided she could do it remotely.

  The woman was a saint in Judith’s book. For eight years, she selflessly cared for her mother, who passed away only six months ago, while working furiously to keep up with the demand from the office.

  Owen took an unsettling interest in helping Ellie through the legalities of her mom’s death—interest that now seemed to overflow into other, more personal areas. Internet service and dinner, indeed.

  She would bet next month’s salary Ellie hadn’t agreed to either.

  Judith pushed back her chair, circled around, and stood. She smoothed her skirt as she walked across the space that separated her desk from Owen’s corner office. A flutter of unease tickled her belly as her hand landed on the doorknob. She had permission, damn it. She’d been in his office more times than she could count. Still, she glanced left, then right, before entering her boss’s domain, as though she was about to commit a felony.

  She stepped inside, leaving the door open. Owen’s office was impeccably clean, not a paperclip out of place. Neat, organized stacks of files decorated the corner of the desk by the phone. A flash drive sat on top of the stack nea
rest the edge. Bingo.

  Three steps in, her spiked heel caught on the carpet. Judith stumbled, the missed step causing her ankle to roll from its tall perch. With a cry of pain, Judith lost her balance. Her hip hit the corner of the desk. She tried to grab on to the edge to keep from falling, but her hand landed on the files instead. They scattered and fell to the floor along with the phone, while Judith managed to just barely escape the same fate.

  Breathing heavily, standing on one foot with her backside resting against the edge of the desk, Judith surveyed the mess.

  “Oh, for the love of Pete.”

  She kicked off her shoes, hiked up her skirt, and eased her knees to the carpet. There was a piece of plastic on the floor. It looked like something that would be used to cover batteries in an electronic device. Glancing around the chaos on the floor, she saw the desk phone and picked it up. She placed the handset on the cradle—thankful it hadn’t broken—and turned the phone over. Sure enough, the plastic piece fit over a small, empty compartment on the back. Her phone had the same feature—a place to store the extra length of a too-long phone cord.

  She replaced the compartment cover and checked to make sure the phone still worked before placing it back on the desk.

  The flash drive was on the carpet with the files, so she picked it up and placed that on the desk as well. Judith scooped the files into a pile. As she went to straighten them, another flash drive dropped from the stack.

  She froze.

  Well, crap.

  She picked up the flash drive and compared it with the other drive she’d found. They looked exactly the same as every other drive she had sent to Ellie. Owen had said drive, right? Not drives, plural? The connection had been choppy, so he could’ve…

  There was only one way to find out.

  She quickly straightened the files and put them back on the desk, praying Owen hadn’t put them in any particular order. She’d rather not have to explain her clumsiness.

  Judith stood, grabbed her shoes, and hobbled back to her desk. She inserted the first flash drive and called up the information. Audio files. Perfect. That’s what she was looking for. She ejected the drive and inserted the second drive. Audio files. Hmm.

  She clicked one of the files and Owen’s voice sounded through her speakers. She listened just long enough to recognize the name of a corporate client and knew the audio was meant for transcription. She checked her watch. If she didn’t get the courier there soon, the information wouldn’t get to Ellie until late tomorrow instead of first thing in the morning. She thought about having to tell Owen she hadn’t asked for clarification and therefore his instructions hadn’t been carried out. That would not go well for her.

  She didn’t need to check every file. If one was meant for transcription, it was safe to assume they all were. She switched the drives and opened the first file. Owen’s droning, dictation voice again. She stopped the recording.

  Owen had said drives, plural. She had misunderstood because of the poor connection, right?

  Time’s-a-wastin’.

  Making an executive decision, Judith shoved both drives into an envelope and called for a courier.

  Chapter One

  “You should have someone look at that cut above your eye. It looks nasty, Spaniard.”

  Booker Maldano flipped his buddy Roman the bird and shifted his ass on the hard, plastic seat underneath him. He motioned to the room at large. “We all look like we’ve been chewed up and spit out. I’ll get checked out once we get some news.”

  The waiting room at Seton Medical Center had been packed, and it became even more so when Booker and his friends arrived. The cute chick behind the front desk had taken one look and promptly ushered them into a private waiting area so as not to scare the ailing folks of Austin.

  With an average height of over six feet, Booker and his friends were an intimidating group on the best of days … and today had been far from the best.

  Booker fingered his injured eyebrow. A butterfly bandage or two—okay, three—and he’d be good to go. He glanced at the others. His team. His brothers. He wasn’t the only one sporting damage. Roman Powers’ knuckles were busted to shit. Sitting next to Roman, Sully Walsh nursed a split lower lip. Adam Casey leaned his back against the wall, pants stained with blood and appearing to favor his left side.

  Across the room, Brandon Martin had his cell phone pressed against his ear, lips pressed into a tight line. That couldn’t be good. Neither were Brandon’s torn shirt and the blood that had dried in rivulets on his arm.

  Noah Summers was the only one of them not visibly bleeding, but the way he repeatedly tipped a flask to his mouth and one-arm-hugged his midsection, Booker suspected Noah sported a broken rib or two.

  Ketcher Novak, who was notably absent, rounded out their group. Their missing man had taken the brunt of the damage, having tangled directly with the guy who had taken Ketcher’s woman.

  Please let her be okay.

  Ketcher had recently killed a Cuban drug lord down in Florida. Wounded during the operation, Ketcher had been ordered to lay low until he recovered. The younger brother of said drug lord promised retribution. Unable to locate Ketcher’s whereabouts, the asshole had kidnapped Dr. Regan Daniels in an attempt to draw Ketcher out into the open.

  Mistake number one.

  The tactic had worked, but in his infinite stupidity the kidnapper hadn’t counted on Ketcher coming with backup.

  Mistake number two.

  A few hours ago, they’d gone in and rescued Regan. Booker and the guys had provided cover and secured Regan while Ketcher showed that motherfucker what happened when you messed with one of their own.

  Game over.

  There was a reason Regan had dubbed them the deadly seven all those years ago in Afghanistan. Individually, they were good. Together, they were downright lethal. And they got the job done.

  Days like today made Booker glad they were all out of the military. If they had been deployed and anything had happened to Regan … Ketcher would’ve been ruined.

  Booker ground his teeth, an ancient pain resurrecting in his chest. He knew about the helplessness of being thousands of miles away when life turned sideways. The frustration. The pain.

  Oh yeah. He knew a little something about that.

  Booker dropped his head back against the wall and closed his eyes. Life could change in an instant. Or rather, lives could change. Where one life changed, so goes another. And another. Booker had seen enough carnage to know the truth. Hell, right now they were an exercise in the ripple effect. Every man in this room would walk away changed forever if they didn’t receive favorable news about Regan’s condition.

  But change wasn’t always instantaneous, was it? Sometimes it was gradual. Sometimes it snuck up on a man like a thief in the night, stealing everything worth—

  Someone dropped into the chair to Booker’s left and nudged him.

  “We might have a situation.”

  Brandon.

  Booker rolled his head toward his buddy and cracked his lids. Booker had known Brandon for most of his life. They had gone to school together. Played varsity football together. Joined the military and served their country together. The history between them made it easy for Booker to read the guy. Brandon was hesitant. Concerned, but not wired for all-out detonation. Whatever the situation was, it wasn’t likely to blow up in his face.

  “What’s up?”

  God, he sounded as tired as he felt. And his eye was beginning to throb. He didn’t need another problem right now. He needed to hear Regan was going to be okay so he could get the hell back to Montana and the life waiting for him there. If work and renovating a house he’d never occupy could be considered a life.

  “Can you take a few extra days off?”

  Annnd, so much for getting home.

  Booker fought the urge to sigh as he dipped his chin. “Hank’s a good guy. He understands brotherhood. Hell, it’s the name of his business. The Brotherhood Protectors.”

 
The business was Hank Patterson’s brainchild and Booker’s saving grace. Separation from active duty was a challenging process. Acclimating to the rhythm of civilian life was hard enough. Try finding a job when your only work experience was drenched in sand and blood.

  Booker had a family to consider. He’d almost given up hope of finding a job when Hank reached out to him. Hank was a retired SEAL. His new mission was to give former military men and women a place to do what they did best—protect others. A phone call and a trip to Montana later, Booker had a new future.

  “Work is slow right now,” Booker said. “Hank was cool about giving me time to take care of things here. He won’t balk if I’m a few days late getting back.” Although Booker might, if Brandon didn’t get on with the why of it.

  “And your family? Will the delay affect the renovation?”

  Irritation growing, Booker stared hard at his friend. He got the feeling he was being vetted for something, and it was starting to piss him off.

  “Really,’mano? That’s how we’re going to play this?”

  The dickwad knew Booker wouldn’t refuse whatever fucked up situation he had going on, regardless of how it would affect the construction timeline. Brotherhood.

  “Indulge me.”

  Booker blew out a breath. After he accepted the job with the Brotherhood Protectors, he used most of his savings to buy a forty-six-acre hobby farm on the outskirts of Eagle Rock, a picturesque little town in the foothills of the Crazy Mountains. The property boasted a four-bedroom house, a one-bedroom guest cabin, a three-stall barn, and a creek that ran along the western border.

  Booker stayed in the cabin, where he would continue to live even after he moved his grandmother, mother, sister, and adolescent niece into the main house. Unfortunately, the house had been neglected for years and needed a total overhaul. Construction was well under way, but it would be months before the house was ready for inhabitants. In the meantime, the ladies would continue living together in Booker’s childhood home on the outskirts of Austin.

 

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