by Jane Porter
Montana Cowboy Christmas
A Wyatt Brothers Romance
Jane Porter
Montana Cowboy Christmas
Copyright© 2020 Jane Porter
Kindle Edition
The Tule Publishing, Inc.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
First Publication by Tule Publishing 2020
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: 978-1-951786-96-0
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Dedication
For Cyndi, so very glad to have you in my corner always! Love you!
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Author’s Note
Epigraph
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Epilogue
The Wyatt Brothers of Montana series
Excerpt from Oh, Christmas Night
More by Jane Porter
About the Author
Dear Readers,
I grew up in a family with strong Christmas traditions. My dad, a professor, loved Christmas so much that every year he earmarked his December paycheck as his—my mom got the other eleven months to pay bills—but his December paycheck was for Christmas: the tree, presents, decorations.
I was fifteen when he died, and my brothers and sister became even more important to me. They were truly ‘my family’ and so as we got older and began to go to college, and then later fall in love and get married, it was hard for me to accept that we wouldn’t all be together for the holidays. It simply didn’t feel right not to have everyone there on Christmas Eve or Christmas morning. Being a newlywed and discovering your new family didn’t celebrate Christmas your way, was also a shock. I missed my family’s traditions and how special Christmas had felt. Happily as a mom, I’ve been able to recreate so many of those traditions and memories from my childhood, and I hope you’re passing down your favorite traditions, too!
I also hope you will enjoy my newest Christmas story, a story of family, love, and second chances…my favorite kind!
Happy Holidays!
Jane
“And we know that all things work together for good to those who love Him.”
Romans 8:28.
Chapter One
Sam Wyatt didn’t feel like leaving bed, not when it was warm and his room was cold, but without getting out of bed there would be no coffee, and he liked his morning coffee almost as much as he liked his boots and horse.
Going downstairs meant he’d see family, and he wasn’t sure he was ready for that either, not after last night’s rowdy family dinner. The Wyatts’ had a lot of strong personalities and, put the four Wyatt brothers together—along with Mom and Granddad—things got loud, and heated, fast.
Billy and Tommy had always enjoyed stirring things up, while Sam liked things calm. Consistent. He was more like Joe in that respect, and more of a loner like Joe. Except Joe had gotten married earlier in the year, and surprise, surprise, had fallen in love with his mail-order bride and was far happier now than Sam had ever known him to be.
Sam was happy for Joe. Maybe a little envious, too, but Sam didn’t feel much like exploring that thought—now or ever. He’d learned serious relationships were work, requiring constant compromise and sacrifice, and he wasn’t sure he was built for compromise, or sacrifice, anymore.
No, he liked his solitude, and he was looking forward to having his own place. He was scheduled to close on his new Wyoming ranch the day after Christmas. Sam pictured his property outside Cody. Hills, pastures, land. Lots of land. Good barns, stable, solid house. Nothing luxurious but it had everything he needed for a successful business. Sam knew cattle, and he couldn’t wait until he could build his own herds.
Leaving bed, he stepped into flannel pajama pants and tugged a sweatshirt over his head, wincing at the pain streaking through his shoulder. He’d reinjured his shoulder last week during the NFRs in Las Vegas: but he couldn’t complain, having walked away from this year’s National Finals Rodeo as world champion in tie-down roping and third in steer wrestling. Younger brothers Billy and Tommy had been there, too, and all three Wyatts’ had left with serious money, but this was Sam’s year, and earning a quarter of a million dollars went a long way to compensating for a torn rotator cuff.
Downstairs, the kitchen was pleasantly warm and empty. Sam reached into the cupboard for painkillers, washing the tablets down with a half glass of water, before filling his coffee cup.
Maybe he should just do the surgery, get it over with. Letting his shoulder heal on its own could take ten to twelve weeks. But he had four weeks, not twelve, before the new season began. Problem was, surgery wasn’t always successful.
In his head, Sam planned his day. His mom’s birthday was a week from today, and Christmas was ten days away. Sam planned on going into Marietta and getting some shopping done, and then he’d stop in at the bank and make sure money was ready to be wired from his account so they could close on the Cody ranch on time.
Tommy and Billy knew about the property in Cody, but Sam still needed to tell the rest of the family. He trusted there wouldn’t be hard feelings. Joe might say he was upset, but Joe was married now and would soon have kids and the ranch would belong to his kids. That was just how it worked.
Floorboards squeaked overhead and he glanced up to the ceiling, the room directly above the kitchen belonging to his younger brothers. A minute later, Tommy descended the stairs, entering the kitchen in baggy sweatpants and nothing else. It was a little cool to be without a shirt but Tommy loved showing off his body, especially his eight-pack abs. Sam arched an eyebrow, silently mocking Tommy’s choice of attire.
Tommy grinned. “Don’t be jealous. You can’t all be me.”
“Not jealous, Tom. I’m all right being who I am.”
“Guess who I saw last night?” Tommy asked, reaching for one of the glossy red and white Santa mugs lining the wide lip of the kitchen window, mugs that Joe’s new wife, Sophie, had put there, along with the plethora of Christmas decorations all over the house. They’d never done much decorating at Christmas, but it seemed no one had the heart to tell Sophie that.
Sam didn’t take the bait and just waited as Tommy filled his glossy red Santa mug and then replaced the coffee carafe.
“Why didn’t you take one of the Christmas mugs?” Tommy asked.
“There was no Grinch mug,” Sam answered easily, lifting his brown feed mug with the faded logo. “Had to make do with this.”
“Sophie is excited about
the new mugs.”
“I noticed.”
“You don’t like Christmas anymore?”
“I like it just fine. Now, who did you see last night?”
“You’ll never figure it out; not in a million years.”
“Put like that, just tell me.”
Tommy lifted his cup. “Make at least one guess. Humor me.”
“I humor you all the time.”
“Dang, you’re a grouch.” Tommy paused, took a sip, and then another, all the while eyeing Sam over the rim of the smiling Santa. “I was at the Wolf Den, does that help?”
Sam suppressed a sigh. The Wolf Den was the seediest bar in town, probably the seediest bar anywhere in a forty-mile radius. Truckers, bikers, and troublemakers liked to frequent the place. He personally avoided it, but his brother had been there for a birthday party last night. His youngest brother liked to run a little wild still. “I don’t know since it’s not a place I like to go.”
“I’ll help you out. Someone you dated.”
This caught Sam’s attention. Someone he dated was working at the Wolf Den? He hadn’t dated that many people, not growing up. Back in high school, there had been just two girls. Sam tended to settle into serious relationships, long relationships, rather than playing the field like Tommy. So if it was someone he dated, that meant it had to be Heather or Caitlin. But, Heather was married with four little ones, and Caitlin had moved away, somewhere in Texas, working for a big tech company. She’d always been smart, ambitious, and she’d gone off to college and never returned. But had she finally come back?
“Caitlin?” Sam asked. “Is she working at the Wolf Den?”
“Nope.”
“I don’t know anyone else from Marietta I’ve dated.”
“I didn’t say she was from Marietta.”
Sam frowned. “I don’t know. I give up.”
“It’s Ivy. Ivy was bartending last night.”
Sam’s jaw clenched and his stomach felt hard, tight as he slowly set his mug down. “Say that again.”
“Saw Ivy last night.” Tommy wasn’t smiling anymore. “And it was her, I know it was her. I even asked one of the waitresses. It’s your Ivy.”
“Did you talk to her?”
“No.”
“Did she see you?” Sam asked.
“I don’t know. Once, I thought I saw her looking at me, but when I looked her in the eye, she glanced away and…” His voice faded. He shrugged. “To be honest, it just felt really weird and awkward. I think she was surprised see me, and I don’t think she was happy to see me, and suddenly I didn’t want to be there.” Tommy went to the fridge, pulled out the carton of half-and-half, and poured a generous measure into his cup. “She looked different, too. Hard to explain. She just didn’t look like your girlfriend anymore.”
Sam grabbed the half-and-half carton and returned it to the fridge, closing the refrigerator door with a little more force than necessary. “That’s because she isn’t my girlfriend. She hasn’t been my Ivy for two years now.”
“Are you going to go see her? She’s working again tonight.”
Sam gave his brother an incredulous look. “No, I’m not going to see her. Why would I do that?”
“Because once you two were serious, really serious. We all thought you were going to marry her.” Tommy paused, waited. “You even thought you were going to marry her.”
“Doesn’t matter. It didn’t happen. She moved on, and I moved on, and we’re both in a better place.”
Tommy took his cup and walked across the room, grabbing a chair from the kitchen table and pulling it out. “But are you?” he demanded, sitting down. “Are you really in a better place? Cause you could have fooled me.”
“Mind your own business, Tom.”
“I normally do.”
“So butt out.”
Tommy said nothing for a long moment, concentrating on his coffee, making a show of taking slow appreciative sips. His broad, bare shoulders twisted, shifting the thick scar wrapped around his rib cage. “You know best. Maybe she’s not your girl now, but you still have a soft spot for her, and if it doesn’t bother you that she’s working in a modern-day whorehouse—”
“Wolf Den is a strip bar, not a whore house. And I thought you said Ivy was a bartender, not a pole dancer.”
Tom shrugged. “You know the kind of guys that go there—”
“Guys like you.”
Tommy just smiled, a dimple forming deep in his lean cheek. He gave his brother a look of pure pleasure. There was love in his expression, but also a challenge. They’d grown up loving each other, fighting each other, besting each other. It was just the Wyatt way. “Yeah guys like me, but because I know who Ivy is, I wasn’t hitting on her, and I wasn’t saying anything, and I wasn’t propositioning her. No sir, I kept my distance, and I was respectful, but Ivy is beautiful. Guys hit on her. They think she’s hot. I’ve got to tell you, she was getting a lot of attention last night, more attention than the dancers, more attention than the cocktail waitresses in their skimpy outfits and Ivy was just Ivy, in jeans and a T-shirt—” He broke off, shrugged. “Sure it was tight, not that I was looking, but others were. She’s got that body—”
“Enough about her body,” Sam growled.
“Sure, Sam, whatever you say. But before I shut up altogether, let me just add, that if you really care about Ivy—and you might not, because you’re right, you loved her a couple years ago and maybe you didn’t really love her, maybe it was just infatuation, maybe it was just a passing phase—but if you were ever her friend, I would check in on her, and make sure she’s okay.” And with that Tommy stood, grabbed his cup, and walked out of the room, leaving Sam alone.
*
Ivy pulled on her heaviest coat, slipped her hands into mittens, and stepped outside to walk to work. It was a beautiful Montana morning, with a crystal-clear blue sky and just a few white clouds scattered above. She was opening the bar this morning and she sang to herself as she walked, “Over the river and through the woods to the Wolf Den bar I go…”
Ivy’s teeth chattered as a gust of frigid wind tried to knock her off her feet. Just a few more days and she’d have enough to pay for the new transmission her truck needed, and then she’d be able to drive again to work, and to see Scotch, and everything would be much, much easier.
But until then, she’d keep walking to work, which honestly, wasn’t that bad, as it was only ten minutes from her lodging on Chance Avenue to the Wolf Den bar. Sure, the road was dirty with black snow and salt and ice, but the fresh air always cleared her head and filled her lungs and made her grateful to be alive despite the difficult past few years, because honestly, things could be so much worse. She had a place to live, she was healthy and strong, and earning decent money. Once her truck had a new tranny, she’d have a lot more freedom, and would be in a better position for making decisions about the future. When she’d first arrived in Crawford County, it was supposed to just be for the fall and winter, but now, it was beginning to feel like home and maybe it could be. Maybe this was where she was meant to put down roots.
Ivy just had to stay patient and keep her faith. All good things came to those who believed.
And she believed.
She also believed that Jeb Kruse was taking good care of Scotch. He’d promised to, and why wouldn’t he? Just because Jeb had to lay her off didn’t mean he was a bad person.
Reaching the Wolf Den, Ivy stamped the dirty snow off her boots before opening the front door. The interior was dim and quiet, but it still had the pungent odor of beer and whiskey.
Pia, one of the cocktail waitresses, was already inside, leaning on the bar reading the paper. She glanced up as Ivy hung her coat on the rack. “Did you hear about Ashley Howe? That little girl from Belgrade who got hurt back in September?”
“What’s happened?” Ivy asked, stashing her purse under the counter because Ivy knew far more about Ashley and the Howe family than she’d ever let on. Last September, Ivy had sold her mare B
elle to help Ashley get the therapy the girl needed after her injury. Ivy’s donation to Ashley’s Go Fund Me had been anonymous. Only the family and Ivy knew what she’d done, and she intended to keep it that way.
“Well, she’s coming home from Florida where she’s been doing rehab.” Pia folded the Copper Mountain Courier and slid it across the counter toward Ivy. “She’s going to be home for Christmas. That’s pretty awesome, don’t you think?”
“I do.” Ivy washed her hands and dried them and reached for the paper. “Her family will be so happy to have her home with them.”
“Do you think she can walk now?”
Ivy hesitated. “I don’t know that walking was ever in the cards for her.”
“Then why did she go to rehab? I thought they were going to help her walk again?”
“From what I know, rehabilitation after a spinal cord injury involves a lot more than just getting someone to walk. For Ashley, it was probably about making her physically stronger, and helping teach her practical things, like how to get dressed, and how to transfer from a wheelchair on and off a toilet and a bed.”
“That’s it?”
“That’s huge, Pia. She’s paralyzed, and these things will help her live more independently.”
“That sucks, though. I thought she would maybe be able to walk again. She’s just fourteen. Just a kid.”
Ivy didn’t answer. Ashley’s tragic accident had kept her up so many nights. It was so unfair, so unjust. Yes, barrel racing could be a dangerous sport, and injuries occurred, but the fact Ashley was injured in a farming accident, rather than through a riding accident, was just salt in the wound.
Ashley had been a stranger to Ivy before the accident last August. Ivy had never worked with the girl, or her horse, but it didn’t matter. She was a talented youth competitor with a passion for the sport, and Ashley’s fate was heartbreaking.