Haley's Mountain Man

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Haley's Mountain Man Page 1

by Tracy Madison




  Tracy Madison’s second book in the Colorado Fosters series gives us a man who has learned to go it alone—and a woman who simply won’t take no for an answer!

  Gavin Daugherty has made every attempt to ignore Haley Foster. But the feisty hometown sweetheart of Steamboat Springs is simply not having it.

  Why won’t she accept that he just wants to open his business and be left alone? Isn’t it enough that she’s already forced her way into his work; must she also force her way into his heart? Plus, he could also do without the rest of the Colorado Fosters! Who needs three overprotective brothers breathing down your neck?

  Of course, none of this seems to deter Haley Foster. No. She learned long ago that you have to follow your heart to get along in this world. And that’s a lesson she’s about to teach Gavin, too!

  Never in his life had Gavin seen such a smile. Warm and real and…well, sweet and saucy, too. How in heaven’s name had this woman seen anything in him to pique her interest?

  Or, for that matter, sit in his living room with a smile?

  Those thoughts swirled and spun. He opened his mouth, set to say something—anything.

  Swallowing hard, he forced his body to move in Haley’s direction before she noticed his awkwardness. Or worse, commented on his awkwardness.

  Lord, he was a mess.

  Rattled. Confused. Unshaven. Yup, a mess, and in that second, what he needed the most was to know what motivated Haley Foster to behave in the way she did.

  “Why’d you come over here tonight, Haley?”

  Dear Reader,

  Every now and then a story comes along that grabs ahold of my heart and refuses to let go. This is one of those stories. I’m beyond excited to share the journey that awaits Haley Foster—the youngest sibling in the Colorado Fosters—and Gavin Daugherty, a loner of a man who is somewhat of a newcomer to Steamboat Springs, Colorado.

  On the outside, these two people couldn’t be more different. Haley was raised in a close-knit, loving family with three older brothers who always had her back. Gavin grew up mostly being shuttled from one foster home to another, and other than a precious few, no one has ever had his back, and his relationship with his mother is…challenging, at best. Haley follows her heart and trusts her instincts above all else, while Gavin almost always obeys the rules of logic.

  They are, in most every way, oil and water. This doesn’t stop Haley from listening to her gut, which insists that Gavin is meant to play an essential role in her life. And poor Gavin—he hasn’t ever come face-to-face with such a feisty, impulsive woman before. He is unprepared when Haley begins to knock down every last barrier he’s ever erected, and he isn’t quite sure what to make of the whirlwind of contradictory emotions Haley has brought to the surface.

  The road ahead of Gavin and Haley is long, twisty and filled with plenty of bumps, but if these two can stay on course, they’ll find that fate has the perfect destination in store for them.

  Happy Reading!

  Tracy Madison

  Haley’s

  Mountain Man

  Tracy Madison

  Books by Tracy Madison

  Harlequin Special Edition

  *Miracle Under the Mistletoe #2154

  *A Match Made by Cupid #2170

  *An Officer, a Baby and a Bride #2195

  ΔCole’s Christmas Wish #2231

  ΔHaley’s Mountain Man #2279

  *The Foster Brothers

  ΔThe Colorado Fosters

  Other titles by this author available in ebook format.

  TRACY MADISON

  lives in northwestern Ohio with her husband, four children, one bear-size dog, one loving-but-paranoid pooch and a couple of snobby cats. Her house is often hectic, noisy and filled to the brim with laugh-out-loud moments. Many of these incidents fire up her imagination to create the interesting, realistic and intrinsically funny characters that live in her stories. Tracy loves to hear from readers. You can reach her at [email protected].

  For many reasons, this story is dedicated to

  the friends who make up my extended family.

  You know who you are, and you know why.

  Thank you for your love, support and belief.

  Contents

  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

  Epilogue

  Excerpt

  Chapter One

  The lazy, hazy days of summer couldn’t get here soon enough. Well, the hazy days, anyway. No one who lived in Steamboat Springs, Colorado, would describe summer as lazy. They would describe now as lazy. Relaxing. Maybe even rejuvenating.

  Not Haley Foster. She was, in fact, bored out of her ever-living skull.

  Admittedly, an odd state of being. With the hectic winter tourist season behind them and the summer season yet to arrive in full force, she should be enjoying the brief slowdown. She always had in the past. This year, though, she was...restless.

  More than that, really. She had this itchy, uncomfortable sense of waiting for something—anything—to happen. What, exactly, she didn’t have a clue. Just...something.

  And that was why she couldn’t wait for summer. The tourists would breeze in to spend their vacations white-water rafting, hiking, canoeing, or any one of the many other activities available in the area, and her sleepy town would wake again. She would be busy from sunup to sundown, and wouldn’t have the time to worry about why she felt so off.

  Sighing, she leaned back in her chair at the Beanery, the local coffee joint, and tried to pay attention to her longtime friend Suzette Solomon. They’d met earlier for a Saturday morning Spinning class. Now, they were supposed to be savoring their reward of yummy hot beverages while catching up on each other’s lives.

  Suzette was in the midst of sharing a funny story about one of her fourth-grade students, and while Haley managed to chuckle and insert a comment here and there, mostly she couldn’t pull herself out of her own head long enough to relax. Dammit! She’d really believed that an hour of hard exercise followed up by a solid dose of friend time would ease the edginess.

  She’d been wrong.

  Why was she so freaking restless? And for that matter, why did she feel as if life were passing her by? She wasn’t old, for crying out loud. At twenty-six, she had plenty of time to do anything she wanted to do. But lately, the days and the nights had seemed interminably long, and even when she was with her family or friends, she had the inexplicable sensation of...loneliness.

  Maybe she needed to take up a new hobby. Or buy a pet. Or... When an epiphany failed to strike, she decided to place the full blame on being stuck between seasons. Had to be. Why search for a deeper meaning when the simplest answer was usually the culprit?

  Suzette cleared her throat and watched Haley expectantly, apparently waiting for some type of a response. Oh, crap. Was this a laugh, be shocked or commiserate moment? She went with a soft chuckle, hoping that would cover all possible bases.

  “Cute story, huh?” Suzette asked, ruffl
ing her short black hair with her fingers.

  “So cute,” Haley agreed enthusiastically.

  “Yeah? What was your favorite part?”

  “Um, honestly, I don’t think I can choose a favorite. The entire story was just adorable, and really, I bet cute and adorable stuff happens every single day in your classroom.”

  “Really, Haley?” Suzette gave her a long, semi-amused look. “You’re seriously going to pretend that you didn’t zone out a good five or ten minutes ago?”

  Sighing again, Haley offered a faint smile. “I’m sorry. Was I that obvious?”

  “Obviously, or I wouldn’t have noticed.” Wrapping her hand around her coffee cup, Suzette said, “No worries, though. I know I can go on and on about my students.”

  “I like hearing about your students!” And she did. Usually. “I was thinking about how slow the days are, and how I can’t wait for summer to get here so everything can pick up again. That’s all.” Close enough to the truth. As close as she wanted to get, anyway.

  “Since when? For almost the entire winter, all I heard was how anxious you were for enough empty hours in the day to read a book, watch a movie, paint your apartment.” She arched a finely plucked eyebrow. “Go out on a few dates. Which, actually, I wanted to ask—”

  “I’ve read the books and watched the movies I wanted to, and you helped me paint my apartment. So now, I’m ready for summer.”

  “Hmm, yes. But you left one item off of that list. Tell me, how many dates have you racked up in the past few months?”

  Wrinkling her nose, Haley sipped her chai tea. Suzette already knew the answer to that question. “My lack of a dating life has nothing to do with my boredom.” Her loneliness, maybe, but she didn’t feel like broaching that topic. “I’m just bored.”

  “Uh-huh. Sure you are.”

  “You know how it is in between seasons,” she argued, hoping beyond hope that she was right, and that once summer rolled in, these odd feelings would disappear. “Instead of twelve-hour workdays, I barely have enough on my agenda to stay busy for eight.”

  Haley’s family owned two businesses in Steamboat Springs. All of the Fosters—Haley, her three older brothers, and their parents—were partners in the running of said businesses. During the winter and summer months, that meant keeping up with her normal duties as well as helping out in the restaurant and in the sporting goods store.

  In the spring and fall, though, she was primarily in the office contending with the businesses’ basic accounting needs, updating their websites, and ordering supplies and inventory. Most of which she’d long since mastered, so typically, none of it took very long.

  “I do know how it is,” Suzette agreed easily. Her parents were also local business owners, and Suzette had worked at their deli during summers until she’d graduated from college. “Your work schedule isn’t the issue. Or what’s really bothering you, so why don’t we talk about that?”

  “Stop.” Forcing a laugh, she wished that Suzette didn’t know her quite so well. In this particular context, anyway. “There isn’t anything else bugging me.”

  “You’re in a funk, dating-wise,” Suzette said matter-of-factly, as if Haley hadn’t spoken. “Happens to all of us at one time or another. But as they say, the first step is admitting an issue exists. So, I have an idea to fix your boredom and make a certain someone—”

  “Stop,” she repeated, sensing the conversation was headed directly toward blind-date land. “There isn’t an issue. None! And I have no desire to be fixed up with anyone.”

  “Even if that guy is cute, sweet and funny?”

  “Even if.”

  “Intelligent and warmhearted?”

  “Even if,” she repeated. “And if he’s that amazing, why aren’t you dating him? Unless... Oh, no, Suzette. You’re not trying to fix me up with one of your leftovers, are you?”

  “One date, and not even a real date, and we didn’t even kiss,” she said with a flick of her wrist. “So nope, not a leftover. Promise.”

  “Darn close, though. Jeez.”

  Letting out a huff, Suzette said, “Just say the words, Haley. Dating. Funk.”

  “So speaks the woman who juggles three men on any given weekend.” Haley was only half joking. Her friend always seemed to have a man on each arm.

  “Only because I’m not as choosy as you.” Narrow shoulders lifted in a slight shrug. “If a nice guy asks me out, I tend to say yes. Whereas you tend to pluck excuses from the air in order to say no.” Bracing her elbows on the table, she rested her chin in her hands. “I have a better question for you. How many dates have you turned down in the past few months?”

  Mentally doing the math, Haley frowned. She’d declined a handful of invitations, so what? Lonely was one thing. Dating someone she wasn’t interested in was another. “I don’t see the point in spending an evening with a man based on how nice he is.”

  “Because spending an evening with a nice guy is...such a horrible experience?”

  “Not at all! He should be nice, obviously, but there should also be something more.”

  “Sexual attraction is always a plus, but—”

  “I’m not even talking about that,” Haley interrupted. Not that she disagreed. But, “I don’t want to know every detail about a man’s life before we order drinks. I want to be...curious about a man, about what makes him tick.”

  And that right there was her real issue. Despite how nice many of the local men were, she just knew them too freaking well for them to hold any real interest. When you could all too easily picture a man swallowing mouthfuls of glue or picking his nose from their elementary school days, it was hard to see him in a different light. Unfair, she knew, but the truth.

  Sure, she’d dated plenty in the past. None of those relationships had evolved into anything. Some of those failures she placed squarely on her big brothers’ shoulders. Sweet as they were, they could also be a little too overprotective. The rest...well, the guys had either turned out to be jerks, or there simply hadn’t been enough chemistry.

  In other words, unless she moved to another city—which she had absolutely no desire to do—her future love life looked pretty darn bleak.

  Maybe she should let Suzette fix her up. The thought was defeating somehow, and for whatever reason, not something she wanted to do. Yeah, she should get a pet.

  A cat, maybe. Or ten. Didn’t all spinsters have a houseful of cats?

  “Are you saying what I think you are?” Suzette asked, her voice this side of shocked. Perhaps even a little amused. And damn if Haley could figure out where her mind had gone.

  “Er, I don’t know,” she said. “What do you think I’m thinking?”

  “Are you considering having a summer fling with a hot, hunky tourist or two?”

  Laughter burbled out of Haley’s throat. It felt good, even if the thought was ludicrous. “Oh, come on, that is not why I’m ready for summer. You know me better than that.”

  “I do, but a girl can hope. Besides, why not?”

  She had nothing to say to that. Not one thing.

  “It could be fun,” Suzette prodded. “How will you know unless you give it a try?”

  “Um, because I do. I’m not interested.” Tourists weren’t around long enough to appeal, and she wanted something more meaningful than a fling. Tired of trying to explain a yearning she didn’t quite understand, she said, “You were right to begin with. I’m too picky.”

  “Look, Haley,” Suzette said, her voice becoming serious, “you’re thinking too hard about this! Date a few guys. Have some fun. You don’t have to marry any of them, but it has to better than sitting at home wishing for twelve-hour workdays. Which is rather nuts, you know.”

  “I know, but—”

  The door flew open and a man entered. Blinking, she watched him stride toward Lola,
the owner of the Beanery and, as it so happened, a close friend of Haley’s mother. He held a clipboard in one hand, the other was squeezed into a fist at his side, and every ounce of his body seemed intense and...hard, as if he were prepared for a fight.

  She had drawn the same impression when she’d originally met him, back in December. His name was Gavin Daugherty, and he was somewhat of a newcomer to Steamboat Springs. At the time, he’d come into the sports store looking for work as a ski instructor. They hadn’t had any positions available, but her brother Cole had latched onto her interest—curiosity—and for a while, had seemed bent on finding out more about Gavin.

  Fortunately, Cole’s attention had become otherwise occupied by his now-fiancée, Rachel Merriday, and he’d seemingly forgotten all about Gavin.

  But Haley hadn’t. The man had been on her mind a lot.

  Silly, really, as she knew hardly anything about him, and had seen him only a few times since. Curious, she watched as he got into line behind four others to wait his turn. The woman in front of him instantly stepped forward, putting a few more inches of space in between her and him. Gavin stepped forward as well, as folks were apt to do when a line moved. The woman attempted to move up again, but she didn’t have any room left to do so.

  Instead, she sidled to the side. Without missing a beat, Gavin retreated a few inches and gestured for the woman to retake her place in line. She didn’t look at him and, rather than moving closer, she stepped another few inches in the opposite direction, and then several more.

  A slow burn began inside as Haley put two and two together. She had a sense that people backed away from Gavin often. She supposed that was due in part to his size, as he was a giant of a man. Probably around six-foot-five, he had the build of a linebacker that only began with the wide, muscular breadth of his shoulders. And okay, he could use a haircut and a shave to get rid of the Grizzly Adams look he had going. Even so, his appearance didn’t scare her or make her uneasy. She could see, however, how others might view him as intimidating.

 

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