Wedding at Cardwell Ranch

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Wedding at Cardwell Ranch Page 21

by B. J Daniels


  ALLIE WATCHED HER sister with Natalie and the kids. Megan, at twenty-three, was still a kid herself, she thought as she watched her playing tag with them. She knew she’d made the right decision and felt good about it.

  She felt freer than she had in years. She’d also made up with Belinda. They would never be as close, not after her friend had kept her relationship with Nick from her. But they would remain friends and Allie was glad of it.

  Belinda said she wanted her to meet the man in her life. Maybe Allie would, since it seemed that this time the relationship was serious.

  Drew had tried to talk to her at the funeral, but she’d told him what she’d told his mother. She never wanted to see either of them again and with both of them leaving the canyon, she probably never would.

  Beyond that, she didn’t know. She would sell the cabin, Nick’s pickup, everything she owned and start over. She just didn’t know where yet, she thought as she saw Jackson coming up the mountainside.

  He took off his Stetson as he approached the steps to her cabin and looked up at her. “Allie,” he said. “I was hoping we could talk.”

  She motioned him up onto the porch. He looked so bashful. She smiled at the sight of his handsome face. The cowboy had saved her more times than she could count. He’d coming riding in on his white horse like something out of a fairytale and stolen her heart like an old-time outlaw.

  “What did you want to talk about?” she asked. He seemed as tongue tied as Ford had been when he’d met Natalie.

  “I...I...” He swallowed. “I love you.”

  Her eyes filled with tears. Those were the three little words she had ached to hear. Her heart pounded as she stepped to him. “I love you, Jackson.”

  He let out a whoop and picking her up, spun her around. As he set her down, he was still laughing. “Run away with me?”

  “Anywhere.”

  “Texas?”

  “If that’s where you want to go.”

  “Well, here is the problem. You know my father, Harlan? I think he might just make a better grandfather than he ever did a father. I want Ford to have that.”

  She smiled. “Montana?”

  “This is where I was born. I guess it is calling back my whole family. Did I tell you that my mother’s new husband, Franklin, owns some land in the state? They’re going to be spending half the year here. Hayes and McKenzie bought a place up the road and Tag and Lily will be living close by, as well. Dana said we can stay on the ranch until we find a place. The only thing we have to do is make sure our kids are in school next month.”

  “Montana it is then.”

  “Wait a minute.” He looked shy again as he dropped to one knee. She noticed he had on new jeans and a nice Western dress shirt. Reaching into his pocket, he pulled out a ring box. “You’re going to think I’m nuts. I bought this the day Tag and I went to pick up his rings for the wedding. I saw it and I thought, ‘It’s the same color as Allie’s eyes.’ Damned if I knew what I was going to do with it. Until now.” He took a breath and let it out. “Would you marry me, Allie?”

  She stared down at the beautiful emerald-green engagement ring set between two sparkling diamonds and felt her eyes widen. “It’s the most beautiful thing I have ever seen.”

  He laughed. “No, honey, that would be you,” he said as he put the ring on her finger, then drew her close and kissed her. “I can’t wait to tell the kids. I have a feeling Ford and Natalie are going to like living in Montana on their very own ranch, with their very own horses and lots of family around them.”

  Allie felt like pinching herself. She’d been through so much, but in the end she’d gotten something she’d never dreamed of, a loving man she could depend on and love with all her heart. For so long, she’d been afraid to hope that dreams could come true.

  She smiled as Jackson took her hand and they went to tell the kids the news.

  * * * * *

  Keep reading for an excerpt from HARD RIDE TO DRY GULCH by Joanna Wayne.

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  Prologue

  Faith Ashburn emphasized her deep-set brown eyes with a coat of thick black liner and then took a step away from the mirror to see the full effect of the makeup she’d caked onto her pale skin. The haunted eyes that stared back at her were the only part of the face she recognized.

  Her irises mirrored the way she felt. Lost. Trapped in a nightmare. The anxiety so intense the lining of her stomach seemed to be on fire.

  But she’d go back out there tonight, into the smoke and groping, the stares that crawled across her skin like hairy spiders. She’d smile and endure the depravity—praying, always praying for some crumb of information that would lead her to her son.

  Cornell was eighteen now. Physically, he was a man. Mentally and emotionally, he was a kid, at least he was in her mind. A trusting, naive boy who needed his mother and his meds.

  Faith’s bare feet sank into the thick mauve carpet as she stepped back into her bedroom and tugged on her patterned panty hose. Then she pulled the low-cut, trampy black dress from the closet and stepped into it.

  The fabric stretched over her bare breasts as she slid the spaghetti straps over her narrow shoulders. Her nipples were covered, but there was enough cleavage showing to suggest that she’d have no qualms about revealing everything if the offer appealed to her.

  Reaching to the top shelf of her closet, she chose the bright red stiletto heels. They never failed to garner the instant attention of men high on booze, drugs and the stench of overripe sex.

  Struck by a burst of vertigo, Faith held on to the bedpost until the dizziness passed. Then she tucked a lipstick, her car keys and some mad money into the small sequined handbag that already held her licensed pistol.

  Stopping off in the kitchen, she poured two fingers of cheap whiskey into a glass. She swished the amber liquid around in her mouth, gargled and then spit it down the drain. Holding the glass over the sink, she ran one finger around the edges to collect the remaining liquor. She dotted it at her pulse points like expensive perfume.

  Her muscles clenched. Her lungs clogged. She took a deep breath and walked out the door, carefully locking it behind her.

  Six months of going unofficially undercover into the seediest areas of Dallas. Six months of questioning every drug addict and pervert that might have come in contact with Cornell, based on nothing but the one shrapnel of evidence the police had provided her.

  Six months of crying herself to sleep when she came home as lost, confused and desperate as before.

  God, please let tonight be different.

  * * *

  “ANOTHER BACKSTREET HOMICIDE, another trip to see Georgio. I’m beginning to think he gives a discount to killers. A lap dance from one of his girls when a body shows up at the morgue without identification.”

  “And the victims get younger and younger.” Travis Dalton followed his partner, Reno, as they walked through a side door of the sleaziest strip joint in the most dangerous part of Dallas. Georgio reigned as king here, providing the local sex and drug
addicts with everything they needed to feed their cravings.

  Yet the rotten bastard always came out on top. His rule of threats and intimidation eliminated any chance of getting one of his patrons to testify against him. Not that they would have had a shred of credibility if they had.

  A rap song blared from the sound system as a couple of seminude women with surgery-enhanced butts and breasts made love to skinny poles. Two others gyrated around the rim of the stage, collecting bills in their G-strings.

  A familiar waitress whose name Travis couldn’t remember sashayed up to him. “Business or pleasure, copper boy?”

  “What do you think?”

  “Business, but a girl can hope. Are you looking for Georgio?”

  “For starters.”

  “Is it about that boy who got shot up in Oak Cliff last night?”

  Now she had Travis’s full attention. “What do you know about that?”

  “Nothing, I just figured that’s what brought you here.”

  Travis had a hunch she knew more than she was admitting. He was about to question her further when he noticed a woman at the bar trying to peel a man’s grip from her right wrist.

  “Let go of me,” she said, her voice rising above the din.

  The man held tight while his free hand groped her breast. “I just want to be friends.”

  “You’re hurting me.”

  Travis stormed to the bar. “You heard the woman. Move on, buddy.”

  “Why don’t you mind your own business?”

  “I am.” He pulled the ID from the breast pocket of his blue pullover. “Dallas Police. Back off or I snap a nice metal bracelet on your wrist and haul you down to central lockup.”

  A thin stream of spittle made its way down the man’s whiskered chin as his hands fell to his sides. Wiping it away with his shirtsleeve, he slid off the barstool and stumbled backward.

  “She’s the one you should be arresting. She came on to me,” he slurred.

  Travis studied the woman and decided the drunk could be right. She was flaunting the trappings of a hooker, right down to a sexy pair of heels that made her shapely legs appear a mile long.

  But one look into her haunted eyes and Travis doubted she was looking to make a fast buck on her back. She had a delicate, fragile quality about her that suggested she’d be more at home in a convent than here shoving off drunks. Even the exaggerated makeup couldn’t hide her innocence.

  If he had to guess, he’d say she was here trying to get even with some jerk who had cheated on her. That didn’t make it any less dangerous for her to be in this hellhole.

  “Party’s over, lady. I’m calling for a squad car to take you home.”

  “I have a car.”

  “Get behind the wheel and I’ll have to arrest you for driving while intoxicated.”

  “I’m not drunk.”

  He couldn’t argue that point. She smelled like a distillery, but she wasn’t slurring her words and her eyes were clear, her pupils normal.

  “I don’t know what kind of game you’re playing or who you’re trying to get even with, but if you hang around here, you’re going to run into more trouble than you can handle.”

  “I can take care of myself.” She turned and started to walk away.

  Travis moved quicker, setting himself in her path without realizing why he was bothering.

  He looked around for Reno, but his partner wasn’t in sight. He was probably already questioning Georgio, and Travis should be with him.

  “Look, lady. You’re in over your head here. I’ve got some urgent business, but sit tight for a few minutes and I’ll be back to walk you to your car. In the meantime, don’t make friends with any more perverts. That’s an order.”

  She shrugged and nodded.

  He stalked off to find Reno. He spotted him and Georgio a minute later near the door to the suite of private offices. When he looked back, the woman was gone.

  Just as well, he told himself, especially if she’d gone home. He didn’t need any more problems tonight. But even after he reached Reno and jumped into the murderous situation at hand, he couldn’t fully shake her from his mind.

  Whatever had brought her slumming could get her killed.

  Chapter One

  Four months later

  Travis adjusted the leather-and-turquoise bolo tie, a close match to the one his brother was wearing with his Western-style tux. The irony of seeing his formerly Armani-faithful attorney brother dressed like this made it hard for Travis not to laugh.

  “I never thought I’d see the day you got hitched to a cowgirl.”

  “I never thought I’d see the day you showed up at the Dry Gulch Ranch again,” Leif answered.

  “Couldn’t miss the wedding of my favorite brother.”

  “Your only brother.”

  “Yeah, probably a good thing you don’t have competition now that you’re building a house here on the ranch. On the bright side, I do like that I get to wear my cowboy boots with this rented monkey suit.”

  Travis rocked back on the heels of his new boots, bought for the conspicuous occasion of Leif’s wedding to Joni Griffin. He’d never seen his brother happier. Not only was he so in love that he beamed when he looked at his veterinarian bride, but his daughter, Effie, would be living with him for her last two years of high school.

  The Dry Gulch Ranch was spiffed up for the ceremony and reception. Lights were strung through the branches of giant oaks and stringy sycamores. A white tent had been set up with chairs, leaving a makeshift aisle that led to a rose-covered altar where the two lovers would take their vows.

  Most of the chairs were taken. Leif’s friends from the prestigious law firm from which he’d recently resigned to open his own office nearer the ranch mingled with what looked to be half the population of Oak Grove.

  The women from both groups looked quite elegant. The Big D lawyers were all in designer suits. The ranchers for the most part looked as if they’d feel a lot more at home in their Wranglers than in their off-the-rack suits and choking ties.

  In fact, a few of the younger cowboys were in jeans and sport coats. Travis figured they were the smart ones. Weekends he wasn’t working a homicide case he usually spent on a friend’s ranch up in the hill country.

  Riding, roping, baling hay, branding—he’d done it all and loved it. A weekend place on the Dry Gulch Ranch, just a little over an hour from Dallas, would have been the perfect solution to Travis. Except for one very large problem.

  Rueben Jackson Dalton, his father by virtue of a healthy sperm.

  “Time for us to join the preacher,” Leif said, jerking Travis back into the moment.

  He walked at his brother’s side and felt a momentary sense of anxiety. He and Leif had been through hell together growing up, most caused by R.J.

  It had been just the two of them against the world since their mother’s death, and they’d always been as close as a horse to a saddle. Now Leif was marrying and moving onto R.J.’s spread.

  Oh, hell, what was he worried about? R.J. would never come between him and Leif. Besides, the old coot would be dead soon.

  The music started. Leif’s fifteen-year-old daughter started down the aisle, looking so grown-up Travis felt his chest constrict. He could only imagine what the sight did to Leif. Travis winked at Effie as she took her place at the altar. Her smile was so big it took over her face and danced in her eyes.

  Travis looked up again and did a
double take as he spotted the maid of honor gliding down the aisle. She damn sure didn’t look the way she did the last time he’d seen her, but there was no doubt in his mind that the gorgeous lady was the same one he’d rescued in Georgio’s sleaziest strip club four months earlier.

  He’d spent only a few minutes with her, but she’d preyed on his mind a lot since then, so much so that he found himself showing up at Georgio’s palace of perversion even when his work didn’t call for doing so.

  All in the interest of talking to her and making sure she was safe. In spite of his efforts, he’d never caught sight of her again.

  Travis studied the woman as she took her place a few feet away from him. She was absolutely stunning in a luscious creation the color of the amethyst ring his mother used to wear. She’d given the ring to him before she’d died.

  It was the only prized possession Travis owned—well, that and the belt buckles he’d won in bull-riding competitions back when he had more guts than sense.

  The wedding march sounded. The guests all stood. Travis’s eyes remained fixed on the maid of honor. Finally, she looked at him, and when their eyes met, he saw the same tortured, haunting depths that had mesmerized him at their first meeting.

  Travis forced his gaze away from the mystery woman and back to Joni and Travis. He wouldn’t spoil the wedding, but before the night was over he’d have a little chat with the seductive maid of honor. Before he was through, he’d discover if she was as innocent as he’d first believed, or if the demons who’d filled her eyes with anguish had actually driven her to the dark side of life.

  If the latter was the case, he’d make damn sure she stayed away from his niece, even if it meant telling Leif the truth about his new wife’s best friend.

  The reception might have a lot more spectacular fireworks than originally planned. Travis was already itching for the first dance.

  Copyright © 2014 by Jo Ann Vest

 

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