The Tycoon's Kiss

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by Jane Porter

“You are one evolved man, Troy Sheenan,” she whispered, leaning over to kiss him.

  He pulled her down on top of him, kissing her back, tasting the salt of her tears. “My mother taught me well.”

  “I wish I could have met her, Troy.”

  “I wish you could have, too. She would have loved you. You would have been the daughter she never had.”

  “I hope we have a little girl. We could name her after your mom.”

  “I hope we have a little girl, and I hope she looks just like you.”

  “But without the big glasses.”

  “I’d love it if she wore big glasses. It’ll help keep all the boys away.”

  Taylor punched him lightly in the shoulder. “I thought you said you loved me in glasses.”

  “I do. But as you know, I’m highly evolved.”

  Taylor didn’t know whether she should laugh, cry or punch him again. “So most boys don’t like girls who wear glasses.”

  “Well, we both know that most boys are fools. Let’s just say I personally think book girls should rule the world.”

  She laughed and kissed him. “You are so good with words.”

  “I mean every word I say.” He clasped her face in his hands, and kissed her slowly, thoroughly, completely. “I love you, Taylor, and I want to have a life with you, and read books with you—”

  “Read books?”

  “Sssh. I’m not finished. And take walks with you, and travel to interesting places with you, and make beautiful babies with you, and grow old with you. How does that sound?”

  “Quite nice, actually,” she said, smiling and snuggling closer. “I approve the plan. And I suggest we move forward. Immediately.”

  The End

  Keep reading for a sneak peek of the next Taming of the Sheenan Romance

  *

  The Kidnapped Christmas Bride

  It was quiet in the truck.

  The kind of quiet that made Trey know trouble was brewing. And if anyone knew trouble, it was he, Trey Sheenan, voted least likely to succeed (at anything legal, moral, or responsible) his senior year at Marietta High.

  At eighteen, he’d been proud of his reputation. It’d been hard earned, with rides in the back of sheriffs’ cars, visits to court, trips to juvenile hall, and later, extended stays at Montana’s delightful Pine Hills, where bad boys were sent to be sorted out. Reformed.

  It hadn’t worked.

  Trey Sheenan was so bad there was no sorting him out. Maybe back then he hadn’t wanted to be sorted out, and so he’d continued his wild ways, elevating trouble to an art form, growing from a hot-headed teenager with zero self-control, to a hot-headed man with questionable self-control.

  Now at thirty-six, after four years in Montana’s correctional system, he was tired of trouble and sick of his reputation.

  Just hours ago he’d been paroled, a whole year early. It’d come as a shock when the warden came to him early this morning, letting him know that he was being released today. Trey knew his brothers had been working on getting him released early for good behavior, as Trey had become a model inmate (at least after the first year), and the back bone of the prison system’s successful MCE Ranch, but he’d never imagined he’d be out now. In time for Christmas.

  It gave him pause. Made him hope. Fueled his resolve to sort things out with McKenna.

  He missed her and his boy TJ so much that he felt dead inside. But now he was out, coming home. Finally he had the opportunity to make things right.

  “It was sure good to see you step outside those gates,” Troy said, breaking the silence.

  Trey nodded, remembering the moment he’d spotted Troy standing outside the prison entrance in front of his big black SUV. He’d nearly smiled. And then when Troy clapped him in a big hard bear hug, Trey’s eyes had stung.

  It’d been a long time since he’d been hugged by anyone. A long time since he’d felt like anything, or anyone.

  Prison had done the trick, breaking him down, hollowing him out, teaching him humility and gratitude.

  Humility and gratitude, along with loneliness, shame and pain.

  His dad had died while he was at Deer Lodge, last March. He hadn’t been allowed to attend the funeral. Talk about pain.

  He shifted ever so slightly in the passenger seat and flexed his right foot to ease the tension building inside of him, aware that Troy might not actually be looking at him, but he was keeping him in his peripheral vision. Smart. You didn’t let a Sheenan out of your sight. Especially not Trey the Dangerous. Trey the Destroyer. Hadn’t he even tattooed that on the inside of his bicep on his nineteenth birthday? What a joke he’d been.

  What an ass he’d become.

  “Should hit Bozeman in thirty minutes or so,” Troy said.

  Trey said nothing.

  “Want to stop for anything? Need anything?”

  Trey shook his head. Silence descended. Troy ran a hand over his jaw. It really was too quiet in the truck, what with the volume down on the Sirius radio station, muffling the country songs, making the lyrics an annoying mumbo jumbo, so that the only other sound was the salted asphalt of I-90 beneath the tires, and the windshield wiper blades swishing back and forth, resolutely batting away the falling snow.

  He itched to lean forward and turn up the radio volume, but it wasn’t his truck and he didn’t want to be demanding. He needed to prove to his family and community that he wasn’t the hot-head Sheenan that intimidated and destroyed, but a man who protected. He was ready to show everyone who he really was. A solid, responsible man, a good man, who was committed to making things right.

  And the first person he had to see was McKenna. He was dying to see her, and TJ. It’d been a long time since he’d seen either of them. Two years and a month almost to the day. It had been Thanksgiving weekend the last time he saw TJ, his son. The boy was three. McKenna had been so very silent and sad, sad in a different way than he’d seen before. He hadn’t realized that would be their last visit. He hadn’t realized she’d decided then that she was through…

  He winced at the hot lance of pain shooting through him.

  It’d taken him a long time to process that she wasn’t coming back. In the beginning of his incarceration, she came every two weeks with the baby. And then gradually she came once a month and then every five to six weeks until that last trip for Thanksgiving when she never returned again.

  He’d about lost his mind at Deer Lodge. He’d died in ways you couldn’t explain.

  She wouldn’t write him back. She wouldn’t visit. She just…cut him out.

  That was when he truly suffered. That was when prison became a living hell. He was trapped. Hostage. He couldn’t do anything about it but write and write and write…

  He must have made a sound because Troy suddenly looked at him, brow creased. “You doing okay?”

  Trey clamped his jaw tight and shoved all the worry and fear deep down into that tough hard heart of his and snapped the lid, locking it, containing it.

  He wouldn’t let guilt and anxiety get the best of him.

  He’d sort it out. Make it work. There was only one girl for him, one family, and that was McKenna and TJ.

  But he had put her through hell. He was the first to admit that he’d done her wrong. She didn’t deserve any of the pain and heartache he’d given her… the trouble he’d dished out in spades.

  So he had one task: fix the mess he’d made of their lives.

  Tonight, tomorrow, sometime this week after he’d cleaned up and calmed himself down, he was going to go to her and apologize for his stupid asinine immature self and beg her forgiveness and show her he was different. Changed.

  She’d see that he’d finally grown up, and he was ready to be the husband she deserved. Ready to be the father TJ needed and a real family at last.

  A wedding, a honeymoon, more kids, the whole bit. He couldn’t wait, either.

  “Worried about going home?” Troy asked, breaking the silence.

  “No,” Trey said roughly,
his voice a deep, raw rasp. He winced at the sound of it, but what did you expect? He hadn’t talked much the past four years. He’d never been a big communicator to start with, but prison just put the silent in him.

  “Home for Christmas,” Troy said.

  “Yeah.” And it would be nice. He’d missed the ranch. Marietta. Everyone.

  But mostly he’d missed McKenna and his boy.

  Just thinking about her and TJ made his gut burn, and his bones ache. Their memory was a pain that never went away.

  He dug the heel of his foot into the floor and pressed his shoulder blades against the seat back, pinning himself to the black leather.

  Warden and his officers might think it was their excellent corrections program that had turned him around, but it wasn’t the work program, or the ranch, or the counseling. It was losing McKenna.

  They’d been together for years, since high school. Well, they’d been together off and on for years, but in the months—or years—they were off, there had never been another woman he’d loved. Sure, he’d screwed a few. He was a Sheenan and Sheenans weren’t saints, but he’d never cheated on her when they were together.

  He’d rather cut his dick off than betray his woman that way.

  And then his conscience scraped and whispered, just like the windshield wiper blades working the glass.

  You betrayed her in other ways, though.

  The drinking. The fighting. The small bar fights. The big bar fights.

  And finally, the afternoon at the Wolf Den that changed everything…

  “You’ve been home for a few days now?” Trey asked his twin, wanting to find out about McKenna and not sure how because Troy hadn’t brought her up, nor had he mentioned TJ, and Troy always talked about the five year old, wanting to keep Trey in the loop.

  “A week.”

  “What’s it like without Dad around?”

  “Quiet.” Troy hesitated. “It’s just Dillon there at the ranch, you know. I’m still dividing my time between San Francisco and Marietta, and when I am here, I’m usually at The Graff.”

  “Things still good with your little librarian?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Wedding date set?”

  “We’re talking February, maybe around Valentine’s Day since we were paired up for that ball. But things are kind of hairy at work and I’m honestly not sure a February wedding would be the best thing.”

  “How hairy is hairy?”

  “Got hit with a big lawsuit. It should sort out but its damned expensive and time consuming until then.”

  “Then wait till it’s settled to marry. No sense being all stressed out over a wedding.”

  “I agree.” Troy tapped his hand on the steering wheel and then exhaled. “There are some other things going on, too. Family things.” He shot a quick glance in Trey’s direction. “Dad was a real bastard when it came to Mom.”

  “That’s not news.”

  “He had an affair with Bev Carrigan. A long affair.”

  Trey said nothing.

  Troy increased the speed on the windshield wipers. “Mom probably knew. Or found out.”

  Trey had heard enough. He’d only just been out a couple hours. He wasn’t ready for family conflict and drama. “They’re all gone now, and the past is the past. Maybe it’s time to let sleeping dogs lie.”

  “Except they’re not all gone, and it’s not just the past.” Troy flexed his hands against the steering wheel again. “Because there is something else going on—”

  “Another affair?”

  “No, but with Callan.” Troy shot him a swift glance, brow creased. “When her dad passed, he didn’t leave the place to her. Or any of them.”

  “What?”

  “There’s some talk in town—just gossip at this point—that maybe he wasn’t their biological father—”

  “Bullshit.”

  “Well, why didn’t he leave the Carrigan ranch to his kids?”

  “I don’t know. But Callan must have been pretty broken up. She loves that place.”

  Troy was silent a moment. “I think Dillon knows something, too, but he’s not saying.”

  “Those two friends again?”

  “More friendly than friends. While you were gone they became drinking buddies. Every Friday night you can find them at Grey’s, playing pool and shooting the shit.” Troy’s lips curved. “Dillon practically lives at Grey’s on the weekends.”

  “He’s not driving back to the ranch drunk, is he?”

  “Usually he finds a warm bed in town, along with an even warmer woman.”

  “Our Dillon is a player.”

  “He’s certainly enjoying being a bachelor.”

  “No little Sheenans on the way?”

  “None that I’ve heard about.” Troy leaned forward, turned up the music and then halfway through the Martina McBride Christmas song turned it back down. “There’s something else I’ve got to tell you.”

  Trey glanced warily at his brother. “Brock got cancer?”

  “Um, no. Thank God.” He sighed. “But it’s not going to make you happy.”

  Trey stiffened. “No?”

  “It’s McKenna.”

  Trey held his breath.

  “I didn’t know how to tell you, or when to tell you, but seeing as you’re out today, now, you’re going to need to know.” Troy’s eyes narrowed and his jaw tightened. “McKenna is getting married tomorrow.”

  They drove another mile in deafening silence, snow pelting the car and windshield. Trey stared out the window blindly, seeing nothing of the Tobacco Root Mountains and Three Forks before them. Instead he fought wave after wave of nausea. McKenna getting married….McKenna marrying tomorrow…

  Unthinkable. Impossible.

  His stomach rolled and heaved. He gave his head a sharp shake. This couldn’t be happening. He couldn’t lose her now, not after waiting four years to make things right.

  “Hey, Troy. Pull over.” Trey’s deep voice dropped, cracked. “I’m going to be sick.”

  Find out what happens next in The Kidnapped Christmas Bride…

  Buy Now!

  From New York Times Bestselling author Jane Porter comes…

  The Taming of the Sheenans series

  If you enjoyed The Tycoon’s Kiss, don’t miss the rest of the Sheenan brothers!

  Christmas At Copper Mountain

  Book 1: Brock Sheenan’s story

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  The Tycoon’s Kiss

  Book 2: Troy Sheenan’s story

  View the series!

  The Kidnapped Christmas Bride

  Book 3: Trey Sheenan’s story

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  The Taming of the Bachelor

  Book 4: Dillion Sheenan’s story

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  A Christmas Miracle for Daisy

  Book 5: Cormac Sheenan’s story

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  The Lost Sheenan’s Bride

  Book 6: Shane Sheenan’s story – Coming April 2016

  Want to learn more about the Great Wedding Giveaway?

  The Montana Born Brides

  The excitement is building in Marietta, Montana, with a series of stories centered around the 100th Anniversary of the Graff Hotel and—as part of the celebration—an incredible wedding giveaway.

  The Graff Hotel has enlisted the entire town to stage a spectacular 100-year repeat of the Great Wedding Giveaway of 1914. Photographs and posters of the original event inspired a look back to an elegant time. Woodrow Wilson was President of the United States and King George V ruled England. High fashion drawings featured long skirts and elaborate feathered hats. As the dance craze swept the world, everyone was learning the tango… hemlines started to rise and “dance shoes” became popular.

  Today’s Great Wedding Giveaway seeks to recapture the style and grace of Marietta’s past and launch a campaign to make Marietta a wedding destination. So couples from all over the country are invited to enter the contest and compete for the works—air fare, bridal gown,
flowers, photography, food, the wedding suite at the Graff, a honeymoon, and more.

  The stories in the Montana Born Brides series bring you the heart, humor, and charm of Marietta and the people who want to get married there (or not). Some brides are sweet, some are sassy, and all are as unique as Montana snowflakes. Watch for new releases… you won’t want to miss a single one!

  What a Bride Wants by Kelly Hunter

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  Second Chance Bride by Trish Morey

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  Almost a Bride by Sarah Mayberry

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  The Unexpected Bride by Joanne Walsh

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  The Cowboy’s Reluctant Bride by Katherine Garbera

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  Game of Brides by Megan Crane

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  The Substitute Bride by Kathleen O’Brien

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  Last Year’s Bride by Anne McAllister

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  The Make-Believe Wedding by Sarah Mayberry

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  Don’t miss Jane Porter’s RITA ® Winning

  “Take Me, Cowboy”

  When Jenny Wright’s fiancé leaves her standing at the altar in a Vera Wang bridal gown she can’t afford, she’s humiliated and heartbroken. To have Marietta hero bull riding champ Colton Thorpe witness her shame – makes the rejection even more devastating.

  Jenny and Colton grew up in the same rough neighborhood and they both left home right after school to pursue big dreams. Now they’re both back, with Colton as the celebrity chair for the 75th Copper Mountain Rodeo, and Jenny in disgrace.

  Sexy, rugged Colton didn’t get to be a national champion by chance. He’s a man that takes risks and goes after what he wants. During the rodeo weekend, Colton makes it clear he wants Jenny. Flustered but flattered, Jenny finds it difficult to resist his charm. But what happens when the rodeo ends and Colton leaves town? Will she dare to dream again?

  Take Me, Cowboy is now available!

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  About the Author

  New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of fifty romance and women’s fiction titles, Jane Porter has been a finalist for the prestigious RITA award five times and won in 2014 for Best Novella with her story, Take Me, Cowboy, from Tule Publishing. Today, Jane has over 12 million copies in print, including her wildly successful, Flirting With Forty, picked by Redbook as its Red Hot Summer Read, and reprinted six times in seven weeks before being made into a Lifetime movie starring Heather Locklear. A mother of three sons, Jane holds an MA in Writing from the University of San Francisco and makes her home in sunny San Clemente, CA with her surfer husband, Ty Gurney, his vintage cars and trucks, and their two dogs.

 

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