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Protect Me, Cowboy (78th Copper Mountain Rodeo Book 2)

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by Shelli Stevens




  Protect Me, Cowboy

  A Copper Mountain Rodeo Romance

  Shelli Stevens

  Protect Me, Cowboy

  Copyright © 2016 Shelli Stevens

  Kindle Edition

  The Tule Publishing Group, LLC

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  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: 978-1-945879-24-1

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Acknowledgements

  Prologue

  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

  The 78th Copper Mountain Rodeo Series

  About the Author

  Acknowledgements

  Thank you to Tule Publishing and to Jane Porter for encouraging me to write for you. To my content editor, Laurie Johnson, for her incredible insight and making this book so much stronger. To my family and husband for being so supportive. To Jeff Derryberry for his knowledge on roping, to Joe Horton for your sound tech insight, and Jeannie Watt for being patient with me as we interwove our scenes and characters. And a big thanks to all my readers who’ve discovered me and stuck with me over the years!

  Prologue

  “Tell me again how you got that obscenely large belt buckle, cowboy?” There was a soft click as the woman turned the empty shot glass upside down on the bar.

  Wyatt Marshall had a type and the lady across from him most definitely wasn’t it. She drank like a cowboy, swore like a sailor, and looked like a punk rock goddess.

  And yet here he was. Flirting his country heart out with a tough as nails city girl.

  “Took first place in tie-down roping at the NFR.”

  Just saying the words again sent a rush of disbelief, pride, and exhilaration through him. First place in the National Finals Rodeo. It still seemed surreal. Ever since he’d started competing, he’d dreamt about this kind of success. He’d worked his butt off for it for nearly a decade. Traveling to endless rodeos and practicing by roping anything and everything when he wasn’t competing.

  He smoothed his thumb over the buckle again, just to remind himself it had really happened. He only wished Pops could’ve lived long enough to see his win.

  The thought of his dad sent a crushing pain through him—one he’d gotten used to—but he pushed it aside. Tonight wasn’t for mourning. It was for celebrating. Pops would’ve demanded it from heaven.

  “The NFR.” The woman across from him smiled. “Ah, right. That little rodeo thing in town.”

  There was nothing little about the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas, and he suspected she knew it too by the glimmer of amusement in her dark brown eyes.

  “Congratulations,” she added softly.

  Even though there weren’t stars in her eyes, or giddy excitement like some of his fans had, she was sincere.

  Which he thought he might just prefer. While he loved winning at rodeos big and small, he wasn’t altogether comfortable with the buckle bunnies that threw themselves at any man with a winning buckle.

  Which was why he’d ended up in this dive bar instead of one of the popular ones blaring country music with his friends. He didn’t want the attention tonight; he wanted to process the win alone. In the empty corner of a dark bar that wasn’t quite even half full.

  “Thank you, ma’am.”

  Her lips, full and glossy, curved into a grimace. “Please, just call me Sin. Ma’am sounds like you’re addressing my mother.”

  “Is Sin your stage name?”

  “What do you think?” She lifted one bare shoulder beneath the tiny black leather dress in a shrug.

  Even though she seemed to embody the name itself, he supposed it had to be a stage name.

  He hadn’t noticed the band on the stage until a throaty female voice began to belt out a Bon Jovi song. He’d finally glanced up, locking his gaze on Sin, and hadn’t looked away until the band had finished their set and abandoned the stage.

  Wyatt had wandered over to the bar where she was grabbing a beer and offered to buy it for her. She’d glanced around, maybe looking for someone. After a moment’s hesitation, she’d countered with a shot of tequila.

  Three shots and one hour later, and he was even more intrigued by this woman. Not to mention starting to get a little buzzed. Those three shots had been in addition to the two beers at the table.

  She was beautiful. Black hair so straight it looked like a waterfall sluicing down her scalp. Too much eyeliner and dark eye shadow just made her brown eyes seem even bigger.

  Likely her appearance capitalized on the rock music she sang. And maybe she looked like she slayed vampires in her free time, but she also managed to appear delicate with her doe eyes, apple cheeks, and petite curves.

  “What do I think?” he mused. “I think I’d like to buy you dinner.”

  “Oh.” She bit her lip and grimaced, looking back toward the kitchen. “Well the food here isn’t amazing, but their fish and chips are decent—”

  “Not here. I want steak. A good one.” He named off a restaurant that was world renown and she went still.

  “That’s an awful lot of money to spend on a piece of meat with a girl you barely know.”

  “I’m in the mood to celebrate tonight. And what better way than with a gal named Sin, in Sin City. My treat.”

  “That’s a terrible line.”

  “You know I actually realized it the moment I said it, so I can’t argue with you on that.” He laughed.

  She smiled and then narrowed her eyes. “Shouldn’t you be hanging out with all your rodeo friends? Fans?”

  “That’s not really my style.”

  “Really?” She looked skeptical for a moment, then nodded. With a tilt of her head, she gave him a pointed look. “I want to get one thing straight. If I go to dinner, it doesn’t mean I’m going to sleep with you.”

  “Never presumed you would.” Yet the more he stared at her lips, the more he wanted her to.

  She looked hesitant, though there was no denying the glimmer of interest in her eyes. “Let me grab my bag.”

  A few minutes later she led them down a quiet hall that must’ve led to the backdoor. She stopped suddenly, and turned to face him.

  “This isn’t normal for me, just so you know.” She stared up at him from beneath her lashes. “Going to dinner with some strange guy I just met. I don’t care what kind of image I portray on stage. I don’t usually do this kind of thing.”

  Why that sent a whisper of exhilaration through him, he couldn’t say. “Neither do I. Think it’s the tekillya?”

  “It might be the tequila,” she agreed with an unsteady laugh, but then sighed. “Then again it might just be you.”

  His chest expanded with his next breath. Pure masculine pride and need slammed through him. He took another step toward her and palmed the wall on either side of her head.

  “I’d wager it’s me.”

&n
bsp; Her eyes widened with surprise, before narrowing again. Amusement danced in her gaze, along with something else. Heated attraction. “You’re pretty damn cocky, cowboy.”

  “Yes, I am.”

  He lowered his head, determined to just have a quick taste. He needed to know if the mouth that had just belted out “Livin’ on a Prayer” could be as soft as it looked.

  It was.

  Soft, lush, and with the sweet bite of tequila. She tasted like her name. Sin. Forbidden and so damn good.

  She made a small murmur of surprise, moving closer to him. Her arms looped around his neck as she kissed him back in a tentative, exploring manner.

  They fell apart after a minute, both dragging in ragged gasps of air. He wondered if he looked as dazed as she did.

  She shoved a hand through her hair. “Maybe we should go to dinner before I start making bad decisions.”

  “Am I bad decision, Sin?”

  She bit her bottom lip that was slightly fuller after their kiss. “I guess we’ll find out.”

  “After dinner, right?”

  “After dinner.” She slipped beneath his arm, but caught his hand and tugged her after him down the hall. “I want that steak.”

  They dined at a dark, intimate table in an obscenely expensive steakhouse. The conversation was light and never too personal. The wine flowed as they savored each bite of the steak and side dishes they ordered.

  Why the hell he was so drawn to her, Wyatt couldn’t have explained. Even to himself. He found every reason to touch her. Stroking the softness of her knuckles while she recounted an amusing story about performing once with the flu. Pushing back a tendril of hair that kept falling over her eye. Her eyes. It was those big, dark eyes he couldn’t stop looking into.

  She placed a hand on his thigh when he made her laugh and he wanted her with a ferocity that was unparalleled.

  Leaving the steakhouse, they could barely keep their hands off each other in the back of the taxi.

  He kissed the nape of her neck, while on the phone to upgrade his room to a two-thousand-dollar a night suite.

  There was no reason to worry when he gave her fifty dollars to grab condoms and snacks, telling her to meet him upstairs in his room.

  So he sat on the plush couch in the suite, a bottle of champagne in his hand, thinking about how the curvy body would feel beneath his hands. Beneath him.

  He waited in the darkness for the knock on the door that would announce her arrival.

  The minutes ticked by.

  The hours.

  Even as daylight lit up the room, he still watched the door with bleary eyes as he dozed in and out of a light sleep.

  Then it came. The knock he’d been waiting for.

  But it was only housekeeping, and he was late in his checkout.

  A little hungover and annoyed as hell, he went to pack for his flight home to Montana.

  Maybe he was on top of his game in the rodeo world, but romantically he could still get outplayed by a slick, city chick.

  Chapter One

  “Monday? But it’s Thursday. Are you sure that’s the earliest you can fix it?” Claire glanced from her car back to the mechanic in overalls, dread growing in her stomach.

  “Yes, ma’am.” Dillon, the owner of the Dillon’s Garage, shrugged. “You caught me just as we were closing up shop. Usually I’d have one of my guys who’d probably fix it for a bit extra, seeing that it’s the weekend and all, but the whole town shuts down rodeo weekend.”

  “The Copper Mountain Rodeo.” Which started tomorrow and lasted three days. She’d be going the entire weekend without a car. Without a way to get back to Bozeman Sunday morning.

  “Yeah, the rodeo.” He grinned. “Is that the reason you’re in town?”

  “Yes.”

  “Barrel racing?”

  She blinked. “I have no idea what that even means.”

  He chuckled. “Gonna take that as a no.”

  “Definitely a no. I’m the entertainment.” She was singing with Bourbon and Boots, the band hired for the big steak dinner and dance Saturday night.

  She’d heard stories about the whole town showing up for the event, but she’d thought it might be more exaggeration than truth.

  Apparently not, going by what Dillon had just told her.

  But now a busted radiator was going to keep her stranded after the gig. Catching a ride with her bandmates wasn’t an option, because their car was all full up with musicians and instruments.

  Even if there was room, she was the new one in the group. The singer they’d brought in just a few months ago to replace the woman who’d left before her. She was still getting to know everyone, and while there was no reason not to trust her bandmates, there was still a part of her that was wary of being alone and dependent on a group of men.

  She preferred to drive herself to the gigs. To not have to rely on anyone else. It was safer. Or at least it felt safer.

  “So will that work for you, ma’am? Waiting until Monday?”

  “I don’t seem to have much of a choice.” Claire bit back a frustrated sigh. Trying to stay calm, she drew in a deep breath and could almost taste the oil and exhaust in the air. “Sorry. Yes, that’ll work.”

  She followed him to the counter and filled out the necessary paperwork. Once she was done, she grabbed her suitcase and guitar case and left the garage.

  There was no question about it. This little town in Montana was the epitome of a small town. She’d thought Bozeman was small, but Marietta was downright quaint.

  She glanced down Front Avenue—four or five blocks long, and spotted the Graff Hotel down at the other end.

  She still needed to book a room for a couple nights. Well, three nights now it seemed.

  With that frustrating reality still settling in, she set off walking, dragging her suitcase in one hand and holding her guitar in the other.

  The September air was growing cooler at night, and a shiver shook her small frame. Why hadn’t she thought to pull her sweatshirt out of the suitcase first?

  When she reached the hotel, the amount of people milling about inside sent another wave of apprehension through her.

  They’d have a room available, right? She figured no one really went to the rodeo here except the locals, and she’d assumed coming in on Thursday before the rodeo even started would ensure she got a room.

  Wrong. She couldn’t have been any more wrong.

  “I’m sorry, ma’am, we just don’t have anything available.”

  “None?” Claire repeated faintly.

  “First room we have available won’t be until Monday night.”

  Oh, God, could this day get any worse? The hotel was packed and she could feel the curious gazes of several people on her.

  “I see.” She swallowed the lump in her throat. “Thanks.”

  “Hang on, let me give you a list of some other possible options that could put you up.”

  Ten minutes later she was back on the street, a scrap of paper in her jeans pocket with the harried scrawl of other potential places to spend the night. But the receptionist had warned her it didn’t look good. So Claire had grudgingly thanked the woman, and then asked where the nearest bar was.

  After the constant barrage of bad news from the past hour, she needed a drink. Maybe two.

  With tears of frustration sneaking out her eyes, she dragged her suitcase and guitar back down First Street until she found Grey’s Saloon.

  She found a table in the back and settled in—grateful for the opportunity to rest her feet and put her things down.

  Only when she had a beer in front of her and an order of fries in the works, did she pull out the scrap of paper to look over her options.

  Out of the corner of her eye she saw someone approaching the booth. Instinctively tensing, she glanced up, just as the woman settled into the seat across from her.

  “Kind of silly to come to town on rodeo weekend without a room booked, don’t you think?”

  Claire blinked in
dismay at the tall, slender brunette. She was pretty. Close in age to her, maybe twenty-four or twenty-five? The arched brow look the woman gave her sent a wave of annoyance through Claire.

  “Excuse me?”

  “The Graff hotel is booked solid being that it’s rodeo weekend. Has been for quite a while now.” The woman nodded her chin at the slip of phone numbers Claire clutched. “Chances are all those will be as well. Unless there was a cancellation.”

  “How did you know—”

  “Carol Bingley, the town gossip. She was at The Graff and overheard you. I ran into her afterward and she told me everything. Including that you were heading to Grey’s.”

  Seriously? Claire’s lips thinned. “Oh, she just offered up that information, did she?”

  “Yeah.” The brunette glanced up as a waitress appeared to take her order. “Hey, Mardie. Can I have Bud Light? Thanks.”

  Small towns. Claire struggled not to look as irritated as she felt. There was no such thing as privacy.

  “Sorry, let me start over. I’m Kaitlyn.”

  “I’m Claire.”

  “Nice to meet you, Claire. I’m here because I can help you.”

  “Really.” She hated needing anyone’s help. Loathed it actually.

  “Really.”

  Kaitlyn’s beer and Claire’s fries arrived at the same time.

  “I’m part owner of a cattle ranch not too far outside of town.” Kaitlyn grabbed her bottle and took a sip. “We have extra cabins on the property that I’m in charge of renting out during the summer.”

  “Just summer?”

  “Peak tourist season. We close down after Labor Day. But during the summer we give people a rustic escape from the city, you know?”

  Rustic sounded uncomfortable.

  “We offer fly fishing. Horseback riding. Guided hikes. All that kind of fun stuff. Brings in a little extra money for us, too.” Kaitlyn snagged a fry and ate it. “Which is all kind of irrelevant right now that summer is almost over, but what I’m saying is you’re welcome to rent one of my cabins.”

  Claire hesitated.

 

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