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A Baby and a Betrothal

Page 19

by Michelle Major


  “You can’t.” Edna’s voice hit a note that would make a dog wince. “We need her for the judging. She’s the expert baker. She always judges the finalists.”

  “Not this year,” Noah growled. “She needs rest more than you need her.”

  “It’s fine,” Katie whispered. “You can let me go, Noah.”

  He looked into her eyes. “No way, Bug. I’m never letting you go again.”

  Her eyes went wide as he leaned down and pressed a gentle kiss to her mouth. God, it felt so damn good to hold her again. How had he ever thought he could live without her?

  He turned back to Edna and the group of volunteers who’d crowded around them. “You all should be ashamed of yourselves. She’s been working too long, too hard, and none of you care as long as you’re getting what you need from her.” He caught his mother’s gaze and she gave him an encouraging nod. “We should all be ashamed. Katie doesn’t owe you anything. She helps because she’s an amazing person. The best.”

  This got a round of head nods, so he continued, “But she does too much for others and we know it. We take advantage of her goodness and her generous heart. But she’s more than earned her place in this community, and it’s time she stop trying so hard. Time we stop expecting more of her than we do ourselves.”

  He gazed down at her, tried to show her all the things he’d never been able to say out loud, hoping she would understand. But when he saw tears cloud her vision, he knew he had to give her more. She deserved more and he’d come here to find her and prove he was willing to give it.

  “It’s time I show you how much you mean to me.” He swallowed, took a steadying breath. “How much I love you.”

  He heard a resounding chorus of awwws from the people gathered under the tent. A bead of sweat trickled between his shoulder blades as he searched Katie’s face for a reaction. She bit down on her lip and looked away.

  “You don’t have to say that,” she whispered.

  He knew what she was thinking, that he was doing this for the baby. And it was because once he’d wrapped his mind around the idea of being a father, he’d wanted the baby almost as much as he wanted Katie.

  “I need to,” he told her. “I should have said it a long time ago. I should have been brave enough to see what was right in front of me all this time.” He gathered her tighter in his arms, adjusted his hold so he could tip her chin up to look at him. “I love you, Katie. I’m in love with you. As Buddy the Elf would say, ‘I think you’re really beautiful and I feel really warm when I’m around you and my tongue swells up.’”

  She laughed at his lame joke and hope glimmered to life inside him, bright like a July Fourth sparkler.

  “I love you, too, Noah.” She lifted her head, brushed her soft lips across his.

  “You’re the key to all of this, Katie. I want you. I want a family. I want to spend the rest of our lives making you happy. I will never let anyone take advantage of you again.”

  “I didn’t mean to take advantage,” Edna said quickly, wiping at her eyes, her voice a plaintive whine. “But she’s always been the one to manage everything.”

  “And we appreciate it,” Noah’s mother said, stepping forward. “But as much as we rely on Katie, Noah’s right. She needs to put herself first for once.” She draped an arm around Edna. “We’ll manage this year on our own. You take her out of here, Noah.”

  He could have kissed his mother but settled for a grateful smile.

  She nodded and gave him a little push. “Go on, now. Text me later to check in.”

  “I’ll make you some chicken noodle soup,” Edna called as he turned away.

  He glanced over his shoulder. “She hates chicken noodle soup.”

  Katie gasped and he felt her shake her head against his shirt.

  “What?” Edna put her hands on her hips. “I’ve been making her chicken noodle soup for years.”

  “Well, she doesn’t like it. Try tomato basil next time.”

  “I really don’t—” Katie began, but he stopped her argument with another kiss.

  “We’re going home,” he said again. After a moment she nodded and buried her face in his shoulder with a small sigh. The shudder that went through her body as she melted fully into him propelled him forward, through the crowd and toward the fairgrounds parking lot.

  Tater jumped up from where she was lying in the shade of the canvas tent as he strode by.

  “Noah...” Katie said his name but he shook his head.

  “Don’t talk until we’re at your house. I need a few minutes to recover from the shock of you hitting the ground back there.”

  “I just need to eat something.”

  “We’ll take care of that, too.” He got them both settled in the car and lifted her fingers to his lips. “We’ll take care of everything that comes our way, sweetheart. Together.”

  “I love you so much,” she whispered. “I’m sorry I gave you a reason to doubt that.”

  He shook his head. “I’m the one who should apologize. I’ve made so many mistakes over the years, Katie, and you’ve been the one to help me pick up the pieces from most of them. But things are going to change. I’m going to change. I’m going to be the man you saw in me when no one else did. I love you, sweetheart, for everything you are and for who I am when I’m with you.”

  He shifted in his seat, reached down to the outside pocket of his cargo pants and pulled out a black box. “This isn’t exactly how I’d planned it, but I can’t wait.”

  Her eyes widened and he smiled, not bothering to hide the slight tremble in his fingers as he opened the velvet box to reveal a square-cut diamond ring. “I want to be the husband you deserve and a father to our baby. I want every piece of you, every moment and year. Marry me, Katie, and make me the happiest man in Crimson?”

  “Yes,” she breathed, and he slid the ring onto her left hand. “I love you, Noah. For exactly the man you are. I want to share my life with you. You’re my best friend.”

  He leaned forward and kissed her. “Let’s go home,” he whispered and they both laughed as Tater barked from the backseat. As they drove through town, Noah felt a sense of peace he hadn’t known since he was a boy. His life made sense with Katie by his side, and he was going to savor every second of it. Forever.

  * * * * *

  Keep reading for an excerpt from BACK IN THE SADDLE by Karen Templeton.

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  Back in the Saddle

  by Karen Templeton

  Chapter One

  “So I gather you know a fair amount about horses?”

  With an actual sigh, the getting-up-there Boston terrier slid down on the exam table in front of Zach Talbot and promptly went to sleep. This might take a while, wake me when she’s done.

  She being the auburn-haired Texan female of indeterminate age who’d brought the dog into Zach’s clinic three times in the two weeks since she—and her daughter, she’d mentioned more than once—had moved into the old Hufsteter place a ways out of town. Completely renovated, she’d said. Beautiful house. Reminded her of home.

  Not that Zach minded chatter, as a general rule. At least it kept him from curling up in a ball inside his own head. However, since he’d yet to find anything really wrong with the little dog, other than a general slowing down due to old age, he was guessing Dorelle Keyes had ulterior motives. Motives that Zach strongly suspected had something to do with this hitherto unseen daughter.

  One hooded doggy lid briefly fluttered open as if to say You got it, buddy, before drifting closed again, and Zach met Dorelle’s sharp—oh, so sharp—green gaze.

  “As part of my practice, sure.” After gently rubbing the dog between the ears—which got a soft groan—Zach scribbled down a couple notes for Shantelle at the front desk to add to Edgar’s chart, then glanced back at Dorelle. Remembered to smile. “Why?”

  “Oh. Well, Mallory—” the daughter “—is thinking about buying a horse for her boy. She’s...” Dorelle glanced around, then practically mouthed, “Divorced. And his daddy has custody at the moment—” Her red-lipsticked mouth slammed shut, as though she’d realized she’d gotten stuck in that narrow wedge between discretion and oversharing. “Anyway, when we noticed the stalls out back, that was the first thing we thought of, how much Landon might like to have a horse to ride when he’s here. So I was wondering if maybe you knew of someone local who might be selling. And you strike me as somebody we could trust.”

  His mouth twitching, Zach adjusted his glasses. Although his own mother had always said he had one of those faces. However...

  “Horses take a lot of work, ma’am—”

  “And while I appreciate that your mama obviously taught you to respect your elders, trust me, no woman past a certain age actually likes to be ma’amed.”

  “My apologies, m—Mrs. Keyes.”

  “Apology accepted. And second... I know how much work horses take. Mallory’s daddy was a rancher. So we know what to do. We just don’t know who to see. Landon’s eleven, by the way. Far as I’m concerned he should’ve had his own horse long ago. But life had other ideas.”

  Not for the first time, Zach got the feeling the woman was deliberately baiting him. As though she’d been given instructions not to blab about personal matters, but if someone asked...well. It would only be polite to answer, wouldn’t it? Too bad for her, then, that Zach was sorely lacking in the curiosity department.

  Although his own full plate probably had something to do with that. Not to mention a deeply entrenched sense of self-preservation that kept most locals from developing anything even remotely like real relationships with the outsiders who flitted in and out of Whispering Pines. The town was no Taos or Santa Fe, heaven knew, but northern New Mexico’s clear, high desert air and pristine forests attracted its fair share of tourists and temporary residents. Especially during ski season, which was right around the corner. Granted, Zach could be as cordial to visitors as the next townie. Friendly, even. Especially since they often brought dogs, and he was the only vet in town. But get himself all tangled up in their lives?

  Nope.

  However, he smiled, focusing on the topic at hand. “Has your grandson said he’d like to ride?”

  “Oh, my goodness, yes! He already has, actually. A few times out on a farm north of LA. Where we were living, you know.”

  Clearly Zach’s cue—again—to ask what had brought them to Whispering Pines. Except he honestly didn’t care.

  Heidi would’ve, though. Because his wife hadn’t known the meaning of aloof, embracing—often literally—everyone she saw as if they were best friends...

  “Dr. Talbot? Is everything okay?”

  With an actual jerk, Zach pulled his head out of his butt to meet Dorelle’s gaze again. “Yeah, sorry...” He cleared his throat. Smiled. “Actually, my brother Josh is the foreman up at the Vista Encantada Ranch nearby—”

  “Oh, yes, we passed it the other day when we were out exploring. And your girl out front, she said your brother worked there. One of ’em, anyway.”

  Shantelle was young yet. She’d learn. “The Vista breeds champion quarter horses—which wouldn’t be suitable for your needs—but from time to time they foster rescues, too. I seem to recall Josh saying something about an older gelding that’d been used to teach another rancher’s kids to ride. I haven’t seen the horse yet myself, but I’m sure you and your daughter would be welcome to go out and meet him.”

  Dorelle lit up as if someone’d flipped a switch. “That sounds perfect—”

  “Dad-deeee!”

  “Liam! No!”

  The groggy little dog scrambled to his feet as, at the doorway to the exam room, Zach’s older son grabbed his baby brother around his middle and yanked him back. “Sorry, Dad!” Jeremy grunted out around the redheaded, windmilling blur that was his three-year-old brother. “Grandma just dropped us off. Man, he’s fast.”

  “So were you at that age,” Zach said, then squatted in front of the pair, ruffling the little one’s rust-colored curls. “I’m almost done, squirt. You wait outside with Jeremy, okay?”

  But Liam threw himself so hard into Zach’s arms he nearly knocked him over. He had no idea why the boy was so clingy—certainly a lot more than his older brother had been—but his hugs never failed to overwhelm Zach, with love and fear, both.

  “Oh, don’t send them out on my account,” Dorelle said behind him, more gently than Zach would’ve expected. Yes, it was obvious she loved her daughter and grandson, but until that very moment he wouldn’t’ve pegged her as a softy.

  Even so, the boys knew the rules. Or at least Jeremy did. To Liam, the concept of boundaries was still a little sketchy. So Zach detached himself from his son, then stood, trying for stern and failing miserably when those big, brown, getting-wetter-by-the-second eyes tilted up to his. So who was the softy now?

  “Go with your brother,” he said, steeling himself against those eyes, so much like his mama’s Zach’s own stung. “I won’t be long. Why don’t you think about what you want on your pizza while you’re waiting?”

  That did the trick. “Peesa?” Liam breathed, as if this was the most awesome suggestion ever.

  “Yep. Now scoot.”

  After the boys left, Zach turned to find Dorelle watching him with one of those expressions, God help him.

  “Neither one of ’em looks much like you.”

  “Truth,” Zach said with a smile. “Although I was apparently as blond as Jeremy when I was his age.”

  “Which is?”

  “Seven. Eight in a few months.”

  “And the little one?”

  “Liam’s three. He looks...” His throat caught. Damn. “He looks exactly like his mother.”

  “She must be one gorgeous creature.”

  Zach hesitated. “She was.”

  Dorelle sucked in a short breath. “I’m so sorry, Dr. Talbot. I didn’t know.”

  Somehow, he doubted that. And it was the end of what had been a very long day, one that had left
Zach so tired he could barely see straight. Meaning he found himself sorely lacking patience for whatever game this woman was playing.

  “Really?”

  The woman’s eyes briefly widened before she released a short laugh. “I suppose I deserved that. Since I’m sure it’ll come as no surprise that digging up information is a hobby of mine. Especially when I find myself in a new place and don’t know anybody. But I swear to you, this is the first I’m hearing of it.” She hesitated, then asked, “How long?”

  Oh, what the hell. “Two years,” he said, and she bit her lip, shaking her head. Then she pushed out a little breath.

  “Folks tend to keep to themselves around here, don’t they?”

  “Pretty much.” Although Shantelle’s keeping it to herself was nothing short of a miracle. Town nosy-body in training, that one.

  “Yeah, it was the same way back in Springerville,” Dorelle said. “There were absolutely no secrets between neighbors, but we had that circling the wagons thing down. And oh, dear Lord—” Her hand flew to her cheek. “You thought I had matchmaking on my mind, didn’t you?”

  Zach’s mouth twitched. “I had wondered.”

  “Oh, dear boy, no. Not that you’re not cute as a damn button, but I did think you were married. Not a whole lot to do around here. Just like Springerville. One learns,” she said with a slight, almost regal, bow, “to make one’s own entertainment. Although we really are looking for a horse. Talking about it, anyway. And I thought...”

  Her eyes clouded. “My daughter Mallory’s had some challenges of her own, this last little while. And this past year or so has been particularly hard on her. Not that she’d ever admit it, God knows. But if you ask me, she didn’t buy a house out here in Nowhere, New Mexico—no offense—”

  “None taken.”

  Dorelle nodded. “Anyway. She didn’t buy that house except for one reason, and that was to hide.”

 

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