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Forever His Texas Bride (Bachelors of Battle Creek #3)

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by Linda Broday




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  Copyright © 2015 by Linda Broday

  Cover and internal design © 2015 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

  Cover art by Gregg Gulbronson

  Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious and are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Published by Sourcebooks Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410

  (630) 961-3900

  Fax: (630) 961-2168

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  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Acknowledgments

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-one

  Twenty-two

  Twenty-three

  Twenty-four

  Twenty-five

  Twenty-six

  Twenty-seven

  Twenty-eight

  Twenty-nine

  Thirty

  Thirty-one

  Thirty-two

  Thirty-three

  Thirty-four

  Thirty-five

  Thirty-six

  Thirty-seven

  Epilogue

  A Sneak Peek from To Love a Texas Ranger

  About the Author

  Back Cover

  Acknowledgments

  Home and family mean as much to me as they do to my three brothers and their ladies in this series. We all have a fierce need to belong to someone, people who give us our identities and who will be there during the good times and bad. When we don’t have that family unit, we often create our own, which is what Cooper, Rand, and Brett do. Often the bond is deepest when you’re not blood kin.

  I’m so fortunate to have family. I dedicate this book to my children Kevin, Melinda, and Lori; brother Irvin; sisters Jean, Irene, and Jan; cousin Sarah; and stepdaughters Monica, Kim, and Laura. While I won’t name the rest of my clan, I haven’t forgotten you. You guys always have my back. You fill my life with immense joy and have helped fill the gaping hole that Clint’s and Mom’s passing left. You’re amazing, and I love you all!

  I also wish to thank David Rabson, my masseuse and friend, who straightens the kinks out of my back, enabling me to sit at my computer, writing these stories for you.

  I hope you enjoy this final book in the Bachelors of Battle Creek series. I think you’ll agree I’ve saved the best for last. I look forward to sharing a new, exciting series soon.

  One

  North Central Texas

  Spring 1879

  A plan? Definitely not dying. Beyond that, he didn’t have one.

  High on a hill, Brett Liberty lay in the short, bloodstained grass, watching the farm below. With each breath, pain shot through him like the jagged edge of a hot knife. The bullet had slammed into his back, near the shoulder blade from the feel of it.

  If a plan was coming, it had better hurry. The Texas springtime morning was heating up, and the men chasing him drew ever closer. Every second spent in indecision could cost him. He had two choices: try to seek help from the family in the little valley, or run as though chased by a devil dog.

  The blood loss had weakened him though. He wouldn’t get far on foot. About a half mile back, Brett’s pursuers had shot his horse, a faithful mustang he’d loved more than his own life. Rage rippled through his chest and throbbed in his head. They could hurt him all they wanted, but messing with his beloved horses would buy them a spot in hell.

  He forced his thoughts back to his current predicament.

  Through a narrowed gaze, Brett surveyed the scene below. It seemed odd that no horses stood in the corral. The farmer who was chopping wood had a rifle within easy reach. The man’s wife hung freshly washed clothes up on a line to dry under the golden sunshine, while a couple of small children played at her feet. It was a tranquil day as far as appearances went.

  Appearances deceived.

  Help was so near yet so far away.

  Brett couldn’t seek their aid. The farmer would have that rifle in his hands before Brett made it halfway down the hill. The fact that Indian blood flowed through Brett’s veins and colored his features definitely complicated things. With the Indian uprisings a few years ago fresh in everyone’s minds, approaching the stranger could mean certain death.

  No, he couldn’t go forward. Neither could he go back.

  They’d trapped him.

  Why a posse dogged his trail, Brett couldn’t say. He’d done nothing except take a remuda of the horses he raised to Fort Concho to sell. He could probably clear things up in two minutes if they’d just give him the opportunity. Yet the group, led by a man wearing a sheriff’s star, seemed to adhere to the motto: shoot first and ask questions of the corpse.

  He was in a hell of a mess and wished he had his brothers, Cooper Thorne and Rand Sinclair, to stand with him.

  Inside his head, he heard the ticking of a clock. Whatever he did, he’d better get to it.

  The family below was his only chance. Brett straightened his bloodstained shirt as best he could and removed the long feather from his black hat. Except for his knee-high moccasins, the rest of his clothing was what any man on the frontier would wear.

  At last he gathered his strength and struggled to his feet. He removed a bandanna, a red one, from around his neck. On wobbly legs, he picked his way down the hill.

  When the farmer saw him and started for his rifle, Brett waved the bandanna over his head. “Help! I need help. Please don’t shoot. I’m unarmed.”

  With the rifle firmly in hand, the farmer ordered his wife and children into the house, then cautiously advanced. Brett dropped to his knees in an effort to show he posed no threat. Or maybe it was that his legs simply gave out. Either way, it must’ve worked—he didn’t hear the sound of a bullet exploding from the weapon.

  The man’s shadow fell across Brett. “Who are you, and what do you want?” the farmer asked.

  “I’m shot. Name’s Brett Liberty. I have a horse ranch seventy miles east of here.” When he started to stand, the farmer jabbed the end of the rifle into his chest. Brett saw the wisdom in staying put.

  “Who shot you?”

  “Don’t know. Never saw them before.” A bee buzzed around Brett’s face.

  “How do I know you didn’t hightail it off the reservation? Or maybe you’re an outlaw. I’ve heard of Indian outlaws.”

  Brett sighed in frustration. “I’ve
never seen a reservation, and I assure you, I don’t step outside the law. I’m respected in Battle Creek. My brother is the sheriff. If I took up outlawing ways, he’d be the first to arrest me.” Likely throw him under the jail instead of putting him in a cell. But he didn’t add that.

  He glanced longingly toward the house, but the rifle barrel poking from a window told him asking for safety inside was out of the question. So was running. Their guns would cut him down before he’d gone a yard.

  Maybe if he stalled, made sure he looked as unthreatening as possible and kept the man nearby, he might just make it. With a witness to the posse’s actions, the sheriff might let him live. It was his only shot.

  The ticking clock in Brett’s head was getting louder, blocking out the buzz of the persistent bee. His pursuers would be here in a minute. His dry mouth couldn’t even form spit. “Please, mister, could you at least give me some water?”

  It was a gamble, but one that looked like it might pay off. Silently, the farmer backed up a step and motioned Brett toward the well with his rifle barrel.

  “Thank you.” Brett got to his feet and stumbled toward the water. He lowered the bucket and pulled it up, then filled a metal cup that hung nearby and guzzled the water down. He was about to refill it when horses galloped into the yard and encircled him.

  “Put up your hands, or I’ll shoot,” a man barked, sparing an obvious glance toward the farmer.

  Brett glanced up at the speaker and the shiny tin star on his leather vest. He set his empty cup on the ledge circling the well. “Your warning comes a little late, Sheriff. I would’ve appreciated it much earlier. Would you be so kind as to tell me what I did to warrant this arrest?”

  The bearded sheriff dismounted. Hate glittered in his dark eyes, reminding Brett of others who harbored resentment for his kind. Jerking Brett’s hands behind his back, the middle-aged lawman secured them with rope. “You’ll know soon enough.”

  Ignoring the sharp pain piercing his back, Brett tried to reason. “I can clear up this misunderstanding if you’ll only tell me what you think I did wrong.”

  No one spoke.

  Brett turned to the farmer. “I’ll give you five of my best horses if you’ll let my brothers know where I am. You can find them in Battle Creek. Cooper Thorne and Rand Sinclair.”

  The farmer stared straight ahead without even a flicker to indicate he’d heard. While the sheriff thanked the sodbuster for catching Brett, two of the other riders threw him onto a horse. With everyone mounted a few minutes later, the group made tracks toward Steele’s Hollow.

  Brett had passed through there before daybreak, anxious to get home to the Wild Horse Ranch. The town had been quieter than a blade of grass growing. He couldn’t imagine what they thought he’d done. This was the first time he’d traveled through the community. Usually he took a more southerly tack returning home after driving a string of horses to Fort Concho, but this time he’d had to deliver a sorrel to a man on the Skipper Ranch near Chalk Mountain, so he’d decided to cut through.

  He made a mental note to give Steele’s Hollow a wide berth from now on.

  Not that there would be a next time if things kept going the way they were.

  The combination of blood loss and the hot sun made Brett see double. It was all he could do to stay in the saddle.

  By the time they rode into the small town an hour later, Brett had doubled over and clung to the horse’s mane with everything he had. The group halted in front of the jail, jerked him off the animal and into the rough wooden building.

  “Please, I need a doctor,” Brett murmured as they rifled through his pockets.

  After taking his knife and the bank draft from the sale of the horses, they unlocked a door that led down a dark walkway. The smell of the earthen walls and the dim light told him the building had been dug into a hill. They unlocked a cell and threw him inside.

  “A doctor,” Brett repeated weakly as he huddled on the floor.

  “Not sure he treats breeds.” The sheriff slammed the iron door shut and locked it. “See what I can do, though. Reckon we don’t want you to die before we hang you.”

  “That’s awful considerate.” Brett struggled to his feet and clung to the metal bars to keep from falling. “Once and for all, tell me…what did I do? What am I guilty of?”

  “You were born,” the sheriff snapped. Without more, he turned and walked to the front of the jail.

  *

  Panic pounded in Brett’s temples like a herd of stampeding mustangs long after the slamming of the two iron doors separating him from freedom. This proved that the sheriff had targeted him solely because of his Indian heritage; he had nothing to charge him with.

  His crime was simply for being born?

  Dizzy, Brett collapsed onto the bunk as his hat fell to the crude plank floor.

  Movement in the next cell caught his attention. Willing the room to keep from spinning, Brett turned his head. He could make out a woman’s form in the dimness. Surely his pain had conjured her up. They didn’t put women in jail.

  He couldn’t tell what she looked like because she had two faces blurring together, distorting her features—but he could hear her pretty voice clear enough.

  “You’re in pitiful shape, mister.”

  Since his bunk butted up to the bars of her cell, she could easily reach through. He felt her cautiously touch one of his moccasins.

  “Checking to see if I’m dead?” he murmured.

  “Nope. Do you mind if I have your shoes after they hang you?”

  Brett raised up on an elbow, then immediately regretted it when the cell whirled. He lay back down. “That’s not a nice thing to ask a man.”

  “Well, you won’t be needing them. I might as well get some good out of them.”

  “They aren’t going to hang me.”

  “That’s not what Sheriff Oldham said.”

  “He can’t hang me, because I didn’t do anything wrong.” It was best to keep believing that. Maybe he could convince someone, even if only himself. “I think he was joking.”

  “Humor and Sheriff Oldham parted company long ago. He’s serious all the time. And mean. You don’t want to get on his bad side.”

  “Wish I’d known this sooner. You sure know how to make a man feel better,” Brett said dryly, draping his arm across his eyes and willing his stomach to quit churning. “What is your name?”

  “Rayna.”

  “Who stuck that on you? I’ve never heard it before.”

  “It’s a made-up name. My father is Raymond, and my mother is Elna. My mama stuck ’em together and came up with Rayna. I’ve always hated it.”

  “Got a last name, or did they use it all on the first one?”

  “Harper. Rayna Harper.”

  “Forgive me if I don’t get up to shake hands, but I’m a little indisposed. I’m Brett Liberty.”

  With that, blessed silence filled the space, leaving him to fight waves of dizziness and a rebellious stomach. Keeping down the contents seemed all he could manage at present.

  But Rayna wasn’t quiet for long. “Where did you get those Indian shoes, Brett? I’d sure like to have them.”

  “My brother.” His words came out sounding shorter than he intended.

  “Sorry. I’ve been in here for a while by myself, and I guess I just have a lot of words stored up. Sometimes I feel they’re just going to explode out the top of my head if I don’t let some out. What are you in here for? I couldn’t hear too well.”

  “For being born, I’m told.” Brett was still trying to digest that.

  “Me too.” Rayna sounded astonished. “Isn’t that amazing?”

  Brett had a feeling that no matter what he’d said, she would say the same thing. He wished he could see her better so he could put a face to the voice. Even though the conversation taxed him, it was nice to know he wasn’t alone. Maybe she’d even hold his hand if he died.

  That is, if she wasn’t too busy trying to get his moccasins off instead.

/>   “Why do you think it’s amazing?”

  “Because it makes perfect sense. I figure if I hadn’t been born, I wouldn’t be in here for picking old Mr. Vickery’s pockets.”

  “So you’re a pickpocket?” Surprise rippled through him.

  “Nope. I’m a spreader of good. I don’t ever keep any of it. I take from those who have and give to the have-nots. Makes everyone happy. Except me when I get thrown in the calaboose.”

  “You’re a Robin Hood.” Brett had seen a copy of the book about the legendary figure at Fort Concho. He’d learned it so he could share the tale with Toby, Rand’s adopted son. Brett had taken the six-year-old into his heart and loved spending time with the boy.

  “I’m a what?”

  “A person who goes around doing good things for the poor.”

  “Oh. I guess I am. It makes me so sad that some people have to do without things they need and no one helps them. This past winter, my friend Davy froze to death because the only place he had to sleep was under a porch. He was just a kid with no one except me to care.”

  Rayna’s unexpectedly big heart touched Brett. She seemed to speak from a good bit of experience. “Do you have a place to sleep whenever you’re not in here?”

  “I get along. Don’t need you to fret about me. Worrying about them putting a rope around your neck is all you can handle. Do you reckon it hurts a lot, Brett?”

  “I wouldn’t know.” Hopefully, he wouldn’t find out.

  “I’ll say a prayer for you.”

  “Appreciate that, Miss Rayna Harper.” She was wrong about him only having to worry about getting his neck stretched, though. He could feel himself getting weaker.

  He could also feel her eyeing his moccasins again.

  Pressure on the bottom of his foot made him jump. He raised his head and saw that she’d stuck one bare foot through the bars and was measuring it to his.

  “Stop that,” he said with a painful huff of laughter. “Doc’ll be along soon. I’m not going to be dead enough for you to get them.”

  The next sound to reach his ears was sawing and her soft, “Oh dear.”

  “Why did you say that? What’s wrong?”

  “The sawbones had best hurry, or you won’t be needing him. They’ve started building the gallows.”

  That ticking clock in his head had taken on the sound of tolling bells.

 

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