Jared (Coyote Ridge) (Volume 2)
Page 1
Jared
Also by Nicole Edwards
The Alluring Indulgence Series
Kaleb
Zane
Travis
Holidays with the Walker Brothers
Ethan
Braydon
Sawyer
Brendon
The Austin Arrows Series
The Season: RUSH
The Club Destiny Series
Conviction
Temptation
Addicted
Seduction
Infatuation
Captivated
Devotion
Perception
Entrusted
Adored
The Coyote Ridge Series
Curtis
Jared (Crossover Novel
The Dead Heat Ranch Series
Boots Optional
Betting on Grace
Overnight Love
Jared (Crossover Novel)
The Devil’s Bend Series
Chasing Dreams
Vanishing Dreams
The Devil’s Playground Series
Without Regret
The Pier 70 Series
Reckless
Fearless
Speechless
The Sniper 1 Security Series
Wait for Morning
Never Say Never
The Southern Boy Mafia Series
Beautifully Brutal
Beautifully Loyal
Standalone Novels
A Million Tiny Pieces
Inked on Paper
Writing as Timberlyn Scott
Unhinged
Unraveling
Chaos
Naughty Nice Holiday Books
2015
Jared
A Coyote Ridge/Dead Heat Ranch Crossover Novel
Nicole Edwards
Nicole Edwards Limited
PO Box 806
Hutto, Texas 78634
www.NicoleEdwardsLimited.com
www.slipublishing.com
Copyright © Nicole Edwards, 2016
All rights reserved.
This is a self-published title.
Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
JARED – A Coyote Ridge/Dead Heat Ranch Novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents either are the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Cover Image: © marishaz (18829658) | 123rf.com
Interior Image: © tassel78 (24058168) | 123rf.com
Cover Design: © Nicole Edwards Limited
Editing: Blue Otter Editing www.BlueOtterEditing.com
ISBN (ebook): 978-1-939786-67-8
ISBN (print): 978-1-939786-68-5
Contemporary Erotic Romance
Mature Audience
Dedication
To my fearless (albeit fictional) Walker brothers
The seven of you have changed my life and will forever live on.
Prologue
Two and a half years ago
“WHERE ARE YOU going?” Sable screamed, her voice grating on his last nerve.
“I’m done. Fucking done, Sable,” Jared Walker informed his soon-to-be ex-wife. And that couldn’t come soon enough.
The second his boss had fired him, telling Jared that he could no longer deal with his crazed wife stopping by unannounced every day trying to start a fight, Jared had decided he’d had enough. The guy wasn’t wrong to fire him. Hell, he’d been putting up with Sable’s bullshit far longer than he should have. She was jealous and spiteful and fucking selfish. Yes, that’s what she was.
Damn it.
Everything was just so fucked up. Jared wasn’t sure how things had gone to shit so quickly, but they definitely had. The woman he’d married had shed her skin not two weeks into their marriage, demanding that she be taken care of. The second that ring was on her finger and the marriage license was signed, Sable had changed from the easygoing, somewhat kindhearted woman to an ex-employee at the makeup counter at Macy’s to a fucking diva who wanted him to make her breakfast in bed on the weekend.
No doubt about it, he’d been blinded by … what? What the hell had he seen in her? Even now, three years later, he had no clue what he’d been drawn to other than her smoking-hot body and her Hoover-worthy mouth. Oh, and she’d given him attention—batting her eyelashes and offering her relentless come-hither stare—something he’d been missing. Or thought he had anyway. In hindsight, the lack of attention from the opposite sex had been self-imposed. Jared had just turned thirty when they met, and he’d been going through the motions, trying to figure out where his life was headed and how he wanted it to go. Marriage had certainly been an idea he was looking forward to, should he find the right woman.
Enter Sable Hillman, with her perfectly applied lipstick and fancy hair. She’d clearly walked into his life at the right time. Or the wrong time, depending on how you looked at it.
He was definitely an idiot.
Sable didn’t want to work, but she didn’t want to stay home, either. She thought they belonged to the country club elite or some shit. He could see how she’d come to that conclusion. Jared’s parents were well off, and they’d set their children up accordingly. Jared had money—mostly family money—but he’d also been working since the day he turned sixteen. He hadn’t had a rough life, by any means, but his father had instilled in him the need to make a good living. Damn good thing his father had demanded he have a prenuptial agreement. Jared hadn’t thought it necessary, but at the last minute, he’d caved. For a second, he’d thought Sable was going to back out. He should’ve known better. The woman was more than willing to spend every penny he had while they were married. She didn’t need to wait until afterward.
“Fuck you, Jared.”
“No,” he turned to her. “Fuck. You. And every asshole who’s had the displeasure of fucking you over the last three fucking years.”
Three years he’d been dealing with this shit. If it weren’t for the fact Sable had gotten pregnant, Jared would’ve been long gone. Only he’d stayed because of his son. Derrick was the highlight of every single day. Jared went to work every morning, and when he came home, Sable generally went out while he enjoyed the peace and quiet and time he got to spend with his boy. It was the perfect routine, and since it got Sable out of his hair, Jared never complained.
“I want joint custody,” he informed her as he went to the closet and began tossing his clothes out. He was packing his shit and moving out. He had no choice. He would go stay in his parents’ guesthouse until the divorce was final. It would allow him to be close enough to Derrick so he could see him every other weekend and every Wednesday.
“Ha!” Sable sneered. “Like that’s ever gonna happen.”
Goddamn, that was going to hurt. He hated the idea of being away from Derrick for that long. He’d been hoping Sable would be level-headed about this, letting him spend time with his boy whenever he wanted. He should’ve known better.
Jared cast an angry glare over his shoulder. “I’ll fight you f
or full custody if that’s what you want.”
“Go ahead and try it,” she snapped. “Considering he’s not your kid, I’m not sure that’ll work out real well for you.”
Jared spun around so fast Sable had to take a step back.
“What did you say?” The impact of her words had caused his hands to shake, and there was a red haze clouding his vision, anger and… Damn, it felt a hell of lot like fear clouded his mind.
Sable always said nasty shit to him. It seemed she got off on putting him down. Normally, he didn’t rise to the bait, but this… He hoped like hell she was lying.
“You heard me. You think you’re all high and mighty. Derrick isn’t yours. You’re not his father. So fuck you, Jared. You don’t get shit out of this deal.”
He had to sit down or his legs were going to give out. Jared managed to back up to the bed and drop down onto the mattress, staring at the woman he had vowed to love forever, a woman he no longer even liked.
“I want a paternity test,” he insisted. That would prove that Derrick was his. He had to be.
Sable rolled her eyes. “I’m marrying him.”
Jared tried to process her words, but they didn’t make sense.
“Derrick’s father. He’s been begging me to leave you. I should’ve done it before now. And yes, you’ll get your paternity test. I’ll prove to you that he ain’t yours.”
She should’ve left before now? She wasn’t the one leaving, Jared was.
“You’ll have nothing,” she spat.
Jared held back his retort, not sure what he could say. The woman had managed to single-handedly rip his heart right out of his chest and grind it into dust.
Derrick isn’t yours.
The fact that his marriage had disintegrated … Jared could get over.
Losing Derrick… That was a wound that would never heal.
* * *
Six months later
“Despite the fact that the paternity test states you are not the father,” Edna Holloway—the expensive lawyer he’d hired—clarified, “Sable is willing to give you full custody.”
Jared waited for her to continue. He was waiting for the “but.” There was always a “but.”
“However, in exchange, she wants twenty-five thousand dollars.”
“Done,” Jared said instantly.
“Jared, you should spend some time thinking about this,” Edna said kindly.
“Don’t need to. My name’s on his birth certificate. He’s my son. Find out where I need to wire the money.”
Edna pulled a sheet of paper from the pile she’d brought with her. “I think we need to ask that she give up her parental rights. That will protect you going forward. She has already made it clear that she doesn’t want Derrick.”
And by made it clear, Jared knew that Edna was referring to the fact that Sable had flat out told him that she didn’t have time for Derrick in her life. The man she’d claimed was Derrick’s father had insisted on a paternity test, also. The results had stated he was not the father. Which meant Sable had lied once again. The new man—some rich, older guy—in her life didn’t want kids, which meant Derrick had suddenly become expendable in her eyes.
“I agree,” he told her. “Do what you need to do, and tell Sable I want this done immediately. While we’re waiting for the legal system to putter along and do their thing, I want him living with me. In Coyote Ridge.”
Since he had moved to the small town where most of his extended family lived, in an attempt to put some distance between himself and Sable, Jared had started to build a life for himself. Although he wouldn’t be close to his parents, he wasn’t too far away. And he had a great job. Being in Coyote Ridge would also lessen the chance of him running into Sable again.
She nodded, jotting down notes before removing her reading glasses and depositing them into her purse. “I’ll keep you apprised of the proceedings. I’ll ask that Sable relinquish custody over to you today.” She glanced at her watch. “Why don’t I try for four o’clock. Will you still be in town?”
“Of course,” he said, his heart pounding. “Anything for Derrick.”
Little did his lawyer know, but Jared would’ve given ten times that much to get his son back. Granted, there was absolutely no reason to let Sable know that. The manipulative bitch would only ask for more.
Chapter One
Present day, September
“A FAMILY REUNION?” Jared Walker dropped into the chair in his office and stared up at the ceiling, cell phone to his ear. “Are you fucking serious?”
For the past half hour, Jared had been humoring his cousin Travis, listening to the spiel as to why it was time the Walker family had a reunion. The last thing Jared had time—much less patience—for these days was some big-ass family get-together. At thirty-five years old and divorced, it was enough for him to deal with the day-to-day of Walker Demolition, along with being a single dad to a four-year-old little boy.
“Very,” Travis confirmed, his tone gruff. “And I want it to take place next month.”
Next month? The guy was getting laid too damn much these days, because now he’d lost his fucking mind and become far too optimistic. Maybe there was something to be said about the whole bisexual thing. “I think we need to be a little realistic here,” Jared added.
“How long do you think it’ll take to prepare?” Travis questioned, sounding genuinely curious.
Jared had no clue. He wasn’t a goddamn party planner. “Do you even know where we’re gonna have this thing?”
“Yep.” The certainty in Travis’s voice gave Jared a small measure of assurance. At least his cousin had looked that far into it.
When he realized Travis wasn’t going to share the details, Jared sighed. “Where, Travis?”
“Dead Heat Ranch.”
“I don’t even know what that is,” Jared admitted.
“It’s owned by some of Cheyenne’s family,” Travis told him, referring to Travis’s brother Brendon’s woman. “Beyond that, I ain’t got shit. I need you to call them, set it up.”
“Me?” Jared sat up straight. “What makes you think I’ve got time to deal with this? Do you know how much business Walker Demo has at the moment?”
Travis chuckled.
Okay, so maybe he did. Jared knew that Travis probably had a finger on the pulse of every damn thing that went on with Walker Demo, not to mention the resort. And probably even the entire town of Coyote Ridge, Texas, to boot.
Unfortunately, they weren’t as busy as Jared would’ve liked. For months on end, they’d been going ninety to nothing, and all of a sudden things had slowed drastically.
“Fine. We’re not that damn busy, but still. Why me?”
“’Cause you’re closer to everyone.”
It was Jared’s turn to laugh. “That’s horseshit and you know it.”
“But it sounded good, didn’t it? Look, Gage just walked in and I’ve gotta take care of some shit. You got this?”
Another frustrated sigh escaped him, but Jared found himself nodding. “Fine.”
“Thanks. Call Cheyenne or Brendon, get the information. Let me know if you need anything.”
Jared didn’t bother responding. He hung up the phone and dropped his cell phone on his desk, then put his head in his hands and tugged at his hair. On top of everything, he needed a damn haircut.
He sighed.
Honestly, this was the last damn thing he needed right now, but it would help to keep his mind occupied, so that was something to look forward to. When business slowed, that was when his mind started wandering, and that was never a good thing.
Ever.
Jared sat up straight and took a deep breath. Fine. He’d do it. And if Travis wanted this shindig to take place next month, Jared needed to get started now. Reaching for his phone, he had just palmed it when it vibrated
. He glanced at the screen and saw that it was Cheyenne Montgomery, the very person he was about to call.
He stabbed the screen to answer, then put the phone to his ear. “Lemme guess, Travis called you?” How that was even possible with only a minute or so passing since Jared had hung up with him, he didn’t know. Then again, this was Travis Walker. The guy was quite possibly not human.
Cheyenne’s husky chuckle made him smile. “Of course he did.”
“And to think, he told me to call you.”
“You know Travis, always makin’ sure things go the way he wants them to.”
Exactly. Which was the very reason Travis should be handling this shit. “I don’t know why he’s trusting me with this,” Jared told Cheyenne. “I get the feelin’ he’s gonna handle most of it on his own anyway.”
“I wouldn’t be so sure about that,” Cheyenne said. “Rumor is, now that he’s got two rug rats at home, he’s havin’ a hard time keepin’ his head on straight already.”
That didn’t surprise Jared one bit. Travis Walker wasn’t the easiest guy to get along with, and frazzled seemed to be the constant state he was in. Although he had toned down somewhat in recent years, which was a relief to everyone.
“I’ve got the number for you. Got a pen?”
Jared grabbed a pen. “Yeah.”
He scribbled the number on his desk calendar as Cheyenne rattled it off. “You’re gonna want to talk to Hope Lambert.”
“Got it.”
“She might have one of her sisters handle the details, but she’s the best one to talk to first. They’ll walk you through everything you need to know.”
“I’ll call her now.”
“I’d offer to help, but I’m gonna be on the road for the next month.”
Shit. That reminded him that he needed to try to coordinate schedules. A month wasn’t nearly enough time to put this together and expect anyone to show up. Maybe he’d push it out a little.
“I’m sure I can handle it,” Jared told her. “But if you could send me your tour dates, that’d help.”
“I’ll get them texted to you ASAP.”
“Is this place close?” he asked. “This Dead Heat Ranch?”