Lang, Chloe - Captured by Cowboys [Doms of Destiny, Colorado 1] (Siren Publishing Ménage Everlasting)
Page 1
Doms of Destiny, Colorado 1
Captured by Cowboys
When an injured woman appears in the middle of a downpour on the Stone brothers' ranch outside of Destiny, her arrival changes everything.
Emmett, Cody, and Bryant have been lost until finding Amber, whose memories are gone. The rainstorm causes a rockslide, blocking the road down the mountain to town, to the doctor, and to the answers about who she really is.
The more time Amber spends with the cowboys, the more she falls for them. She surrenders her heart completely to the three Doms, convinced her memories would’ve returned by now if true love were in her past.
Cody believes fate brought her to them. Bryant isn’t so sure. Emmett is certain a woman as incredible as Amber must be claimed by another. All three have forgotten what it means to be family until spending time with Amber.
She reminds them true love is worth protecting—whatever the cost.
Emmett is right. Someone is coming for her—a killer.
Note: There is no sexual relationship or touching for titillation between or among siblings.
Genre: BDSM, Ménage a Trois/Quatre, Western/Cowboys
Length: 57,575 words
CAPTURED BY COWBOYS
Doms of Destiny, Colorado 1
Chloe Lang
MENAGE EVERLASTING
Siren Publishing, Inc.
www.SirenPublishing.com
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A SIREN PUBLISHING BOOK
IMPRINT: Ménage Everlasting
CAPTURED BY COWBOYS
Copyright © 2013 by Chloe Lang
E-book ISBN: 978-1-62242-801-4
First E-book Publication: April 2013
Cover design by Les Byerley
All art and logo copyright © 2013 by Siren Publishing, Inc.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: This literary work may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, including electronic or photographic reproduction, in whole or in part, without express written permission.
All characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead is strictly coincidental.
PUBLISHER
Siren Publishing, Inc.
www.SirenPublishing.com
Letter to Readers
Dear Readers,
If you have purchased this copy of Captured by Cowboys by Chloe Lang from BookStrand.com or its official distributors, thank you. Also, thank you for not sharing your copy of this book.
Regarding E-book Piracy
This book is copyrighted intellectual property. No other individual or group has resale rights, auction rights, membership rights, sharing rights, or any kind of rights to sell or to give away a copy of this book.
The author and the publisher work very hard to bring our paying readers high-quality reading entertainment.
This is Chloe Lang’s livelihood. It’s fair and simple. Please respect Ms. Lang’s right to earn a living from her work.
Amanda Hilton, Publisher
www.SirenPublishing.com
www.BookStrand.com
DEDICATION
Doms of Destiny, Colorado began as a discussion between me and my dear friend and sister in heart, Sophie Oak. I had already wrapped up the Strong Brothers books and was working on the next Wilde, Nevada story at the time. I mentioned to Sophie that I was thinking about starting a new series about a town of Doms. You have to know Sophie. When the wheels of her brain start whirring, she’s much like a mad scientist—brilliant and dangerous. I love it. In less than an hour, we’d worked out the major details of Destiny, Colorado.
Sophie, thank you for your never-faltering friendship and support.
Doms of Destiny soon became my passion. I would wake up in the middle of the night as my imagination began to populate the town. More and more people showed up. My sanity was another wonderful friend—Chloe Vale. Like a midwife, doctor, therapist, Domme at times, she listened to my blathering on and on about Destiny. She’s my much-needed grammarian, my sweet cheerleader, and my ever-ready listener when Destiny seems to be screaming inside me.
Chloe, thank you. This book has your fingerprints all over it.
Two lovely women who read for me on this book and added wonderful insight and awesome critiques were Liz Berry and Lana McLemore.
Liz and Lana, what can I say? Thank you for being there for me on this one, and thank you for your unshakeable love and support.
There are three people at Siren-BookStrand I want to thank, also: Diana, Courtney, and Les.
Thank you for everything that went into this book—support, hard work, and creativity.
Lastly, I want to thank you, the reader. Without you all of the above would be for nothing. All of us do our best to give you a place and people to fall in love with. My hope is we’ve done our job.
Thank you for visiting Destiny.
CAPTURED BY COWBOYS
Doms of Destiny, Colorado 1
CHLOE LANG
Copyright © 2013
Chapter One
Emmett Stone watched the clouds darken behind and above snow-capped Blue Arrow Peak. The white flakes shouldn’t be falling at this elevation until late September, another four months from now, but by the feel and smell of the air and the look of the sky, he knew their raindrop cousins were about to come down in buckets. “We better get back to the cabin and pronto, buddy.” He patted his horse’s thick neck.
Bullet, his constant companion for the past thirteen years, snorted his agreement. The steed still had some life left in him, thank God, though his gait had been slowed by time. Galloping was unfortunately relegated to bygone years for his four-legged, chestnut-colored friend.
Emmett got up in the old boy’s saddle in a single bound. The wind was picking up speed at his back, fueling the coming storm. It was definitely going to be one helluva squall.
Warning his younger brothers, who were working the south part of the ranch, would’ve been best. Too bad cell service didn’t work up here. The roads, all of them dirt for miles and miles, would likely wash out, making travel by horseback rough, and by truck, which Cody and Bryant were in, impossible. Their ranch hands, Sawyer and Reed Coleman, were safe in town at their sister’s for her birthday.
He looked at his watch and thought that his brothers might make it back to the cabin in time if they cut
out a little early, though he doubted they would. Like him, they put in a good ten to twelve hours each and every day.
Ranch life could be hard, but it also had its rewards, which were many. Those rewards had kept him and his brothers in line since they were kids. They’d kept the ranch and built it into something to be very proud of. According to the accountants, their assets—the land, livestock, and other holdings—were worth well into the hundreds of millions of dollars. He should’ve been satisfied with the success, but he wasn’t. The all-too-familiar gnawing at the back of his mind inched up into his consciousness, making him feel unsettled and restless. He shifted in the saddle and tried to shove the nagging thoughts away. It didn’t work. The longing had grown and grown over the past few years. Why? He wasn’t even sure what it was he was longing for.
“Bullet, I need to be more like you. Take things one day at a time. Thinking too much gets a man in trouble.” He tugged on the reins slightly, guiding his horse through the gate and onto the county road that edged the ranch. He dismounted and closed the gate. Turning back to Bullet, he spotted something about a quarter mile up the road. Was it a downed animal?
He jumped on the horse and headed that direction, the opposite way of the cabin. Best to check it out. The thing looked too small to be one of their heifers or young bulls, which had been calved in March. Now they were fully weaned and over four hundred pounds. No, the bundle ahead was something else. A small doe or a female wolf?
Once he and his ride had covered half the distance, Emmett realized this was no downed animal. The bundle in the road was a person, a woman.
Clicking his tongue to the roof of his mouth and gently tapping Bullet’s sides with the heels of his boots, he urged the old boy to pick up the pace. Once he got next to the female, he leapt from his saddle and knelt down next to her.
Lying faceup, eyes closed, she was mumbling something. The first thing he saw was the gash just under her hairline. What was she doing this far from the paved road? He glanced around to see if he could see her car, but found none. What could’ve happened to her?
Her clothes were torn in a couple of spots and she had no shoes on her tiny feet. Even in her current state, he couldn’t get over how unbelievably beautiful she was. Auburn hair framed her delicate facial features. Her thick red lips accentuated her pale skin. She was perfectly curvy, just the way he liked women.
“Are you awake, miss?”
Her mumbling continued but her eyes remained shut. He leaned down to see if he could make sense of her words.
“Right. Need to…bliss. Right…please help…bliss. Got to…right.” She continued to ramble, but he couldn’t make heads or tails out of what she was saying.
Her wound no longer bled, but had likely only just stopped. Dark blood coated her long auburn hair. He placed his fingers to her neck to see how steady her pulse was. Luckily, the beats vibrated evenly on his fingertips. Strong heart.
Moving her might be a risk since he wasn’t sure if she had any internal injuries, but it was a risk he might have to take. The storm would be here in a flash and he couldn’t, even if he stayed and covered her with his own frame, leave her in the middle of the road to be drenched. He moved his hands over her body, pressing slightly here and there to see if she had any broken bones or other wounds. Touching her slender arms and legs awakened strong emotions inside him—the need to protect, the need to possess, the need to claim.
He reined in his mind. This vision of feminine wonder needed him to remain focused. Once he was satisfied that he could move her and not harm her further, he swung the woman into his arms.
“Bullet, slow and easy. We don’t want to hurt her.”
His old friend turned his head and blinked. Emmett knew the horse understood. Horses understood a lot more than most gave them credit for.
He hauled her up into the saddle with him, something he’d done several dozen times with other wounded creatures, but never with a woman before.
“You’ll be okay, miss. I promise.” A raindrop hit his nose. He placed his Stetson on her bloodied head to keep the coming rain out of her face. “Let’s go, Bullet. Slow and easy.”
* * * *
Cody Stone let out a big breath of relief as he drove his truck to the cabin. “Home sweet home.”
“Amen to that, brother.” Bryant, his twin, sat in the passenger’s seat.
The rain was coming down so hard that the windshield wipers hadn’t been able to keep up. He’d been driving blind for nearly an hour. His shoulders were tighter than he could ever remember them, and it wasn’t from having to replace a half dozen posts and stringing new barbed wire for the fences either. It was from nerves about the possibility of rolling the truck on some pretty narrow roads. Dry, they were difficult. Wet, they were tough. Drenched, they were treacherous.
The lights were on in the cabin, indicating Emmett was already home. He looked up at the chimney and saw smoke coming out. Good deal. A fire was just what he needed for sure, and a few gulps of whiskey would warm up his insides real nice.
He stepped up on the cabin’s front porch and heard the squeak of the board that needed a couple of nails in the worst way. His brothers and he had never wanted to repair it. Their mother had called it the cabin’s doorbell years ago, and that had always brought a smile to their dads’ faces. He liked the cabin better than their house down in the valley, where they stayed most of the time. The cabin was rustic and drafty in places. It didn’t have Internet, or even a phone, but it held more memories for him than the house. He and his brothers had increased their stays up here over the years. Emmett claimed it was better to be on the ranch, especially during the winter and spring, than fifteen miles away. He was right, too. The roads often became impassable during snowstorms or downpours. The current rain would likely cause a slide of rock and mud—maybe two or three of them. Turkey’s Pass would definitely need the Bobcat and probably Narrow Belt, too. Nickel Ridge might weather this storm without a mark, but the way the rain was coming down, he doubted it. That would mean at least six or seven days, at minimum, to clear the road to town. Not a problem. They had supplies enough to get through several months if need be.
With Bryant at his heels, Cody opened the door and entered the cabin. The fire was going, the lights were on, but there was no sign of Emmett.
“Bro, you surely haven’t gone to bed already,” he yelled down the short hallway that led to the two bedrooms on one side and their “playroom” on the other. The cabin’s only bathroom was at the end of the hallway.
Emmett appeared from the bathroom and placed his index finger to his lips in the universal sign of “be quiet.”
“Why? You got company back there?” He sure hoped so. It had been some time since he and his brothers had brought a female up here. Too long.
“Shhh. There’s a woman back there,” Emmett said in hushed tones. “She’s injured. I found her on the road.”
A million questions swirled in Cody’s head. “Who is she?”
“I don’t have a clue,” he answered.
“Did you check for ID?” Bryant asked.
“None. She only had the clothes on her back, and they were in rough shape. Looks like she was in some sort of an accident, but I didn’t see her car where I found her.”
“Did you ask her who she was?” Cody knew the ranch was way off the beaten path and wondered how anyone would get so lost to end up on it.
“She’s been out since I found her. Bad blow to the head. No broken bones that I can tell and no fever,” his eldest brother answered. “I wiped off the grime as best I could. Then I put her in bed.”
“Which bedroom?” he asked.
Emmett answered, “Mom and dads’ room.”
That figured. Even after all these years, none of them slept in there, keeping to the old routines from long ago before the accident. Unlike the house in the valley, where Emmett had claimed their parents’ master suite, the cabin held an almost sacred quality for all of them. It was the spot that their family
had enjoyed being together more than any other place on the planet.
Cody walked gingerly down the hall, keeping the squeaks from the floor to a minimum. He opened the door and peered into the space. The lamp on their dads’ desk illuminated the room in a soft glow. Its warm light revealed a beautiful woman in bed. Her dark auburn hair covered the white pillow, which was stained with a little of her dried blood now. The wound on her forehead was at least three inches long, though it didn’t detract one bit from her perfect features. He’d never uttered the word “stunning” before, but that was what she was. The heavy quilt, which had been given to their mother as a wedding gift by a distant relative, covered her. Her neck was slender, and her skin had a pearly hue, adding to the perfection his eyes were enjoying.
Though it might’ve been best to remove the woman’s clothing to inspect her injuries more thoroughly, his brother hadn’t. Typical Emmett. Always doing the right thing. He probably didn’t want her to wake up completely stripped in a home full of strange men.
On the nightstand next to her was a bowl of water and the cloth his brother must have used to wash her.
Even clothed, her breasts pressed up against the covers, making it clear she was endowed in the manner he liked very much. Though he and his brothers enjoyed the whole feminine package and mystique, Bryant was definitely a leg man, Emmett a die-hard butt man, but Cody had always been drawn to the mouthwatering mounds of a woman’s upper half, and this sweet lady’s upper half was drool-worthy.