Hidden Treasure
Page 19
“The candles are all in jars,” Colt pointed out before stopping and looking around, making sure the scene was still set.
Her entire front railing was covered in lighted candles. There were three hundred of them. He knew this for sure, because he’d lit every single one himself.
“You do know that with the dry weather, if even one of these jars tips over, the place could go up in flames, right?”
Of course Hawk had to say it — he was the fire chief. But it was also Colt’s prerogative to ignore him. “If it burns, I’ll build her a better house,” Colt said before he resumed pacing, not even thinking about what an arrogant statement he’d just made.
“All right. Since Tony has the fire tender on standby, I guess I’ll let you be.” Hawk patted Colt on the shoulder and stepped down from the porch to go and sit with Tony, who, sure enough, had the fire truck backed up to the house. He was in a chair behind it, hose in his hand in case he needed to act quickly.
“It would sure help if you’d just go away, Tony,” Colt snapped for what seemed like the tenth time.
“Not gonna happen, Colt,” Tony drawled.
This was not going according to plan, Colt thought with frustration. Then everything else disappeared, because he saw headlights in the distance. That had to be Brielle — unless the hands had called in the sheriff, too.
Colt wouldn’t have put that past them. Still, with his heart thundering and the blood rushing through his veins, he had no doubt it was Brielle. He could feel it. His mood lifted, his heart raced, and a smile returned to his face.
He planned to spend the rest of his life proving to this woman each and every day how much he loved her, and to treat her like the princess he knew she was.
But first he had to convince her to allow him in her life.
Much easier said than done…
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
EXHAUSTION SEEMED TO be her middle name now, but Brielle was happy to be driving down the long road that led to her home. And yes, this was her home. She’d enjoyed the visit with her oldest brother, loved meeting his soon-to-be fiancée — at least if Crew had anything to say about it — and loved spending time with her father and getting to know her uncles, but she was glad to be home.
What a different drive this was for her now. The first time she’d taken this road, she’d been ticked off, miserable, and certain that her life was over. And it was — life as she’d once known it was over. But that was a good thing.
Unfortunately, Colt lived nearby. Talk about ambivalence.
Her anger was long gone, but that didn’t mean she could just forget what he’d done. If only her foolish heart agreed with her mind. But the longer she was away from him, the more she yearned for his touch.
No. Impossible. How would she ever know for sure that he wanted her and not her land? Was it still about the land? She hadn’t lied to him. She had to remember that and harden her heart to him.
When she turned the corner, she noticed a strange glow coming from her house. “What the…?” she said aloud.
When she pulled up, she realized her porch was lit up with…candles. Yes, those were candles, what appeared to be hundreds and hundreds of candles on her railing. As she emerged from the truck, she found Colt standing on her front deck, his arms at his sides, his whole body tense.
To her left, she saw Tony and Hawk sitting in a couple of lawn chairs beside the ranch’s fire truck, but she barely glanced their way. Her eyes were drawn to one place — to the man now coming down the front steps.
They met halfway and she stood before him. But she didn’t know what to say. Just leave?
“I’ve missed you, Brielle.” His softly spoken words were nearly her undoing. But somehow she did manage to find her voice.
“What are you doing, Colt?”
“I can’t go another day without seeing you, Brielle. When I close my eyes, I’m holding you.”
“Colt, please just give it up.”
“I can’t. Though I know it’s only a dream, it feels so real. I picture myself running my fingers through your long red hair, I feel the tremor in your body when we touch. Feelings like I’ve never felt before rush through me, and then I find myself with my lips brushing against yours. I imagine that hitch in your breathing, that small indication that you’re as moved as I am each and every time we touch. Then I open my eyes and you aren’t there. Everything disappears and I’m left with only emptiness. I want to close my eyes again, live in that perfect moment of having you in my arms.”
“Colt…”
She was close to tears, and she didn’t know what to say. He was offering his soul with so much passion, so much love. It had to be real. There was no way it couldn’t be.
“Did you know that every time I come near you, I’m afraid of the way you affect me? And afraid of the way I need you. Or I was afraid. I thought I was happy before I met you, Brielle. I wasn’t. And when I look into your eyes, I feel like I’ve found what my life has always been missing. And I didn’t know there was something missing until recently, but now that I’ve had you by my side, I can never go back to the existence I walked through before you, to the way I was. You make me feel like I’m flying. You are worth holding onto forever, and I won’t throw this away. I promise that if you give me another chance, I will never again treat you with disrespect, and I will never tell another untruth. I will hold you, care for you, and love you.”
Brielle didn’t try to stop the tears anymore. This man did love her — her! — spoiled little Brielle Storm who’d needed her father’s intervention to help her find herself. Somehow, Colt had managed to see past her facade. And he actually liked the woman hiding inside. When he dropped to his knees in front of her and pulled out a black velvet jeweler’s box, her knees shook.
“Brielle, please end my misery. Please be my wife — help make me a better man.”
His eyes shone bright in the light from the candles behind them and the full moon filling the starry sky, and Brielle couldn’t stand up a second longer. Sinking to her knees in front of him, she placed her hands on his face and brushed her lips against his.
“I don’t want to live another day without you either, Colt,” she whispered, and she wrapped her arms around his neck.
“I love you, Brielle.” He ran his hands up and down her back, pushing the last of her worries away.
“I love you, too, Colt. Yes, I’ll marry you. My heart won’t let me do anything else.”
He sat back, and she felt bereft until he lifted her hand, pulled out a flawless square-cut diamond, and slipped the ring on her finger — a perfect fit.
“You are my everything,” he told her, and he sealed their promise to each other with a kiss.
Tony and Hawk had to turn away from the stirring scene, and from each other. The two gruff men were too touched by the beautiful moment they’d just witnessed.
After Colt carried Brielle through the front door, the two men outside put out all the candles, and then the only light shining down on the old ranch house was from the stars, which seemed to be twinkling a little more brightly on one of the last nights of summer.
EPILOGUE
IT LOOKS AS if we’ll be getting at least two weddings this year,” Richard said as he enjoyed a nice scotch with his brothers.
“Yes. I truly admire Colt,” Joseph said. “Always have.”
“Well, of course you do, because he’s a good man. I’m just grateful I found that land. My only complaint is I missed most of the romance.”
“You were pretty lucky in that match,” George said with a laugh.
“I knew Brielle would end up on the ranch, and the first time I met Colt, he was an ornery cuss, but I liked and respected him. I had hoped sparks would fly, but hadn’t held out much hope for it,” Richard said. “I knew when I told the kids what I wanted from them that they would all be mad, but I also knew that Brielle would take the longest to accept her challenge, and there was just no way any of the boys would want anything to do with ranchin
g. It seems each of the businesses I purchased has landed in the right hands, at least so far.”
“Are you ever going to tell her you were hoping she and Colt would find each other?” George asked.
“Are you insane? She’d skin me alive.”
“Yeah, that’s pretty much how our kids feel,” Joseph said. “But that doesn’t matter. All that matters is the end result, and that’s a lot of grandbabies and great-nieces and -nephews. I only wish we’d known each other when this ‘journey’ you’ve placed your children on started. There’s nothing I like more than a bit of meddling.”
“I couldn’t agree with you more, brother,” Richard said. “Plus, I’m way behind in the grandchild department, so it will be a pleasure catching up with you.”
“From the way Colt and Brielle were looking at each other on our last visit, I bet it won’t take long at all,” Joseph told him.
“I think it’s time to visit with Lance again. I want to see what that boy is up to. I have a feeling he’s going to be my favorite nephew,” George said with a smile.
“Ah, they’re all my favorites,” Joseph said, and he meant it. There wasn’t one of the kids he loved more than the other. Okay, he did have to admit that his granddaughter Jasmine had an extra-special place in his heart.
“Even the strongest of them fall, George. Lance will fight to the end, but it’s only a matter of time before he gives in to his destiny, and that certainly includes true love…” Richard said.
The three men clinked glasses.
THE END
AN EXCERPT FROM SAFE IN HIS ARMS
from “Baby it’s Cold Outside” coming at the end of October 2014 by Melody Anne, published by Pocket Books.
Available for preorder now.
Prologue
CAN YOU BELIEVE that Edna took off like that?”
“What do you expect, Bethel? Her grandbaby needed her,” Eileen replied.
“I know. I know. But the Christmas pageant is coming and it just won’t be the same without her,” Bethel said.
“Yes, of course, but don’t you see the opportunity this presents?”
Both women turned to look at their friend Maggie, whose grin ran from ear to ear. The three women were thought to be in their sixties, but no one knew for sure—they guarded their age more securely than Fort Knox guarded its gold. Plus, they certainly didn’t act their age, not even on cold Sunday mornings.
“What do you mean?” they asked in unison.
“We don’t get too many new people here in town,” Maggie told them. “Hawk’s been single for long enough. Now that my boy Bryson has gotten married and settled down, I’m more than ready to see the same happen for Hawk.”
The lights switched on in the other two women’s eyes.
“Ooh, I like your thinking, Maggie,” Bethel said. She was practically jumping in her seat.
“So, we just need to find an . . . appropriate teacher,” Eileen said with a giggle that took twenty years off her age—whatever it was.
“Yes, yes, yes,” Bethel burbled. “I’m so glad the school board has left us with the task of finding Edna’s replacement.”
“Do they have photographs of the applicants on the places we have to search?” Maggie asked.
“Sure do!” Eileen told them as she flipped open her laptop. “I still hate that these damn contraptions are necessary.” But she resolutely fired up her Internet browser.
“Yes. Technology is a burden,” Bethel grumbled.
Sure, the women complained, but they were much sharper than they let on. A very crafty move that allowed them to get away with a heck of a lot more meddling into the lives of people who would otherwise protest.
A slight blush tinged Eileen’s cheeks when she asked, “Shouldn’t we bring Martin in on this?”
Bethel and Maggie knew that something was happening between the two longtime friends, but they weren’t about to call Eileen out on it.
“We certainly will… eventually,” Bethel said. “But not right now. This girl needs to be for Hawk. Martin would try to steal her away for one of his four boys.”
“Well, we need to find some women for those ornery sons of his, too,” Maggie chimed in.
“Let’s just focus on one kid at a time,” said Bethel, always the logical one. “Besides, I already have plans brewing for my granddaughter Sage and one of the Whitman boys. As soon as she’s done with medical school…”
Maggie’s eyes widened. “Oh, do tell.”
“Now’s not the time.” Bethel clicked on a page and gasped. “Girls, I think we have a winner!”
The other two women leaned over and then all three of them smiled as they read all about Natalie Duncan, who was seeking work as an elementary-school teacher.
“I think you might just be right,” Maggie said.
The three best friends got busy, and their plans solidified. Poor Natalie had no idea what she was about to step into . . .
Chapter One
HER HEELS CLICKING on the hard tile floor of the airport, Natalie Duncan smiled and popped a Hershey’s Kiss into her mouth. Her first teaching job! It was a dream come true. Four years of college, thousands of study hours, even more volunteer hours, a teaching internship at a beautiful elementary school in sunny L.A., a pretty dang good GPA, and she had finally received the call she’d been waiting for.
Sure, it was November, and sure, she’d been called only because another teacher was going through some sort of family emergency and had to leave the state suddenly, but Natalie was still stoked. She’d been the one the school had called. She was the one who would be stepping into her very own classroom come Monday morning.
The small town of Sterling, Montana, wasn’t exactly where she’d wanted to begin her very first job, but you couldn’t always have everything you wished for, could you? No. This was only a stepping stone.
Wholly unaware of the masculine eyes that were following her in her sharp blue pencil skirt and four-inch heels, Natalie pressed forward. With her slim five-foot-three-inch frame and her fiery red hair, green eyes, and full lips, she was made to turn heads. The thing was, she didn’t ever look up long enough to notice she was doing it.
Why? Because Natalie wasn’t looking for male attention. She had plans. She had goals. And men were far down on her list of priorities. After all, she was only twenty-three. For now, she was content to stick with the third-graders she was going to teach. Let the older males stay clear. They’d just interfere with her goals. Work first. Marriage and family later.
From the time Natalie was a little girl her mother had pushed her, letting her know her only option was to go to college, graduate with honors, and then get a good job. So, Natalie had decided that first she would save for at least ten years, buy a home, and set up a nice nest egg, then, and only then, would she settle down and marry.
A smile flitted across her lips as she thought about her life fifteen years down the road. She’d have a white picket fence and one girl and one boy running through the sprinkler on a nice hot day while she sat next to her husband and enjoyed the successes of her life.
Sure, some might say she was too specific in what she wanted, but wasn’t that the whole point of making goals? If a person just winged it, they might never achieve anything in life—they’d end up like her mother, and that wasn’t something Natalie would ever accept.
As she focused on her fantasy future, the airport doors opened, and Natalie stepped forward with an excited smile. That smile vanished in an instant when the biting Montana wind slapped her in the face, causing her to stumble backward.
“What the hell?”
Her voice came out choked as she struggled to regain the breath that had been sucked from her. Yes, she’d been warned that the temperatures dropped incredibly low in this part of the state, but how could a normal human survive this?
She’d been born and raised in Southern California, and was in no way ready for this sort of weather. She’d been so excited over receiving the job, she hadn’t even t
hought to research what climate she was stepping into. Stupid, stupid, stupid. She fell back inside the terminal and gulped warm air into her frozen lungs.
“Okay. You can do this,” she told herself as she looked down scathingly at her completely inefficient shoes. “Heels? What was I thinking?” Heels and sexy lingerie were her concessions to blatant femininity. Otherwise she wore beige and dark colors, and downplayed what she’d been blessed with.
Raising her head, she studied the people passing her by. None of them were wearing heels and a skirt. No. They were wearing warm boots, thick coats, and trousers. She threw her suitcases a disgusted look as it dawned on her that she’d have little choice but to spend some of her precious savings on warmer clothing.
This certainly called for another chocolate.
Look, this was a happy day. She shouldn’t have to dwell on insignificant factors such as clothes and freezing weather. Instead, she should be able to munch on her morsel of chocolate and look forward to her first real teaching job.
Reaching into her carry-on bag, she pulled out her warmest jacket, which wasn’t going to do enough, but it was better than nothing. Then she made her way back to the airport doors. Looking at them as if they were the gates to hell, which they sort of were—just a very, very cold hell—she took a deep breath and moved forward again.
As she stepped outside, tears sprang instantly to her eyes, and her entire body shook, but she forced herself to trudge to the curb. Thankfully, there was a cab ready and waiting. Fearing she’d never feel warmth fully return to her body again despite the warm air that billowed from the vents, she huddled in the backseat after giving the driver the address for the little furnished house that the school district had set up for her.
The people had been unbelievably kind. One woman—her name was Bethel—had even sold Natalie a small Toyota sedan, dirt cheap. That was one less thing she had to worry about. The vehicle should be parked in her driveway already.