Selasa, 29 September 2015

? PDF Download The Cowboy Next Door and Jenna's Cowboy Hero (Love Inspired Classics), by Brenda Minton

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The Cowboy Next Door and Jenna's Cowboy Hero (Love Inspired Classics), by Brenda Minton

The Cowboy Next Door and Jenna's Cowboy Hero (Love Inspired Classics), by Brenda Minton



The Cowboy Next Door and Jenna's Cowboy Hero (Love Inspired Classics), by Brenda Minton

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The Cowboy Next Door and Jenna's Cowboy Hero (Love Inspired Classics), by Brenda Minton

Two heartwarming novels of family, love and cowboys by bestselling author Brenda Minton  

THE COWBOY NEXT DOOR  

Jay Blackhorse is determined not to be won over by city girl Lacey Gould and her niece. Still, they clearly need his help. Lacey's clueless about caring for the infant her sister abandoned. Jay has a talent for stopping the baby's tears. But when a dark secret from Lacey's past blows into town, will Jay's help be enough? 

JENNA'S COWBOY HERO  

Former football player Adam Mackenzie hopes to fix up a camp for underprivileged kids. But the city slicker doesn't know horse tack from a touchdown. The pretty rancher next door seems to be the answer to his prayers. Army vet Jenna wants only to raise her twin boys and run her ranch—not fall in love. But can the gorgeous and kind Adam make her open her heart to love?

  • Sales Rank: #3928635 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-01-20
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.58" h x 1.16" w x 4.21" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 448 pages

About the Author
Brenda Minton lives in the Ozarks with her husband and three children.  Life is chaotic but she enjoys every minute of it with her family and a few too many dogs. When not writing she's drinking coffee, talking to friends, or hanging out at the river with her family and extended family.  visit her online at www.brendaminton.net

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
"Lacey, when are you going to go out with me?" Bobby Fynn hollered from across the dining room of the Hash-It-Out Diner.

"Maybe next week," Lacey called back as she refilled an empty coffee cup, smiling at her customer, an older woman with curly black hair and a sweet smile.

"Come on, Lacey, you can't keep turning me down."

Lacey smiled and shook her head, because Bobby wasn't serious, and she wasn't interested.

"Ignore him," Marci, the hostess, whispered as Lacey walked past.

Lacey shot her friend a smile. "He doesn't bother me. I'll be back in a minute. I need to get a pitcher of water."

She hurried to the waitress station, set the glass coffeepot on the warming tray, and grabbed the pitcher of ice water. The cowbell over the door clanged, announcing the arrival of another customer. She hustled around the corner, pretending her feet weren't blistered and her back wasn't aching from the double shifts she'd worked for the last week.

If it wasn't for the perfect piece of land she wanted to buy…

Two strong hands grabbed her arms, stopping her mid-stride and preventing a near collision. The pitcher of ice water she'd carried out of the waitress station sloshed, soaking her shirt. She looked up, muttering about clumsiness and met the dark gaze of Officer Jay Blackhorse.

Gorgeous, he was definitely gorgeous. Tall with black hair and brown eyes. All cowboy. All rugged and sure of himself. But not her type. He'd been back in Gibson, Missouri, for a month now, and she already had him figured out. He was too serious, not the kind of customer who chatted with a waitress, and she was fine with the knowledge that they weren't going to be best friends.

Several men called out, offering him a chair at their table, as Lacey moved out of his grasp. Not only was he the law, his family also raised cattle and horses. He hadn't lived in Gibson for the last seven or eight years, but he still fit in on so many levels that Lacey didn't know how he could do it all.

She was still trying to find something other than round holes for her square-peg self.

She was the girl from St. Louis who had showed up six years ago with a broken-down car, one hundred dollars and the dream of finding a new life.

Jay waved at the men who called out to him, but he didn't take them up on their offers to sit. Instead, he took hold of Lacey's arm and moved her toward the door.

"Lacey, I need to talk to you outside."

"Sure." Of course, not a problem.

She set the pitcher of ice water on a table and followed him to the door, trying hard not to remember her other life, the life that had included more than one trip in the back of a police car.

It would have been a waste of breath to tell Jay she wasn't that person any more. He didn't know her.

He didn't know what it had been like to grow up in her home, with a family that had fallen apart before she could walk. Jay had a mom who baked cookies and played the piano at church. Lacey's mom had brought home boyfriends for herself and her daughters.

Instead of protesting, Lacey shot Jay a disgusted look—as if it didn't matter—and exited the diner at his side. When they were both outside, she turned on him, pushing down her pain and reaching for the old Lacey, the one who knew how to handle these situations.

"What's this all about, Blackhorse? Is it 'humiliate the waitress day' and someone nominated me to get the prize?"

He shook his head and pointed to his car. "Sorry, Lacey, but I didn't know what else to do with her."

"Her?"

The back door of the patrol car opened.

Lacey watched the young woman step out with a tiny baby in her arms and a so what look on her face. Jay's strong hand gripped Lacey's arm, holding her tight as she drew in a deep breath and tried to focus. She pulled her arm free because she wasn't about to fall.

Or fall apart.

Even at twenty-two Corry still looked drugged-out, antsy and on the verge of running. Her dark eyes were still narrowed in anger—as if the world had done her wrong. The thrust of her chin told everyone she would do what she wanted, no matter whom it hurt.

Jay stood next to Lacey, his voice low. "She said she hitched a ride to Gibson and that she's your sister."

Lacey wanted to say that it wasn't true and that she didn't have a sister. She wanted to deny she knew the young woman with the dirty black hair and a baby in her arms.

The baby cried and Lacey made eye contact with Corry.

"She's my sister," Lacey said, avoiding Jay's gaze.

"Thanks for claiming me." Corry smacked her gum, the baby held loosely against her shoulder, little arms flailing. The loose strap of Corry's tank top slid down her shoulder, and her shorts were frayed.

Lacey sighed.

"I don't have to leave her here." Jay pulled sunglasses from his pocket and slid them on, covering melted-choco-late eyes. The uniform changed him from the cowboy that sat with the guys during lunch to someone in authority.

Lacey nodded because he did have to leave Corry. What else could he do? What was Lacey going to do? Deny her sister? The Samaritan had cared for the man on the side of the road, a man he didn't know. And Lacey knew Corry.

"She can stay. I'm off duty in thirty minutes."

"Do you have to make it sound like the worst thing in the world?" Corry handed Lacey the baby and turned to pick up the backpack that Jay had pulled from the trunk of his car.

Lacey looked at the infant. The baby, Corry's baby, was dressed in pink and without a single hair on her head. She was beautiful.

"Her name's Rachel." Corry tossed the information like it didn't matter. "I heard that in a Bible story at the mission we've been living in. We couldn't stay there, though. We need a real home."

A real home? The one-room apartment that Lacey rented from the owners of the Hash-It-Out was hardly a home fit for three.

She inhaled a deep breath of air that smelled like the grill inside the diner, and the lunch special of fried chicken. Corry and a baby. Family meant something. Lacey had learned that in Gibson, not in the home she grew up in. Now was the time to put it into practice. She could tell her sister to leave, or she could be the person who gave Corry a chance.

Like the people of Gibson had done for her.

But what if Corry ruined everything? Lacey tucked that fear away, all the while ignoring the imposing Officer Blackhorse in his blue-and-gray uniform, gun hanging at his side.

"You know, you two could help me," Corry tossed over her shoulder as she dug around in the back seat of the patrol car. "I haven't eaten since this morning. And then I get here and you aren't even glad to see me."

Continuous jabber. Lacey tuned it out, nodding in what she hoped were the appropriate places. She held Corry's baby close and took the car seat that Jay had pulled out of his car. His gaze caught and held hers for a moment, and his lips turned in a hesitant smile that shifted the smooth planes of his face. Jay with his perfect life and his perfect family.

She didn't want to think about what he thought when he looked at her and her sister.

"Need anything?" Jay took a step back, but he didn't turn away.

She shrugged off the old feelings of inadequacy and turned to face her sister. Corry shifted from foot to foot, hugging herself tight with arms that were too thin and scarred from track marks—evidence of her drug use.

"Lacey?" Jay hadn't moved away and she didn't know what to say.

* * *

Lacey Gould's dark, lined eyes were luminous with unshed tears. Jay hadn't expected that reaction from the waitress who always had a comeback. He held a grudging admiration for her because she never slowed down.

And he knew her secrets, just as he knew that her sister had prior arrests. Corry Gould had two drug convictions and one charge of prostitution. She was a repeat offender. A simple run through the state system was all it took to find out if a person had a criminal record. In Lacey's case, the Gibson police chief had filled him in. Jay hadn't been sure if it had been gossip or serious concern for his parents. They had spent a lot of time with Lacey Gould in his absence.

His parents hadn't appreciated his concern, though. They knew all about Lacey's arrest record, and they knew who she was now. That was good enough for them.

He'd been a cop for too long to let it be good enough for him.

Lacey shifted next to him, the baby fussing.

She was slight in build, but not thin. Her brown eyes often flashed with humor and she had a mouth that smiled as much as it talked. He tried to ignore the dark hair, cut in a chunky style and highlighted with streaks of red.

For the moment her energy and feistiness were gone. He couldn't leave her like that.

"Lacey, I can take her to the station," Jay offered, knowing she wouldn't accept. She scraped leftovers from plates at the diner to feed stray cats; he doubted she would turn away her sister and that baby.

Corry moved closer to Lacey. The younger sister had the baby now, holding the infant in one arm and the dingy backpack in the other. Her eyes, blue, rather than Lacey's dark brown, shimmered with tears.

Lacey was motionless and silent, staring at her sister and the baby.

"I have to take the baby somewhere, Lace. The guy who dropped me off at the city limits was going south, way south. I don't have a way back to St. Louis."

"I'm not going to turn my back on you, Corry. But as long as you're here, you have to stay clean and stay out of trouble."

"If it helps, I checked her bag and she doesn't have anything on her." Jay could tell when Lacey bit down on her bottom lip and studied her sister that this information didn't really help.

He shrugged because he didn't know what else to do. The two sisters were eyeing one another, the baby was fussing and his radio squawked a call. He stepped away from the two women and answered the county dispatcher.

"Sorry, I have to run, but if you need anything—" he handed Lacey a card with his cell phone number "—I'm just a phone call away."

"Thanks, Jay. We'll be fine." She took the card and shoved it into her pocket without looking at him.

"That's fine, but just in case." He shifted his attention to her sister. He had a strong feeling that Corry wasn't really here looking for a place to start over.

As he got into his patrol car and looked back, he saw Lacey standing on the sidewalk looking a little lost. He'd never seen that look on her face before, like she wasn't sure of her next move.

He brushed off the desire to go back. He knew he couldn't help her. Lacey was a force unto herself, independent and determined. He was pretty sure she didn't need him, and more than positive he didn't want to get involved.

* * *

Lacey watched Jay Blackhorse drive away before turning to face Corry again. The front door of the diner opened and Lacey's boss, Jolynn, stepped outside.

"Honey, if you need to take off early, go ahead. We can handle it for thirty minutes without you." Jolynn smiled at Corry.

Lacey wished she could do the same. She wished that seeing her sister here didn't make her feel as if her life in Gibson was in danger.

"I can stay." Lacey picked up the backpack that Corry had tossed on the ground.

"No, honey, I insist. Go home." Jolynn patted her arm. "Take your sister on up to your place and get her settled."

Lacey closed her eyes and counted to ten. She could do this. "Okay, thank you. I'll grab my purse. But if you need…"

"We don't need. You're here too much as it is. It won't hurt you to go home a few minutes early."

Lacey stepped back inside the cool, air-conditioned diner with Jolynn, and pretended people weren't staring, that they weren't whispering and looking out the window at her sister.

She pretended it didn't bother her. But it did. It bothered her to suddenly become the outsider again, after working so hard to gain acceptance. It bothered her that Jay Blackhorse never looked at her as though she belonged.

Jolynn gave her a light hug when she walked her to the door. "You're a survivor, Lacey, and you'll make it through this. God didn't make a mistake, bringing that young woman to you."

Lacey nodded, but she couldn't speak. Jolynn smiled and opened the door for her. Lacey walked out into the hot July day. Corry had taken a seat on the bench and she stood up.

"Ready?" Lacey picked up her sister's bag.

"Where's your car?"

"I walk to work."

"We have to walk?"

Lacey took off, letting Corry follow along behind her. Her sister mumbled and the baby whimpered in the infant seat. Lacey glanced back, the backpack and diaper bag slung over her shoulder, at her sister who carried the infant seat with the baby.

As they walked up the long driveway to the carriage-house apartment Lacey had lived in for over six years, Corry mumbled a little louder.

Lacey opened the door to her apartment and motioned her sister inside. The one room with a separate bathroom and a walk-in closet was less than five hundred square feet. Corry looked around, clearly not impressed.

"You've been living in a closet." Corry smirked. "And I thought you were living on Walton's Mountain."

Ignore it. Let it go. Push the old Lacey aside. "I think you should feed the baby."

"Ya think? So now you're a baby expert."

The old Lacey really wanted to speak up and say something mean. The new Lacey smiled. "I'm not an expert."

Corry had done nothing but growl since they'd left the diner. Obviously she needed a fix. And she wasn't going to get one.

"Is there another room?"

"No, there isn't. We'll make do here until I can get something else." Lacey looked around the studio apartment that had been her home since she'd arrived in Gibson.

The home she would have to give up if Corry stayed in Gibson. Starting over again didn't feel good. The baby whimpered. A six-week-old child, dependent on the adults in her life to make good choices for her.

Starting over for a baby. Lacey could do that. She would somehow make it work. She would do her best to help Corry, because that meant the baby had a chance.

Corry tossed her backpack into a corner of the room and dumped the baby, crying and working her fist in her mouth, onto the hide-a-bed that Lacey hadn't put up that morning.

Lacey lifted the baby to her shoulder and rubbed the tiny back until she quieted. Corry had walked to the small kitchen area and was rummaging through the cabinets.

"You know, Corry, since you're here, wanting a place to live, maybe you should try being nice."

"I am being nice." Corry turned from the cabinets and flashed a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "And your boyfriend is cute."

"He isn't my boyfriend." Lacey walked across the room, the baby snuggling against her shoulder. She couldn't let her sister bait her. She couldn't let her mind go in that direction, with Jay Blackhorse as the hero that saved the day. "Corry, if you're going to be here, there are a few rules."

"Rules? I'm not fourteen anymore."

"No, you're not fourteen, but this is my house and my life that you've invaded."

Lacey closed her eyes and tucked the head of the baby against her chin, soft and safe. Be fair, she told herself. "I'm sorry, Corry, I know you need a place for the baby."

"I need a place for myself, too."

Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
#2 OF THE MONTANA MAVERICKS SAGA - WHITEHORN, MONTANA
By M. Hartmann
Ah, the Players in another great story:
Maris Wyler, 32 - a widow with a lot of emotional trauma due to her husband Ray. But she has the strength to hold onto the ranch she has renamed NO BULL.
Luke Rivers, 35 - just coming of a two year healing process and needing money. He finally digs out an I.O.U. given to him by Ray Wyler for three thousand dollars. He will take it any way he can get it - cash, horses or....

Maris has taken in Keith Colson, 16 after Keith has put his father in jail for abuse. He loves working with horses once Luke shows him how.

John Tully the owner of the drugstore - he sends Luke to the NO BULL ranch.
Sheriff Judd Hensley - he is a bit sweet on Maris - and doesn't like Luke working for her.
Jim Humphrey - a friend of Lukes - he is rich and collects Corvettes.
Lori Parker Bain - a nurse and midwife and Maris's best friend along with Jessica.
Floyd Oakley's murder has still no been solved.
Mary Jo Kincaid floats back into the picture.
Can't really tell what Winona Cobbs has to do with the plot - she is pushing 70 and is also a junk collector
Melissa Avery - owns The Hip Hop Cafe and comes to Maris's yard sale.

Now the funny thing is Maris flip-flops between her moral attitude about affairs and her desire to get pregnant by Luke. One minute she practically invites him into... - and after the done deed, she hates Luke and herself. No protection used:)and Luke is a great stud.

The authors are continuing a great saga of the people of Whitehorn, Montana [12] and more.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED - PMS -- Next #3 is Sleeping With the Enemy by Myrna Temte.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
A very enjoyable read
By Cloggie Downunder
The Widow and The Rodeo Man is a book by American author, Jackie Merritt, in the Montana Mavericks series. Widow Maris Wyler has been left with 93 unbroken horses that her husband, Ray, an irresponsible drinker and rodeo enthusiast, swapped for their cattle. Rodeo man, Luke Rivers has a $3000 IOU from Ray that he needs to collect after a rodeo fall left him injured and depleted his savings. When Luke comes to the No Bull ranch to collect, sparks fly between him and Maris. Eventually, however, a deal is struck: Luke’s expertise with breaking horses for his IOU and a horse to keep. But neither of them counts on the attraction that flares between them. This slightly longer romance has a little more depth than the average: the characters have depth and appeal and the plot has a few twists. The hero is sexy but principled; the heroine sweet but flawed. A very enjoyable read.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Engaging storyline, strong characters, rocky romance
By Hope This Helps
Rated: 3.5 stars. Mild graphic sexual content. Note: mostly stand alone read.
2nd book in the multi-author Montana Mavericks series of over 50 books.

GOOD READ! Well written, engaging storyline, heartfelt and candid dialogue, a good secondary cast, and a predictable, but rocky affair between two appealing characters. HOWEVER, the judgmental heroine can't seem to follow her own moral compass which provides plenty of angst, but becomes annoying after a while. There is a small bit which presumably pertains to the overall series mystery thrown in, but it makes NO sense if you haven't read the previous books.

THE STORY revolves around recently widowed, Maris Wyler, the abandoned teen she fosters, Keith, and down-on-his-luck, injured rodeo competitor, Luke Rivers. As the story opens, Luke arrives at her ranch to collect on an IOU from Ray Wyler, her late, gambling, womanizing, lazy, rodeo-bum, husband. Broke and desperate to revive his rodeo career, Luke makes a deal with Maris to break 93 green horses in exchange for money and one of the horses. Watching Luke train the horses, seeing the care he shows Keith, and working together to save her ranch, Maris begins to appreciate Luke's heart and strength, and he begins to realize he want more from life than chasing after the rodeo.

OVERALL, endearing characters, great secondary cast, and a charming read. ABOUT THIS SERIES: The books range from good to disappointing, but the ongoing mystery remains unsolved. SHAME on the authors and Silhouette for a 50+ books series which never ends.

You may also enjoy the complex characters and storytelling of N. Bruhns, A. Stuart, and E. Palfrey. For sweet, funny, heart touching romances with great descriptive imagery, try Susan Fox, Cara Colter, and Nikki Logan.

See all 7 customer reviews...

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Horns of a Dilemma, by Ganesh Krishnamurthy

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Horns of a Dilemma, by Ganesh Krishnamurthy

Ganesh started questioning the reality of life and the world very early in life. He went through what many people do-get a good education (IIT, Delhi, Topper, Iran Centre for Management Studies, Tehran, an affiliate of the Harvard University Business School, MBA, with Distinction), tasted material success, went through a phase of being known and recognised, travelled the world and observed people, customs and human interrelationships. However, fundamental questions about life and its reality kept surfacing repeatedly. For what ultimate purpose does one take any action? Sensing that all the trappings of success in the world did not satisfy what he was (and every human being seemed to be) striving for, he started making serious enquiries. Using the excellent training he had received from formal education as well as what he learnt from his observations of life, he tried to find the answers. He asked many famous and erudite people, read what great thinkers had to say about the subject matter, discussed with others who too were seeking answers; all of which drove to him turn to Indian scriptures, sastra. He followed it up until he reached a traditional guru who could unfold the secrets of the self, using the words of the sastra. He spent three and a half years living with and learning from his guru, Poojya Swami Dayananda Saraswati at a gurukulam (a traditional place of learning where students live with the guru) in Anaikatti in Southern India. Ganesh now lives a life of study and teaching, and helping anyone who approaches him with a problem, or with a commitment to learn.

  • Sales Rank: #4743298 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-01-15
  • Released on: 2015-01-15
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x .52" w x 5.00" l, .51 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 230 pages

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Deeply Meaningful and Relatable, Makes Profound Truths Easily Accessible through Stories
By Varun Viswanathan
Horns of a Dilemma was quite a meaningful book, explaining the challenges we come across in life ,and how a greater understanding of the deeper purpose of life can guide people through all challenges. It provided a very hopeful message for me, demonstrating that it is possible for human beings to face adversity and come out stronger and more vibrantly alive, without being pulled down and tormented by the changing circumstances of life.

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Through Visalam's life journey and understanding how her wisdom and deep love and compassion fora all has changed the course of each characters life and provided them true guidance to navigate the uncertainty of life in this book, the reader can clearly see how a person of firm clarity in truth can bring people forward and shows the value of keeping such good company regularly.

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An unusual and engaging book about the mysteries and miracles ...
By Mrunalini Katiyar
An unusual and engaging book about the mysteries and miracles we ignore in daily life, about ordinary people who become extraordinary with the choices they make, about healing, self-realisation and the courage to be honest with oneself.

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Very Interesting book. I could not put it down ...
By Meera
Very Interesting book. I could not put it down once I started reading. Makes you question the different decisions that we take in life.

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Chelsea lives thousands of miles away from her family, where she lives blissfully devoid of harsh realities. She's built an idyllic new life in Hawaii, surrounded by art, love, nature, and the many pleasures of island living. This happiness is derailed by the news of her father's battle with cancer. Torn between duty and fear, she takes a leave of absence to be by his side. Leaving her husband, her career, and her detachment from reality behind, Chelsea boards a flight back to her hometown in New York. She doesn't know exactly how she'll navigate this new path, one now defined by uncertainty and the heartbreak of impending, inescapable, and unimaginable loss. She relies on her wit and keen observation of human fragility and strength to explore both the tragic and quirky circumstances surrounding death. Pulled from the comfortable delusions of her island life, she's out of her realm, out of her depth, and definitely out of her comfort zone. Life is chaos.

  • Sales Rank: #2614403 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-01-06
  • Released on: 2015-01-06
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .68" w x 6.00" l, .88 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 270 pages

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
What are you waiting for?
By Charles D Edwards IV
I related a lot to this book because I also live in land far far away and went thru similar situation. Reads like an intimate diary building a wonderful characters background. Which makes you seem like part of the family. Each chapter builds the suspense. Great and easy read with the full range of emotions. Read it!

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Five Stars
By Tom Briggs
A great read. You'll see people on airplanes laughing and crying while holding this book.

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I really enjoyed this book
By Scout
I really enjoyed this book, especially its raw and truthful approach to the topic. The characters ring true and are fully developed. Like all of us, they have their strengths and weaknesses, and new facets of their personalities continue to emerge throughout the novel. This is a fine first novel, full of interesting details, and I can't wait to read her next!

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Never Trust a Cowboy (Harlequin Special Edition), by Kathleen Eagle

When a Cowboy Comes Calling… 

The last thing harried Lila Flynn needed was another cowboy to deal with. But new hire Del Fox was different than most sweet-talking wranglers. The hard worker had a gentle touch and eyes that spoke of a past he didn't share. Lila soon found her hardened heart softening, frightening her more than any other hurdles she was facing. 

Del's assignment in Short Straw, South Dakota, was meant to be fast and simple. Falling for Lila Flynn, however, had complicated everything. If he did his job right it would mean destroying everything Lila had worked for. He'd given her every reason never to trust him again. But when all was said and done, would she trust their love enough to give them a second chance?

  • Sales Rank: #592026 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-01-01
  • Released on: 2015-01-01
  • Format: Kindle eBook

About the Author
New York Time and USA Today bestselling author Kathleen Eagle published her first Silhouette Special Edition, an RWA Golden Heart winner, in 1984.  Since then she has published more than 40 books, including historical and contemporary, series and single title novels, earning her nearly every award in the industry including Romance Writers of America's RITA.  Kathleen lives in Minnesota with her husband, who is Lakota Sioux and forever a cowboy. 

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Delano Fox enjoyed watching a smooth heist in progress the way any skilled player might be entertained by another's performance. Sadly, under the starlit South Dakota sky on the flat plain below his vantage point the only real skill on display belonged to a blue heeler, and even he was a little slow. Del was going to have to forget everything he knew about rustling cattle if he was going to fit in with this bunch. Otherwise he'd find himself itching to take over, which wasn't the best way to get in thick with thieves. Even rank amateurs had their pride.

One by one, six head of black baldy steers stumbled into a stock trailer, each one springing away from the business end of a cattle prod or kicking out at the biting end of the dog. There was no ramp, but a jolt of fear helped the first two clear the trailer's threshold. When the third one tried to make a break for it, Ol' Shep lunged, crowding the animal against the trailer door. The guy manning the door cussed out both critters, while the one handling the prod added injury to insult by missing the steer and connecting with the dog. It would've been funny if he'd stung the other man with a volt or two, but Del instantly set his jaw at the sound of the yelping dog. Inexperience was curable, but carelessness could be a fatal flaw, and lack of consideration for man's best friend was just plain intolerable. The best cowhand of the lot—the one with paws—jumped into the bed of the jumbo pickup, where he shared space with the gooseneck hitch.

Two shadowy figures climbed into the growling workhorse of a pickup that was hitched to the stock trailer, while the third—the prod handler—hopped into a smaller vehicle—a showy short box with an emblem on the door—parked on the shoulder of the two-lane country road. He would be Del's mark. One of them anyway. He would be local, and he would be connected. Rustlers were high-tech these days, and they used every resource, did their research, found their inside man.

Del didn't go in much for high tech. He did his research on the down low, and he had already had a private, persuasive conversation with a man he knew to be one of the two hauling the stolen stock. The job he himself was looking for would soon be his.

He chuckled when he passed the sign welcoming him to the town of Short Straw, South Dakota, promising, You'll Be Glad You Drew It.

Maybe, but there was bound to be somebody in the area who wouldn't be. Del knew how to handle the short straw. He'd drawn it many times.

He followed the sawed-off pickup at a distance, which he kept as he watched the driver pull up in front of a windowless storefront emblazoned in green neon with what would have been Bucky's Place if the P were lit up. The B flickered, trying mightily to hang on to its dignity, but it was ucky that cast a steady glow above the hat of Del's mark, the man who had just helped steal six head of cattle. Del could see enough of the guy's face now to add a few pieces to those he'd already collected. He could now read the Flynn Ranch emblem on the pickup door. So far, so good. The driver wasn't much more than a kid, early twenties, maybe. The steers might well belong to his father. Wouldn't be the first time the heir decided to help himself to his inheritance a little early. Del just hoped Junior had the power to hire and fire ranch hands.

It took Del all of thirty seconds to disable a tail-light on Junior's pickup.

A typical edge-of-town watering hole, Bucky's was shades of brown inside and out. Customers were lean and green or grizzled and gray, but they were all on the same page at Bucky's. They were winding down. Two guys sat side by side at one end of the bar, a third sat alone at the other, a man and a woman exchanged stares across the table in a booth and pool balls clicked against each other under the only bright light at the far end of the establishment.

"I'm looking for the owner of the Chevy short box parked outside." Del was looking at the bartender, but he was talking to anyone who'd noticed his entrance. Which would be everyone.

"That'd be me." The kid who'd wielded the cattle prod waved a finger in the air and then turned, beer bottle in hand. He wore a new straw cowboy hat and sported a pale, skimpy mustache. "What's up?"

"The name's Delano Fox." Del offered a handshake. "If you're with the Flynn ranch, I was told you might be hiring."

Junior admitted nothing, but he accepted the handshake. "Who told you that?"

"Ran into a guy who said he'd just quit. Told me to look for a red short box with a taillight out. Your taillight's out."

Junior frowned. "You been following me?"

"More like following up on a tip. Not too much traffic around here. Hard to miss a single taillight."

"When did he say he'd quit?"

"Maybe he said he was about to quit. I don't remember exactly how he put it, but if you're not short one hand, you soon will be. You hire me, you won't need anybody else. I'd get rid of the other guys."

The bartender chuckled.

"Only got one hand. Had, sounds like. Where did you run into him?"

"Couldn't say. Somewhere along the road." Del tucked his thumbs into the front pockets of his jeans and gave an easy smile. The way to play the game was to keep the questions coming and the answers on the spare side. "After a while they all look alike. Faces and places and roads in between."

Junior nodded toward the empty stool beside him.

"Did he mention his name?" Junior asked as Del swung his leg over the stool. "Or mine?"

"Flynn was all he gave me. Said he was helping move a few steers and that the guy driving the red pickup might be hiring. That last part was all that interested me."

"Brad Benson. Tell me why I should hire you."

So this wasn't Junior. One missed guess, but it was a small one. As long as the kid could hire a new hand, he would be hiring Del.

"I'll put in a full day every day." Del sealed the deal with a sly smile. "Or a full night. Whatever you need."

Benson took a pull on his beer, took his time setting it down and finally glanced sideways at Del.

"How about both?"

"A guy's gotta sleep sometime. But yeah, calving time, I'm there. Workin' on a night move once in a while? I can do that, too."

Benson didn't bite. "Where have you worked before?"

"Just finished a four-month job on a place west of Denver. The Ten High. Foreman's name is Harlan Walsh." Walsh was his standard reference. Harlan knew the drill. Del had actually worked at the Ten High, just not recently.

"If Thompson don't show up tomorrow—"

"Pretty sure he won't." Damn sure he won't. Thompson had been most cooperative once Del had ruled out all other options.

"If he don't, then we'll try you out. The Flynn place is sixteen miles outside of town on County… Well, I guess you already know the road. We pay thirty a day to start, six days a week. You'll have the bunkhouse to yourself, and you'll get board with the family." The grin was boyish. "Bored, too. Get it?"

"Either way, as long you've got a good cook in the family."

"You can always get yourself a microwave," Benson said, tipping the beer bottle in Del's direction. "Oh, yeah, and you answer to me. It's my stepdad's operation, but he's getting on, and we're trying to get him to take it easy."

"Understood."

"And if it turns out you're more skilled than most, more…specialized…" Benson's lips drew down in the shape of his mustache. "You could bump up your income, put it that way."

"Like all good cowboys, I'm a jack-ofall-trades." Del tapped his knuckles on the bar as he dismounted from the stool. "With resourcefulness to spare."

"Just to show your appreciation, spare some on buying the second round."

Del chuckled. There hadn't been a first round. "My employer always gets the better end of the deal. I'd suggest the other way around if I wasn't dog tired. I've been on the road awhile."

"And I'd show you to your room, but I ain't ready to hit the road."

"I'll be there by eight."

"Breakfast's at six."

Del glanced at the shot the bartender set down next to Benson's beer, and then gave his new boss a slight smile. "I'll be there by eight."

The Flynn Ranch sign hung high above the graveled approach five miles south of the scene of the previous night's crime. Del's first thought was how easy it would be to alter the Double F brand that adorned the intersection of the gateposts and the crossbar on both sides of the entrance. A seasoned rustler would have it done by now even if he was hungover. Del was betting Benson was fairly new to the game and that last night's haul still carried the Double F. He doubted Benson had any authority to recruit new thieves. A man new to the game only stole his own cattle for show, to convince family, friends and FBI that he was among the victims. And by peeling off some skin and dropping it into the game, he bought himself some street cred. But he'd have to keep up appearances on both sides. Del looked forward to seeing whether Benson was any more serious about his acting than his rustling.

The red Chevy pickup was parked kitty-whompus beside an old two-story farmhouse that probably had been a local showplace in its day. The right front tire had crushed a bed of pretty blue-and-white flowers. Some of the once-white paint on the house was peeling, and some had been scraped. The covered porch looked as though it had recently been painted.

Del mounted the steps to the sprawling porch and rapped on the screen door. He heard movement, peered through the screen and saw a pair of chunky rubber flip-flops—neon green, if he wasn't mistaken—sitting on a rag rug in the dim alcove.

The bare feet that belonged to the shoes appeared at the top of the stairs beyond the alcove, paused and then ran down like water bouncing over rocks. Del was fascinated by the quickness of the flow and the lightness of the feet. He'd never seen prettier. He watched them slip into the rubber thongs, pink toenails vying for his attention with bright green straps. The colors spoke volumes about the woman who came to the door.

He wasn't sure why he wanted to hold off on looking up. The colors were cheerful, the feet were pretty and their owner probably belonged to his new boss. But for some reason he wanted to take her in bit by stirring bit.

She wore jeans that ended partway between her knees and her curvaceous ankles—Del admired a well-turned ankle—with a sleeveless white top over a willowy body. Her neck was pale and slender, chin held high, lips lush and moist, dark hair pulled back, and her big blue eyes stared at him as if he were some kind of a rare bird. Maybe he was looking at her the same way. He couldn't tell.

"Mornin'." Del recovered his game face and touched the front edge of his hat brim. "I'm looking for Brad Benson."

He watched her shut down any interest he'd sparked. "You came to the wrong door."

"If you wouldn't mind pointing me to the right one…" He smiled. "Sorry. Del Fox. I'm your new hired man."

"I don't have an old hired man. Or a man of any kind behind any of my doors. And if I did, it wouldn't be Brad Benson."

"My mistake. I saw his pickup out here." He was pretty sure she hadn't meant to be funny, but he had to work at keeping a straight face. His new boss was clearly in trouble. He stepped back and nodded toward the side of the house. "Looks like his pickup anyway."

She pushed the screen door open and ventured across the threshold, took a look and planted her hands on her hips. "It does, doesn't it?"

"Same plates and everything. Must be around somewhere. You wanna tell him I'm here?"

"I want to tell him to get his pickup out of my flower bed. Or maybe you'd tell him for me when you find him."

"Should I try the doghouse?"

"I don't have one. My dog…" She stepped past him and surveyed the yard. Her tone shifted, the wind dropping from its sails. "Should be chewing on the seat of your jeans right about now."

"Guess he ain't hungry. Maybe he got a piece of Benson."

She gave her head a quick shake, banishing some momentary doubt that had nothing to do with him or with Benson. "Maybe you should check the pickup." She nodded toward the dirt road. "It's another mile and a half to the new house, and you can be sure Brad didn't walk. How drunk was he when he hired you?"

"Couldn't say."

"And you wouldn't if you could." She lifted a lightly tanned shoulder. "It really means nothing to me, but it might make a difference to you."

"I'll check the pickup." He touched two fingers to his hat brim and stepped back. "Sorry to bother you. Sign says Flynn Ranch, and Benson wasn't clear on where the house would be."

"I'm Lila Flynn," she said quickly. "Brad is my stepbrother. He lives down the road with his mother and my father."

"In the new house." He smiled, grabbing the chance to start over. "You get the home place."

"And you'll get the bunkhouse out back if Brad remembers hiring you." Suddenly retreating, she cast a backward glance. "Like I said, check the pickup."

Before the screen door slapped shut, Del caught the edge of a smile, the flash of blue eyes. Slim chance, he thought, but the door to making a second first impression had been left ajar.

Driveway gravel rattled under Del's boot heels as he approached the red short box pickup. Benson's chin rode his collarbone as his head lolled from one side to the other.

Most helpful customer reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Never Trust a Cowboy
By Jonel
This novel was packed full of intrigue from the first page. I found myself trying to guess who did what and how it would all pan out. Even when I’d figured most of it out, I still found myself trying to unravel the last details right to the end.

This novel definitely had a unique cast of characters. Eagle develops the main characters in such a way that you feel like you know them, without knowing too much about them. Surrounded by a supporting cast that rounds out the family ranch feel of the story, I felt like I could really understand the dynamics. I enjoyed getting to know the father, he added a lot to the story. The stepbrother gave me the creeps from the moment I met him.

Overall, this was quite an interesting novel that kept me thinking and guessing throughout. Eagle balances romance and intrigue nicely for an enjoyable whole.

Please note that I received a complimentary copy of this work in exchange for an honest review.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Another 10!
By readsalot
Kathleen Eagle never disappoints

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Great fast read!!
By lep
I received a complimentary book from Net Galley and the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

I took this book because I enjoy Kathleen Eagle. She is a wonderful, experience writer who always has a Native American character. She shows them in realistic ways without any generalizations. We see how Native Americans are able to include their tradition into their lives in spite of living a cowboy lifestyle.

I liked this book because it inclued intrigue and suspense in its story. Also, Del Fox is an alpha male who works hard and also helps Lila Flynn with her other interests.

Lila and Del fall in love, but, Of course, he has a secret that he knows will hurt devastate Lila.

I was worried about this story since I know that the Harlequin Special Editions have are much shorter than they were in the past. Fortunately Kathleen Eagle is a terrific writer and was able to develop an exciting story and some interesting characters in the shorter book. Kathleen Eagles book did not disappoint me one bit!

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The Eligible Suspect (Ivy Avengers Series), by Jennifer Morey

Nothing is as lethal as an Ivy in the winter. 

Letting a stranger into her secluded home in the wilderness may be loner Savanna Ivy's biggest mistake. But tall, sexy Korbin Maguire was stranded in a blizzard, and Savanna can't resist his charm despite his shady past and secretive manner. 

 

A stunning, independent artist from a famous Hollywood family, Savanna has always fallen for—then been hurt by—bad boys. And Korbin is definitely a bad boy…albeit an innocent one. Framed for two murders, he has a gunman in hot pursuit and a sizzling passion for Savanna. But can she exonerate Korbin before it's too late?

  • Sales Rank: #581568 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-01-01
  • Released on: 2015-01-01
  • Format: Kindle eBook

About the Author
Two-time 2009 RITA nominee, Golden Quill winner and HOLT Medallion Merit award recipient, Jennifer Morey writes her happy endings in Denver, Colorado, where she lives with her real-life hero.  She was featured in the October, 2009 Life List section of LADIES' HOME JOURNAL. Contact her through her website, www.jennifermorey.co

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Each step closer to the Laughing Grass Pizzeria hammered a dark sense of foreboding in deeper. Korbin Ma-guire took the stairs down to the basement of the old redbrick building, certain his life was about to take a big turn. A man who took charge of his own destiny, he'd steer it in a direction he chose, but there was something else at play, and it would begin to reveal itself here, today, at this restaurant.

Under a high, ornately carved white ceiling, people filled worn wood tables, and conversation echoed in the cavernous room. It smelled like pizza, not marijuana. The latter was reserved for a fee in a private room, since it wasn't legal to smoke in public. Korbin didn't smoke the stuff but most of the people he knew did, and this was their favorite hangout.

Spotting Collette Hamilton, he headed over to her.

A bleach-blonde with heavy makeup and surgically enhanced breasts, she was borderline trashy but a nice girl nonetheless. It wasn't her fault she had parents who weren't around for her and didn't teach her how to survive anywhere but on the street. She was a woman on the brink of spending her life in and out of the judicial system. And, he'd realized recently, so was he if he didn't make some drastic changes.

Collette didn't even smile when he sat across from her. She'd sounded frantic on the phone when she'd asked him to meet her here, which was why he'd come. He had an idea what this was about.

"Where's Damen?" he asked.

"Not here." She sounded glad.

Was Damen the reason she'd asked to meet? He wouldn't be surprised. Damen's behavior as of late had raised his brow more than once. But why call him?

She'd never shown any indication of interest in him, and he wasn't interested in any other man's woman. They'd developed a friendship over the last year. She'd helped him through a rough spot and she talked to him about Damen sometimes. On the hardened side for a woman, a little easy and not very smart, she wasn't his type. But she had a good heart and he wouldn't let anyone hurt her, least of all Damen.

"You two having trouble?" he asked.

"He told me that you turned him down on the offer to work a new job," she said.

She hadn't answered his question, but that must have something to do with why she was here. Korbin was always careful about how, when and if he broke the law. He also had a tough reputation to back up his freedom of choice. No one forced him to do anything. No one messed with him. If he took a job, he took it on his own terms.

A waitress came to the table and Korbin declined to order anything. Collette had ordered a soda.

"Damen told you I turned him down?"

She nodded, almost in awe. "He wasn't happy about that at all."

"No, he wasn't." He'd yelled and threatened. Korbin had warned him about the threats. He'd only partially listened, which had been the first wake-up call. That meeting had alerted him to what might lie ahead. Trouble. And it was beginning now. With Collette.

"Korbin, you should watch your back."

"I'm not afraid of Damen." There was nothing he could do to hurt him. He had no evidence to prove his past cyber crimes. Korbin was always meticulous about covering his tracks.

Collette smiled. "No, you aren't, are you? But he's been unpredictable lately. The fact that you turned him down made him furious. I couldn't even talk to him about it. He started throwing things."

Damen's unpredictability was what bothered Korbin, but he was becoming violent? That caused him more concern. Not for himself, but for Collette. "I'm done with that type of work and nothing Damen does will change that. I'm going to find something else to do. Maybe get a real job. Maybe go see my parents." He'd been a handful to them and they no longer spoke to him. By his sixteenth birthday, he'd hacked into all of their friends' computers. By the time he graduated from high school, he'd added teachers and employers to the list. In adulthood, his expertise had attracted Damen Ricchetti's attention. No more. Damen was out of his life now. He couldn't be a part of his new direction, wherever that led.

"That's why I wanted to talk to you," Collette said. She pulled back her hair, tucking the strands that had hung over the side of her face. Korbin saw the fresh cut high on her cheek. Then she let her hair fall back down over her face.

Anger boiled to life inside him. "Did he do that to you?"

She nodded, her eyes pooling with tears. "It isn't the first time. I've had black eyes that forced me to stay home until I healed."

Korbin started to stand. "Where is he?"

"Wait." Collette grabbed his wrist to stop him. "I just want to get away from him. And I asked you to meet me here today to see if you'd help me."

He sat back down. She needed help to get away from Damen? "Why can't you tell him to get lost?" Was she that afraid of him?

"Because he won't stay lost. He's threatened me many times that if I break up with him he'll kill me. He wants me to move in with him, and I can't do that. I need to get away from here."

Korbin hadn't thought in great detail about what he was going to do or where he'd go, if anywhere. He figured he'd start with a trip to see his parents. If they'd see him.

Damen's saying he'd kill his girlfriend if she broke up with him changed the game. That made him far more dangerous than he'd anticipated and confirmed some suspicions he'd had. But first he'd step in and teach Damen a lesson.

"Of course I'll help you." He didn't have it in him not to. He would never leave her, or anyone, helpless against violence. Damen had abused her. He was going to pay for that.

He should have become a cop.

Collette reached over and put her hand over his. "I know why you're getting out, Korbin."

Everyone associated with Damen knew that. But it was too raw to talk about.

"It's a good decision," she said in his silence.

Smothering the tide of unwelcome emotion, he asked, "What do you need me to do?"

She half smiled, a pity smile, empathizing but not saying any more on the matter. Slipping her hand from his, she said, "Help me find a place to go. Somewhere Damen won't find me."

That wouldn't be a problem. "All right. I'll need today to prepare."

"Okay. Thank you. I can't tell you how much I appreciate this. I'd do it myself but I don't have the resources you do. Damen would probably catch me before I left town."

He didn't like the sound of that. "Do you need money? A place to stay?"

"No, I should be okay. I'll just be happy to have a life free of Damen."

He'd give her enough to get by for a few months. His parents may not be speaking to him but they hadn't taken away his trust fund yet. "Be ready to leave in the morning. Meet me back here at eight." He put some cash down on the table and stood with her, putting his hand on her lower back to guide her toward the stairs. Out on the street, he looked around for any sign of Damen. Not seeing any, he walked with Collette to her car. There, he looked around again and then reached under his shirt for the gun he'd put in the back of his jeans. Foreboding had compelled him to do that. Otherwise he never carried.

"Take this."

Her mouth dropped open. "Wha—"

"Don't let him in your house. If he gets violent again, use it to get away from him."

"But…I can't kill him!"

"Then aim for his knee. Just get away from him. You only have to make it to tomorrow morning. The goal is to act normal so he doesn't figure it out. I'm hoping you won't have to use it. But just in case."

Collette put the gun into her purse. "Okay. Tomorrow morning." She seemed worried.

"It will be okay," he said. Leaning forward, he gave her a hug, one that elicited a comforted sigh from her.

"You're a good man, Korbin Maguire." She stepped back with a smile and got into her car.

He closed her door and waved back when she did. She thought he was a good man. He wasn't, but he was going to be.

Early the next morning, Korbin woke to his ringing doorbell and pounding on the front door of his home in Lone Tree, Colorado. More pounding suggested urgency. He got up and went to the window of his second-story bedroom, which had a view of the driveway and part of the front entrance. A sedan was in the driveway and two men stood at the door. They wore jackets. Professional. Who were they?

He put on a pair of jeans and a white T-shirt and went down to the door. More pounding and ringing grew louder.

"Denver police. Open up!" one of them shouted. Police? What were they doing here? Korbin opened the door, leaving the security bar in place.

"Korbin Maguire?" One of the men opened a wallet to show him a badge. He was older than the dark-haired man.

Had something happened to Collette? Real worry for her swelled within him. "Yes." He released the security bar and opened the door.

"Do you drive a Mercedes AMG Black Series?" the older officer asked.

Why were they asking him about his car? "Rarely. I mostly drive my truck." He began to wish he hadn't opened the door so soon. If this was some sort of ruse…

"But you own a Mercedes AMG, correct?"

He hesitated, wondering why they were asking him about his car. "Yes. What's this all about?"

"Would you step outside, please?"

The two men moved back to give him room. Korbin didn't see any way out of this. If they were real cops—and they seemed to be—he couldn't refuse. He stepped outside onto the front porch.

"You're under arrest for a hit-and-run that resulted in death."

The younger officer produced a pair of cuffs. "Turn around and put your hands behind your back." Did he say death?

Numbly, Korbin turned around as the younger officer handcuffed him. In the street, more police cars appeared, lights flashing.

"I don't understand," Korbin said. "I didn't drive anywhere last night. My car is in the garage."

The older officer nodded to the one who'd cuffed him. Uniformed policemen gathered in the yard.

All three garage doors opened and Korbin saw the stall where he parked his Mercedes-Benz coupe was empty. His car was gone. Only his dark blue pickup truck was in the next stall over, closest to the inner door.

"Someone stole my car," Korbin said.

"Come with us. We'll take your statement at the station." The younger officer guided him to the backseat of the sedan, reciting his rights as they went.

Had a stranger stolen his car and then run when he'd hit someone? His Mercedes-Benz coupe would be a prize for any car thief. Someone could have broken in and taken it. But how had his security system been breached? Whoever had broken in had experience. Professional experience. That's where the stranger theory fell apart. Someone had deliberately stolen his car. Someone who knew him.

This had the stink of Damen. Their last conversation filtered into his mind. Damen had accused him of thinking he was better than him and said he'd regret not partnering with him. Collette had reinforced his emotional reaction. It had led to him beating her. And then she'd come to him for help. Had Damen found out? Had she told him? Or had he made her? Korbin hadn't seen Damen anywhere near the Laughing Grass, but had he followed Collette?

It was possible. And Damen had plenty of experience breaking into buildings. And even more damning, he'd suggested the security system Korbin had installed in his house.

But if Damen had stolen his car, why leave the car at a hit-and-run scene?

All the way to the police station, questions pummeled him. By the time he was led into the interrogation room, he was convinced Damen had set him up. He'd deliberately run someone over and left the car there. His behavior was violent enough to support that assumption.

Korbin stewed with anger as he sat at a gray table in an interrogation room. The entire room was gray. Gray walls. Gray door. He'd have a gray life if he didn't find a way out of this.

The older officer—the detective who'd been at his door—entered the room.

"What happened?" Korbin asked. "Why am I here?"

He sat across from him. "I was hoping you'd tell me."

"Why was I arrested? You said it was for a hit-and-run." That resulted in death. "I didn't run anyone over."

"Tell me about your day yesterday, Mr. Maguire. Let's start in the morning. Take me from then all the way until this morning."

The detective was following protocol and obviously didn't believe Korbin. Why would he? He must hear all kinds of excuses and lies from people he had to question for crimes.

"I woke up at about eight, made some coffee. Watched some television for a while, and then went to meet a friend at the Laughing Grass Pizzeria."

"What time was that?"

"Two in the afternoon."

"What friend did you meet?"

"Collette Hamilton." He explained that she was worried about Damen hurting her and that they had made plans to meet back at the restaurant this morning, when he'd help her get out of town. He checked the time. He wasn't going to make it now.

"She came to you for help?"

Did that seem strange? "Yes. We're friends."

"Romantic friends?"

"No."

"Has this Damen Ricchetti been violent with her before?"

"I wasn't aware of his abuse until she told me yesterday." But he explained how Damen had been behaving differently, leaving out why.

"Why did she go to you for help? Why did she need your help? I guess I don't understand why she couldn't leave on her own."

"She trusts me. And she's afraid of Damen."

"What were you going to do to help her?"

"I found her a place to stay where she'll be safe for a while." He didn't mention the fake ID. "And I'm going to give her some money."

"She knew you had money?"

He nodded.

"Please respond verbally for the recording."

"Yes, she knows I have money. Look, I need to get out of here so I can help her."

The detective stared at him for a long moment. Korbin hoped Collette's knowledge of him having money would provide enough of a motive for her to come to him for help.

"What do you do, Mr. Maguire?"

"I have a degree in computer science, but I'm not working right now. I have a trust fund."

The detective nodded, watching him again. "After you left the restaurant…which one did you say it was?"

"The Laughing Grass," he said. "Pizzeria."

"Don't they sell pot there?"

Most helpful customer reviews

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Depressing, boring book.
By Fallen3
I could not get into this book. It just seemed to drag. Throughout the book they wined continuously over his dead wife, & her broken heart from two past love. I don't buy books to hear about that mess. The action nor the romance were believable. They both had to much baggage to be so young. Such a depressing book. I can't start believing in a new love between a H & h if I'm hearing about a dead wife as much as a current heroine. Even to the end the Hero's mom had to talk him into & convince him that he wasn't betraying his dead wife & that he loved the heroine & should go after her. :/ Not romanic. At all.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Adventurous plus emotional
By A. Richard
For the fourth book in the Ivy Avengers miniseries, the story is about a woman who is a member of a well-known Hollywood family and a man who lives by his own rules. When a frame-up causes them to become entangled in one dangerous situation after another, personal beliefs will be tested while unexpected feelings surface. Jennifer Morey has her romantic couple facing several difficult ordeals that could drastically change their live forever. THE ELIGIBLE SUSPECT has continuous peril and plenty of emotional conflicts.

Although occasionally Korbin Maguire does not follow every rule law-abiding citizens should, he is selective about which ones he chooses to break. When an acquaintance asked him to perform a certain task, he refused because of his determination to make a better life for himself. Yet his rejection leads to him being accused of killing someone, and he needs to find proof of his innocence. Getting out of Denver will hopefully give him time to prove he has been setup.

Living in an isolated cabin in the Colorado mountains is where Savanna Ivy feels most comfortable, especially after breaking up with another man who lied to her. During a very heavy snowstorm, a stranger’s truck becomes trapped near her home and she offers to let him remain with her until the road is plowed. Though Savanna is very drawn to Korbin, he seems to be dodging her questions and this makes her suspicious. But as they talk, quite a few similarities in their lives are discovered along with some rather shocking disclosures. When someone comes to the cabin threatening them, Savanna will be forced to decide whether he is guilty or blameless of what he has been accused.

Any story in the Ivy Avengers miniseries is always packed with danger and passion, and THE ELIGIBLE SUSPECT definitely has loads of both. Trouble seems to follow Korbin and Savanna wherever they go, and I never knew who they would be confronting or what the possible outcome would turn out to be. Some of the threats they encountered are very terrifying, and the author certainly did not make staying alive easy at times for this couple. Korbin and Savanna had to make a number of very tough choices after they met, and issues about trust plus sexual longing play a big part in what they ultimately decide.

From almost the instant Savanna and Korbin meet, the desire between them starts to simmer and gradually builds up to a boiling point. While both have past romantic history that influences them in the present, what they feel for the other often cannot be denied. A whole myriad of emotions are conveyed by these two, sometimes by an action and other moments only using words, and I could easily sense how the inner feelings of each was being affected. The Ivy family may be wealthy and famous, but these facts do not keep one after another of them from being thrown into dangerous situations where anything can happen. Jennifer Morey brings the chance of love into the lives of two people who desperately need it, but have become too afraid to take a chance. THE ELIGIBLE SUSPECT is adventurous plus emotional, and has risks around every turn.

Copy received from author for a CataRomance review

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Five star review. Great Read
By Susan Ledoux
I thought the author built the characters well and I found the conflict believable. I enjoyed the suspense and adventurous aspect Ms. Morey often builds into her stories. I love the way she mixes the adventure and crime with the love story. Her characters are real and I can't wait for the next opportunity to read more about them. I've been reading Jennifer Morey's works for a few years now and look forward to her next endeavors. You Go Girl.

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Selasa, 22 September 2015

? PDF Ebook The Beautiful and Damned, by F. Scott Fitzgerald

PDF Ebook The Beautiful and Damned, by F. Scott Fitzgerald

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The Beautiful and Damned, by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Beautiful and Damned, by F. Scott Fitzgerald



The Beautiful and Damned, by F. Scott Fitzgerald

PDF Ebook The Beautiful and Damned, by F. Scott Fitzgerald

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The Beautiful and Damned, by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Beautiful and Damned is F. Scott Fitzgerald’s second novel, portraying the Eastern elite during the Jazz Age, exploring New York café society.

This fictional tale tells the story of Anthony Patch, a 1910s socialite and presumptive heir to a tycoon’s fortune, his relationship with his wife, Gloria, his service in the army, and his alcoholism. 

  • Sales Rank: #1189503 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-01-22
  • Released on: 2015-01-22
  • Format: Kindle eBook

From Library Journal
How can a reader not lose patience with Anthony and Gloria Patch, the "beautiful couple," as they squander their money, idle away their days, and drink themselves into blissful oblivion? Although the obvious parallel between the fictional Patches and the real-life Fitzgeralds is somewhat intriguing, anyone reading the book would be sorely tempted to close it long before the final scenes of degradation. Not so, however, with the audiobook. Peter Marinker's sympathetic narration is so effective that the listener, gradually and almost reluctantly, begins to feel a measure of compassion for Gloria and Anthony-almost as if they are naive children who can't understand what is happening to them or why. Marinker's rendition of Gloria's soft voice is especially persuasive. By the end, it seems as if Fitzgerald's flawed second novel has been redeemed by audio. For most serious literature collections.
Jo Carr, Sarasota, Fla.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
"[Kirby Heyborne's] understated style ultimately emerges as a perfect match for the callow hero, and he ably conveys the sense of wonder in audiences Fitzgerald surely intended them to feel."---Library Journal Audio Review

Review
Anthony Patch The victors belong to the spoils.

Most helpful customer reviews

256 of 276 people found the following review helpful.
VERY TOUCHING, VERY WELL DONE
By Heather Negahdar
"It is seven thirty on an August evening. The windows in the living room of the gray house are wide open patiently exchanging the tainted inner atmosphere of liquor and smoke for the fresh drowsiness of the late hot dusk. There are dying flower scents upon the air, so thin, so fragile, as to hint already of a summer laid away in time."

This is the story of a young couple Anthony and Gloria Patch living out their days to the hilt in New York City as they await the death of Anthony's grandfather, Adam Patch from whom they expect to inherit his massive fortune.

Gloria is a spoilt child from Kansas City turned into a sophisticated and most beautiful woman. Gloria does not intend to lift a finger to do any domestic work in the home, no matter how slight; while Anthony who considers himself an aesthete, finds it quite hard to get his act together and instead of buckling down to some work, prefers instead to hang with his wife and their friends on nightly binges. They drink and eat in the classiest restaurants and hotels, rent the most expensive apartments, travel out to the West in the spring time driving plush cars, wearing top-of-the-line clothing and just generally living it up high on the hog, as they wait.

Meet Maury Noble who is Anthony best friend who spends his time between New York and Philadelphia; Richard Caramel who has just completed writing a book and looking for new ideas for a second one. Joseph Bloeckman from Munich who started out small in America and is now a big shot in Show Biz. Also the quiet Jewess Rachael Barnes and Muriel Kane who is young, flirtatious and sometimes a bit too talkative and Tana the Japanese housekeeper of the Patches.

We are shown the Patches at their very best as the novel starts, with the world at their feet and loaded with cash with which they make very expensive choices. But, as we get further in, we see things begin to change gradually and we realize that those very choices will be their very downfall. It was quite a good read but it could be very heartbreaking at times as we put ourselves into the shoes of the main characters. All lovers of F. Scott Fitzgerald should read this book if you haven't done so already, and those of you who like reading about the ultra rich in the Roaring Twenties this one is for you. It is the kind of book that you feel you will want to read again. It is that good and I shall miss it.
Reviewed by Heather Marshall Negahdar (SUGAR-CANE 10/04/04)

150 of 166 people found the following review helpful.
Moral depravity personified
By Chris Salzer
The genius of F.Scott Fitzgerald shines brilliantly in this vastly underappreciated classic novel of moral depravity. The pervasive themes of Fitzgerald include moral corruption, profligate behavior, agnosticism, selfishness, narcissism, egocentrism, and of course, a sick obsession with money and alcohol. These themes permeate all too well throughout the beautifully written The Beautiful and Damned(pardon the pun).
Released in 1922, 2 years subsequent to the seminal This Side of Paradise and 3 years prior to the magnum opus The Great Gatsby, incomprehensibly, The Beautiful and Damned was not well received critically nor financially. As a result, history has erroneously filed it under the dubious sophomore jinx category. Strange it may seem, I vehemently disagree. As you read this book, you witness first-hand the maturation of an amazing writer. No American writer of the 20th Century can compare to the profound power and unwavering genius that is F.Scott Fitzgerald. If you enjoyed The Great Gatsby, you will no doubt enjoy this work - an equally beautifully writen and tragic tale of aspiring morally depraved young Americans in pursuit of The American Dream.
"Remarkable that a person can comprehend so little and yet live in such a complex civilization."

35 of 36 people found the following review helpful.
A must-read--before it's made into a movie
By T. M. Teale
Nearly ninety years after its first publication, _The Beautiful and Damned_ is still a shockingly relevant account of the entitlement class, the children of the rich or privileged who don't know how to navigate through life without big money. And, it's a New York City novel--written as only a mid-westerner can. It seems to me that because New Yorkers are too much in the middle of it to see themselves clearly, an intelligent "outsider" like F. Scott Fitzgerald must come along. To write as well as he did, Fitzgerald let the city inhabit him. New York got into his blood, and he recorded it in narrative right down to the dirt under the carpet. Fitzgerald's details lead the reader into the depths of the beautiful and doomed couple, the Gloria-Anthony entanglement, as they are part and parcel of the extremes of poverty and wealth (in the World War I era or the roaring 20s).

I don't know how Fitzgerald knew what he knew about the human psyche, or specifically about how a young man might react when he is good-looking and swimming in money and New York, but Fitz's life at Princeton University among this set of people gave him the environment in which to observe; Fitzgerald supplied the story around which the narrative coheres. Of course, there are autobiographical elements to this novel--a lot of himself and Zelda--but what the literary art requires is critical distance. To put his main characters through some shameful scenes, Fitzgerald had to know what tough love is in the New York City context. He had to put his couple to the test, people who from birth had relied on the "religion" of charm and money. And the author had more than just critical distance: F. Scott had them down right! Every expression, every word. Gloria: "This is life! Who cares for the morrow." And you can see Anthony deciding to have one more drink, his speech becoming slurred, his manners maudlin. While Anthony and Gloria wait for his inheritance, we find out what they're made of.

Most pleasurable about Fitzgerald's craft is his carefully-controlled technique of letting Anthony and Gloria visit hell (the "damned" in the title) while softening the harsh surgery-like light with well-timed, well-handled, lyrical sentences. In a single beautiful line, the passage of the winter sun describes both Fitzgerald's craft and his beautiful couple's descent: Gloria "lay still for a moment in the great bed watching the February sun suffer one last attenuated refinement in its passage through the leaded panes into the room" (p.173). Fitzgerald knew how to show the attenuated and refined way downhill.

One more thing about the craft of writing: Only the omniscient narrator technique--which Fitzgerald employs--can show characters in shameful acts and show what they're thinking, and the circumstances in which they got there, and how they "need" money in order to "survive." I wonder if now, in nearly 2010, this novel is not more important than in 1922. More than ever, _The Beautiful and Damned_ is a national portrait. (I can see how "spending" money could be the "sex" in the novel.)

Advice: Read this novel while in New York, if possible. The first time I read _The Beautiful and Damned_, I was living near 123rd (me, a Westerner!). I looked up every address in the novel (except for the gray house near Cos Cob, Conn.) and got to know New York through this novel. In fact, I could almost pick out their final apartment in Harlem near 127th.

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